Gains
in sentence
1773 examples of Gains in a sentence
Regional free-trade agreements (FTAs), such as the TTIP, do so as well, but some of the
gains
may come at the expense of other trade partners.
Within each country, despite net gains, there are also some losers.
The
gains
from such pacts stem from a variety of factors, the most important of which is comparative advantage: countries specialize in producing the goods and services that they are relatively most efficient at producing, and trade these goods and services for others.
Estimates of the annual
gains
from a fully realized TTIP are $160 billion for the EU and $128 billion for the US.
Tariffs are generally modest already, so
gains
from their further reduction would be modest as well.
Adapting the JLN model to support officials of national education ministries could produce comparable
gains
in education in many countries.
The result is often a wage-price spiral that quickly offsets the competitiveness
gains
of a weaker currency.
Capital flows into Europe and major emerging economies picked up, as investors sought to benefit from the expansion, while enjoying both higher yields and the possibility of capital
gains
from currency moves.
This includes, first and foremost, pro-growth policies, particularly for Europe, which, despite recent economic gains, faces significant structural headwinds.
Migration quotas should be preferred to other types of restrictions on the ground that they allow at least a part of the potential welfare
gains
from migration to be realized.
The conventional wisdom still stands: underlying Trump’s election was the median household’s perception that it had been left behind by globalization and technological change, with the
gains
from those developments having gone to the rich instead.
Given existing inequality, the absolute income gain to the rich will be greater - much greater - than the
gains
to the poor.
In economies where poor people tend to be illiterate, sick, hard to reach and/or marginalized socially, they have less chance of sharing in the
gains
from growth than in an economy in which such debilities are less severe.
One side smoothes over the diversity in country experiences; the other often ignores the averages, and focuses instead on cases in which high or rising inequality dulls the
gains
to the poor from growth.
Yet the evidence is compelling that, on average, the
gains
to the poor from growth outweigh the losses.
With inequality also growing, many French are rightly upset that labor is taxed much more than capital
gains.
But in the long term, the reforms now underway will deliver economic, political, and social
gains
to the country – and to any others that emulate them.
Gains
from international trade deliver big increases in national income to the trading partners.
Although Mexico exports more than all other Latin American countries combined, its export sectors’ efficiency
gains
have been offset by policies that systematically funnel resources toward low-productivity firms with non-salaried workers.
But, according to the TFT strategy, the other player would then also defect, creating losses that, whether immediately or over time, would offset whatever
gains
you had secured.
Research by Surabhi Mittal of TARINA (Technical Assistance and Research for Indian Nutrition and Agriculture) shows that this would generate yield
gains
of 10%, creating benefits worth as much as 20 times the costs.
Half of all welfare
gains
from 1960 to 2000 come from us living longer, healthier lives.
On balance, the economic case is strong, and the political case is compelling, with potential
gains
far outweighing any pitfalls.
The Common Market was defended at the outset in terms of the
gains
that would follow from increased trade.
While the West, which much prefers the Kurds to ISIS, welcomes Kurdish gains, Turkey is watching them with anxiety, convinced that they prefigure a bid for Kurdish independence.
Although some of the losses may have resulted from productivity
gains
from information technology and digitization, many occurred when companies shifted segments of their supply chains to other parts of the global economy, particularly China.
Unfortunately for advanced economies, the
gains
in per capita value added in the tradable sector were not large enough to overcome the effect of moving labor from manufacturing jobs to non-tradable service jobs (many of which existed only because of credit-fueled domestic demand in the halcyon days before 2008).
Hence the muted overall productivity
gains.
The European Parliament election in May shocked Europe’s elites, as parties of the far right, assorted euroskeptics, and even leftists made strong
gains
in many countries, fueled in part by popular frustration with the European Commission’s concentration of power.
For years, with the authorities’ encouragement (or at least acquiescence), China’s securities companies spared no effort in pumping up China’s stock exchanges with fashionable financial instruments and practices, the sole aim being to realize capital
gains
from rising prices (dividends are rarely distributed).
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