Industrial
in sentence
2197 examples of Industrial in a sentence
Neither does it preclude the use of activist trade and
industrial
policies in pursuit of economic restructuring.
There are highly successful large
industrial
enterprises, most of them politically well connected, and tiny mom-and-pop businesses that are vestiges of a lost country.
Already, China is pursuing a similar regional development strategy, aimed at revitalizing its old northern
industrial
belt, thereby taking some of the pressure off its ultra-dynamic coastal cities.
Of course, the US is much larger than England, and its old
industrial
cities are much farther apart.
The science of robotics is revolutionizing manufacturing; every year, an additional 200,000
industrial
robots come into use.
According to Jeremy Rifkin, the strategy’s main architect,
industrial
revolutions are driven by the convergence of changes in the type and availability of energy and in how people connect and share information.
These countries have domesticated the relevant technologies and adapted them to a developing-country context (balancing energy access for the poor with power for
industrial
growth and wealth creation).
This must include incentives to stimulate private-sector investment – especially in new, environmentally-friendly technologies and labor-intensive economic activities – and collaborative
industrial
policy to strengthen economic diversification in developing countries.
At the core of the agreement concluded by Juncker and Trump was the understanding that the European Union and the United States will “work together toward zero tariffs, zero non-tariff barriers, and zero subsidies on non-auto
industrial
goods,” with no new trade barriers in the meantime.
Given the myriad special interests that such a deal would mobilize, it is highly unlikely that any trade agreement – even one limited to
industrial
products – will materialize any time soon.
The agricultural revolution, the
industrial
revolution, the technology revolution, all provided enormous opportunity and government played a key role in each, by reacting quickly to put the policy structures in place to support those changes.
With a clear commitment to the low-carbon
industrial
revolution, businesses around the world, large or small, can compete with confidence, invest with certainty, and drive the scale and innovation necessary to make the changes we need to make.
With these three straightforward principles at its core, a global deal signed in Copenhagen can fire the starting pistol for the new
industrial
revolution, the low-carbon revolution, creating significant growth, job creation and economic development throughout the world.
For example, the 2015 agreement between China and the US to limit
industrial
cyber espionage was a bilateral accord that was later taken up by the G20.
Obama and his congressional allies enacted an $800 billion “stimulus” bill that was loaded with programs geared to key Democratic constituencies, such as environmentalists and public employees; adopted a sweeping and highly unpopular health-care reform (whose constitutionality will be determined by the Supreme Court this year); imposed vast new regulations on wide swaths of the economy; embraced an
industrial
policy that selects certain companies for special treatment; engaged in borrowing and spending at levels exceeded only in World War II; and centralized power in Washington, DC (and, within the federal government, in the executive branch and regulatory agencies).
The roots of America’s “environmental movement” lie in the nineteenth century, when the damage wrought by the
industrial
revolution and the fragmentation of the natural landscape by individual property rights and tenures first became apparent.
Indeed, even firms in advanced
industrial
countries that have not received a subsidy are at an unfair advantage.
Does he want to extract concessions from the EU in all
industrial
sectors in which US firms are lagging?
While Merkel opposes Hollande’s proposal to create Eurobonds with a view to financing
industrial
projects, they cannot afford to waste time in reassuring jittery markets with a message of cohesion.
The only significant exception to these trends is China, which has designed
industrial
policies specifically to increase the share of domestic value-added and to improve workers’ conditions.
Are the international scientific community and the IAEA really incapable of providing indicators and criteria that would allow the international community to differentiate between two types of
industrial
operations?
Even if Microsoft on occasion may have engaged in some sharp competitive practices, the EU’s competition authorities have not been content with slapping its wrists, but got involved in deeply intrusive remedies, including the unbundling of a media player from Microsoft’s operating system and mandating disclosure of
industrial
secrets embodied in Microsoft’s server software.
The swamp is close to the city center and its
industrial
center, and there is a land shortage in Kampala.
When
industrial
factories were introduced in Europe in the nineteenth century, even staunch critics of capitalism such as Friedrich Engels acknowledged that mass production necessitated centralized authority, regardless of whether the economic system was capitalist or socialist.
Such large-scale lending might cut a generation off the time it would take economies where people were poor to converge with the
industrial
structures and living standards of rich countries.
More recently, in the early 1980’s, the International Monetary Fund and the central banks in the big
industrial
countries teamed up to pressure banks into extending more credit to the big Latin American debtor countries.
On the other hand, because it required significant and expensive short-run cuts in emissions by
industrial
countries, it threatened to impose large immediate costs on the American, European, and Japanese economies.
First, the world’s
industrial
core must create incentives for the developing world to industrialize along an environmentally-friendly, C02- and CH4-light, path.
Second, the world’s
industrial
core must create incentives for its energy industries to undertake the investments in new technologies that will move us by mid-century to an economic structure that is light on carbon emissions and heavy on carbon sequestration.
The number of potential targets for attack, by both private and state actors, will expand dramatically, and include everything from
industrial
control systems to heart pacemakers and self-driving cars.
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