Goods
in sentence
3286 examples of Goods in a sentence
The resulting excess supply of goods, services, and labor would cause inflation to fall.
It is the well- educated who can get the best jobs – and thus earn the money to buy the kinds of
goods
and services that they and their fellows produce.
This is important because it illustrates the dissimilar regional impact that trade with China has on Latin America and the Carribean, owing to the export of South America’s basic goods, coupled with the growth of Chinese imports into Mexico.
With respect to other goods, including computers, Chinese-made products are set to replace Mexican output in overwhelming numbers.
The same holds true today, when countries, doing what they do best, produce more and exchange it for more of all other
goods.
First, because they issue the world’s main reserve currencies, the advanced economies get to exchange bits of paper that they printed for
goods
and services produced by others.
While commodity prices are always more variable than those for manufactured
goods
and services, commodity markets over the last five years have seen extraordinary, almost unprecedented, volatility.
US President Donald Trump’s recently announced import tariffs on steel, aluminum, and other Chinese-made
goods
are in keeping with his brand of economic nationalism.
In any case, exports of
goods
to the EU generate only about 6% of the UK’s GDP.
Yet another reason why the introduction of some low trade barriers is unlikely to produce large losses is that the differences in the cost of producing
goods
in one market or the other are small.
This means that the barriers that EU negotiators are in a position to impose – which largely affect trade in
goods
– are likely to have a much smaller impact than the UK-imposed barriers, such as quotas on EU workers.
Negotiators must focus on minimizing new barriers to the free movement of labor; indeed, this should be an even higher priority than maintaining the free movement of
goods.
Liberals, meanwhile, advocate the free movement of goods, people, and information, whereas a nationalist politics seeks to restrict all three.
Since human history may be only just beginning, we can expect that future humans, or supra-humans, may achieve some great
goods
that we cannot now even imagine.
For example, even China has been a major beneficiary of the public
goods
provided by the US-led hierarchical system.
That is clearly reflected in the difference between the -0.2% annual inflation rate for
goods
and the 2.5% rate for services (over the past 12 months).
A globalized world, with one country’s goods, capital, and pollution flowing into another, will inevitably need common norms and laws.
Indeed, such measures are crucial in the long term, because if BPO makes developing countries better off, their demand for
goods
and services will grow.
A first “must” for an exporting superpower is to establish clear and stable trade arrangements with other countries, so that firms can produce
goods
and services collaboratively across borders.
Exporting services can be much more complicated than exporting
goods.
That prospect rapidly drove down the euro’s exchange rate, enhancing the international competitiveness of European
goods.
As long as the world's (economically) advanced countries maintain this attitude, innovative approaches to financing economic development - and global public
goods
more generally - need to be tested.
The money would be given to developing countries to finance their development programs as well as global public
goods
like environmental projects, health initiatives, humanitarian assistance, and so on.
A country with reserves of the new global money could exchange it for hard currencies to sustain needed food imports or other
goods.
Relative to today's levels of spending on official development assistance and global public goods, however, the amounts are enormous.
The scheme also provides regular funding, not currently available, to finance global public
goods.
This much is clear: addressing the plight of the world's poorest countries and providing the global public
goods
needed in this age of globalization requires us to explore innovative ways of raising the necessary financing.
If one accounts for consumer
goods
expenditure on imports, that 10% appreciation would lower inflation, as measured by the consumer price index (CPI), by just 0.5 percentage points in the first two quarters.
The estimated price pass-through for imported manufactured goods, which would better represent what enters the consumption bundle, is even lower than that for all non-fuel imports.
These are not space-age technologies, but staple
goods
that the world needs.
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