Industrial
in sentence
2197 examples of Industrial in a sentence
For them it will be just another instance of having to bear the costs of policy mistakes made in the advanced
industrial
countries, another instance of globalization gone awry.
Apart from a six-month period after the September 2008 collapse of Lehman Brothers, in which trade finance stopped and the world did look as if it was close to Great Depression circumstances, China and other emerging markets helped those export-oriented
industrial
economies to recover.
The Global Nuclear Energy Partnership, clean coal development through FutureGen, and
industrial
efficiency audits represent some of the most productive areas of ongoing cooperation.
But neither country can protect its way to prosperity: protectionism harms China’s
industrial
development and our efforts to build stronger trading relationships.
The prosperity of the first age of globalization before 1914, for example, resulted from a successful constellation of developments: falling transport and communication costs, the technological breakthroughs of the second
industrial
revolution, the pacific state of international relations, and Great Britain’s successful management of the gold standard.
Economic developments in the region are promising, with almost all its economies posting high growth, fueled by increasing
industrial
output and exports.
Indeed, the conventional wisdom – supported by many painful experiences – was that when the
industrial
countries sneezed, the emerging world caught a cold.
Such
industrial
mismatches become larger during recessions, reflecting greater churn in the labor market as workers move between shrinking and expanding sectors; but they decline as the economy recovers.
The prospect of falling prices reflects the collapse of
industrial
production, the resulting high level of unemployment, and the dramatic decline in commodity prices.
Industrial
production is falling at double-digit rates in the negative-inflation countries, and the price index for all commodities is down more than 30% over the past year.
Another fundamental communist tenet has been the concentration of
industrial
production in a small number of gigantic monopolistic enterprises.
On the contrary, they had a uniquely competitive
industrial
structure.
And, with Americans facing a debt overhang, rapidly increasing unemployment (and the worst unemployment compensation system among major
industrial
countries), and falling asset prices, they are likely to save much of the tax cut.
The loss of settled EU arrangements would be balanced by the chance for Britain to rediscover its own way, not least in fiscal and
industrial
policy.
Such polymers are tested to biodegrade, but only in the particular conditions found in
industrial
composting.
Because the debts of the large
industrial
borrowers – the UK and the US – are externally financed, the argument that their governments can always monetize debt is not convincing.
Indeed, no private-equity fortunes were made over the past generation without investing in or trading with the prosperous North Atlantic
industrial
core of the world economy.
Whereas the US and Europe approach development from a poverty-reduction and good governance standpoint, China places a higher priority on supporting infrastructure development as part of its
industrial
policy.
Unlike older
industrial
robots, newer technologies can interact safely and efficiently with humans, who sometimes need to train them and will increasingly have to work seamlessly with algorithms and machines.
The build-up of public debt in
industrial
countries (which was rising briskly well before the Great Recession pushed it to near-unsustainable levels) reflects this kind of calculus.
Democratic institutions in
industrial
countries are stronger, and have deeper roots, than was the case in the 1930s.
In the 1990’s, these ex-communist countries had to face temporary income slumps as most of their
industrial
production became virtually made obsolete overnight.
The European integration process – aimed at overcoming Franco-German enmity and reconciling West Germany’s
industrial
potential with European stability (and thus, under the US and NATO security umbrella, excluding the recurrence of war in Europe) – was marginal to its concerns.
Germany’s success in retaining its
industrial
base contradicts rich countries’ standard practice of outsourcing manufacturing to locations with lower labor costs.
The second feature of the German model is its “social market economy,” best reflected in its unique system of
industrial
“co-determination.”
Mexican governance is undermined not only by narco-traffickers (who have gained a stranglehold on some Mexican states), but by
industrial
and business cartels, as well as other entrenched interests which have impeded implementation of reforms even after they become law.
The basic lessons of US success should be recognized: macroeconomic stability; budgetary prudence; global trade, competition and de-monopolization in telecommunications and finance; and an active
industrial
policy geared towards a knowledge-based economy, building upon science, research and development, information technology, and higher education.
China’s Vicious Growth CircleLONDON – Most economists have a reason to be worried about China’s economy – whether it be low consumption and large external surpluses,
industrial
overcapacity, environmental degradation, or government interventions like capital controls or financial repression.
Today, China’s proclivity for
industrial
production is manifested in large-scale manufacturing and infrastructure projects, encouraged by direct and indirect government subsidies.
The problem is that rapid labor-productivity growth in the
industrial
sector – more than 10% per year over the last two decades – is reducing the need to hire more workers.
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