Industrial
in sentence
2197 examples of Industrial in a sentence
Likewise, the emphasis on markets’ “decisive role” in upgrading China’s
industrial
structure and eliminating excess capacity is compatible with the Third Plenum’s goal of achieving a market-based shift to a consumer society.
Most Indian farmers will benefit from greater access to irrigation, but if this means building more ill-conceived dams and pursuing large-scale projects, the result will be more water for
industrial
agriculture, more damage to India’s damaged environment, and little improvement for poor farmers.
They make it harder for developing countries to access technology, manage volatile capital flows, and diversify their economies through
industrial
policies.
Although developing countries are the primary sites of the world’s most threatening population problems, the wealthy
industrial
countries face some rather vexing problems of their own.
Every year, humans generate about two billion tons of household waste, and much more industrial, hazardous, electronic, medical, and construction waste, much of which is disposed of inadequately.
The aim here is to encourage the transfer of production capacity to other countries, in order to strengthen the “global
industrial
chain” in mutually beneficial ways.
The first
industrial
revolution so reduced the cost of textiles that it led to a boom in demand, production, and employment.
The outcome at CITES has brought into sharp relief increasing tensions between
industrial
and environmental interests, as if these were diametrically opposed.
Should this continue, perhaps bringing a de facto end to the Maastricht criteria and rising national protectionism in the form of
industrial
subsidies, the euro will be seriously jeopardized.
Public funding of basic research and
industrial
investments are both needed to achieve long-term technological development.
Fiscal and monetary policies had focused on boosting
industrial
growth, without regard to macroeconomic balance, resulting in chronically excessive demand and widespread shortages.
Across
industrial
countries, there has been a slowdown in productivity growth – and therefore in overall economic growth – which now appears to have started around the year 2000.
The Sherman Act itself did not change this situation overnight, but, once President Theodore Roosevelt decided to take up the cause, it became a powerful tool that could be used to break up
industrial
and transportation monopolies.
But then the country built an
industrial
park near Addis Ababa and invited the Chinese shoemaker Huajian to open a factory there.
In 2013, spurred by Huajian's success, the Ethiopian government created a new
industrial
park, with space for 22 factory units.
The World Bank has provided $250 million to support the continued construction of these
industrial
parks.
In the 1970s, the government set up
industrial
parks to process textiles and garments for export.
At the time, most of the owners were from Taiwan or Hong Kong; today, more than 70% of the island's
industrial
companies are locally owned.
For example, instead of investing heavily in the infrastructure needed for regional integration, a country like Ethiopia would be better off building
industrial
parks and linking them by road to ports in Djibouti.
As a consequence, the boldest new experiments in employee ownership - United Airlines, privatized Russian firms, even Air France - seem likely to serve only as temporary expedients in
industrial
restructuring.
We may see some compromise between European (Sarkozy-style) capitalism and an authoritarian, protectionist model with a lot of
industrial
policy.
Allocating clean water, for example, to those able to pay the most for it results in situations where
industrial
applications win out over individual needs, leaving many with none.
The necessary reductions imply a rapid and radical transformation of industrial, energy, and land-use systems around the world.
Indeed, in the United States, the Dow Jones
industrial
average reached an all-time high in early March, having risen by close to 9% since September.
Germany had surpassed Britain in
industrial
production by 1900.
The exception has been China’s dramatic stimulus measures, which, being
industrial
policies, will be a source of severe trouble in the future.
After regaining its independence from the Soviet Union, only remnants of the
industrial
behemoths of the communist era remained.
Second, between 1750 and 1975, income distribution also widened globally, as some parts of the world realized gains from
industrial
and post-industrial technologies, while others did not.
Thatcher’s reforms reinvigorated the private sector, promoted home ownership, lowered taxes on enterprise, deregulated large parts of the economy, and reined in the unions’ power to use their
industrial
muscle.
The most obvious and dangerous consequence of low interest rates in the major
industrial
countries is their impact on commodity prices, which is especially pronounced for food and fuel.
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