External
in sentence
2292 examples of External in a sentence
Meanwhile, a highly interdependent and (now) less dynamic world economy has been limiting the scope for
external
growth drivers.
Governments’ role will be different in countries like China, where officials will guide a shift from dependence on
external
sources of growth to more balanced demand.
If these
external
disadvantages are not debilitating enough, this economy also maintains its own high barriers on international trade (in the form of state trading, import tariffs, and quantitative restrictions).
But, as in other cases of successful development, what distinguishes them is not the
external
advantages they possess, but their ability to exploit these advantages.
And, with all due respect for Annan and Tutu, this is what
external
mediation would amount to – and it would threaten to cripple Spanish democracy.
In leading China’s process of economic “reform and opening-up” from the late 1970s to the early 1990s, Deng explicitly emphasized the importance of a stable
external
environment to facilitate internal economic development.
According to Lesotho’s National AGOA Strategy, the country’s annual garment exports to the US increased from about $129 million in 2001 to $330 million in 2015, representing 80% of total
external
demand for the country’s textiles and garments.
Yes, Argentina’s current-account deficit exceeds 5% of GDP, while Brazil’s
external
position is nearly balanced.
But the real danger to Merkel is external: the European crisis.
After all, the EU has, in general, a liberal trade regime, with low
external
tariffs.
India relies on
external
trade for less than 20% of its GDP; its large and robust internal market accounts for the rest.
The maturity of domestic debt is very short, of
external
debt even shorter.
According to our most recent Regional Economic Outlook for Sub-Saharan Africa, six of the region’s 35 low-income countries (LICs) are in “debt distress,” meaning they are unable to service
external
commitments.
However, the required adjustments have been delayed repeatedly, owing to political constraints, social pressure for much-needed development spending, and favorable
external
financing conditions.
Setting aside the
external
impact on the global economy, the damage to domestic stability and growth from anything other than a short-term technical default would be so severe that the political system (and both parties with it) could not withstand the backlash.
One is reminded of the
external
consternation expressed during the 2008 crisis at the possibility of a default on debt carrying an implicit government guarantee.
Second,
external
holders of US sovereign debt will almost certainly begin to view Treasuries as risky assets and, where possible, to diversify away from them.
The weakness in Latin America’s education systems reinforces a less rosy view of its economic success in recent years – one that attributes strong performance mainly to favorable
external
conditions, not improved productivity.
What saved Argentina over the last decade were highly favorable
external
conditions: sky-high global commodity prices and technological innovations that greatly increased farm yields.
Nevertheless, Europe is reasonably equipped to defend itself against
external
threats.
Several detailed recent calculations provide credible estimates of how much
external
financing developing countries will need to achieve SDG 4.A UNESCO study puts the total at $39.5 billion per year.
A report by the International Commission on Financing Education Opportunity, led by former UK Prime Minister Gordon Brown, similarly put developing countries’
external
financing needs at tens of billions of dollars per year.
External
aid can and should cover the financing gap so that all children can attend school.
If growth in the trade sector boosts that of domestic non-trade sectors, then a fixed exchange rate will not put pressure on the
external
balance of payments as demand for imports rises.
With its huge domestic economy, China would never have been able to accumulate such an enormous
external
surplus if its growth had not been confined to such enterprises.
The Trump administration will also have to deal with the
external
actors involved in Syria.
All of this would be highly destabilizing, particularly for emerging economies like Brazil that are facing a brutal combination of internal and
external
challenges.
But the scientific enterprise is under threat from both
external
and internal forces.
But will this do enough to stem the slowdown in an economy that has become hooked on
external
demand in recent years?
The buildup of assets associated with
external
surpluses, together with continuing export strength, looked like a guarantee of their currencies.
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