Exports
in sentence
2581 examples of Exports in a sentence
While Iran’s
exports
almost doubled after the previous sanctions were lifted in 2015, from 1.5 million barrels a day to around 2.5 million barrels currently, most of this oil has been sold to China, India and Turkey, all of which are likely to ignore or circumvent US sanctions.
The genuinely vulnerable part of Iran’s oil trade are
exports
of just 750,000 barrels daily to the European Union, South Korea, and Japan.
A shift on this scale would be smaller than the 700,000-barrel collapse of Venezuelan oil
exports
since last year, and much smaller than the increase in US daily output of 1.1 million barrels projected over the next 12 months, not to mention the probable reduction in global oil demand caused by the sharp increase in prices since last summer.
The Chinese economy remains heavily dependent on exports, which should pick up as growth in other countries recovers.
The EU’s trade significance for Iran is huge, accounting for 40% of Iran’s imports and a quarter of its
exports.
Some two-thirds of Iranian industry, most of it state controlled, relies on German engineering exports, 65% of which in 2005 came with export credit insurance guarantees from the German government.
Without this transition period, British
exports
would come to a temporary standstill in March 2019, because agreements on product safety, labeling, food quality, public procurement, and hundreds of other little-known issues must be negotiated to trade under World Trade Organization rules – and these need to satisfy all 164 members of the WTO.
Unfortunately for the Brexiteers, the effect of these warnings has been counter-productive: instead of triggering an upsurge of preparations, the prospect of aircraft being grounded, hospitals running out of medicines, and
exports
coming to a standstill have made a no-deal Brexit implausible to the point of absurdity and probably discouraged business decision-makers from wasting money preparing for such an unrealistic contingency.
In recent years, the US absorbed half the world’s capital exports, while China provided one-fifth of the total.
While a handful of commodity-rich countries have managed to buck the curse, including Botswana, Chile, and Norway, they have, nevertheless, failed to diversify their economies, remaining dependent on natural resource-based
exports.
On the contrary, creditor countries will benefit from more stable, solvent commercial partners for their
exports.
And, while recovery in the advanced economies boosted exports, persistent overcapacity, combined with slower household-consumption growth than in 2012, caused investment growth, though still rapid, to decline to its lowest rate in the past 11 years.
While this solution would be good for the 45% of British
exports
that are sold in EU markets, it would reduce protection for British industries to zero.
Because the common tariff is at a relatively low level on industrial and fishery products, this might not be an insuperable barrier for UK exports, and it would allow some flexibility in protecting UK companies from imports.
This is vitally important for Britain’s service industries, particularly for the City of London’s
exports
of financial services.
There is no guarantee that the EU would agree to an interim continuation of free trade, and it seems certain that UK
exports
would face higher tariffs than its former EU partners in those third countries (placing British exporters at a competitive disadvantage).
They pointed to the big post-referendum depreciation of the pound, which promised to make British
exports
more competitive and offset any problems with the transition to a new trade regime.
To be sure, the malaise in the United States and Europe is likely to hurt Chinese exports; but, over the long term, China wants to reorient its economy toward domestic consumption.
Sooner or later, the Chinese and Indian central banks' desire to hold down exchange rates to boost
exports
and their rich citizens' desire to keep their money in accounts at Bank of America will be offset by the sheer magnitude of investment opportunities.
At this rate, current oil output and oil
exports
now exceed post-invasion predictions.
Despite massive injections of funds and unprecedented security, insurgents have still managed to halt or reduce oil production and
exports
several times since the invasion.
After all, in its 16 years in power, the party has been unable to tackle the main challenges facing Nigeria: rising unemployment, poor infrastructure, sclerotic social services, and an unstable economy that relies on oil
exports
for 95% of its foreign-exchange revenue.
To this end, Putin used Russia’s energy
exports
to recover gradually the territories lost when the Soviet Union collapsed a generation ago.
Russia is completely dependent, economically and politically, on its commodity and energy exports, which go primarily to Europe.
Assuming that EMU flies, i.e. that the hard core union including Germany, France, the Benelux, Austria and a few more countries - is realized in 1999, Poland, Hungary and Czech Republic will find that nearly half of their
exports
will be with EMU countries.
From 2004 to 2014, Israeli
exports
to Asia tripled, reaching $16.7 billion last year – one-fifth of total
exports.
In an efficient system, this should reduce the price of US goods relative to those of the rest of the world, with US
exports
becoming cheaper than imports.
Say the prices of US imports from Japan are sticky in Japanese yen and the prices of US
exports
to Japan are sticky in dollars.
By enabling monetary expansion, and thus causing the US dollar to depreciate, the logic goes, a floating exchange rate allows the prices of US
exports
to decline relative to its imports.
Almost 100% of US
exports
to Japan are priced in dollars, meaning that they, as in Friedman’s version, are sticky in dollars.
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