Industrial
in sentence
2197 examples of Industrial in a sentence
China’s huge
industrial
overcapacity and property glut needs to be wound down; the hubris driving its global acquisitions must be reined in; and its corruption networks have to be dismantled.
A tripartite system of big, closely held corporations, big
industrial
unions and government mediate conflicts and block changes through barriers to entry, control over licenses and standards, sway over big banks, golden shares and, in some countries, state ownership of key enterprises.
We will also need “efforts” and “gestures” directed toward the one-third of people under 30 and the nearly one-half of
industrial
and service workers who are said to have expressed their “frustration” and “anxiety” by voting for the FN.
Thus, the coming technological transformation won’t entail occupational shifts on the scale of the
Industrial
Revolution, with its wholesale redistribution of labor between the agricultural and
industrial
sectors.
Germany’s Pathological Export BoomGermany is the world’s
industrial
bazaar.
No other country can offer its international clients such a broad variety of
industrial
products.
In fact, since the fall of communism, the percentage decline in German
industrial
employment has been larger than in any other OECD country.
Malaria further obstructs travel,
industrial
activities, commerce and tourism.
The so-called Section 301 trade investigation launched by President Donald Trump’s administration last year charged that China’s trade and
industrial
policies, which provide advantages to specific technology industries, violate both US and international trade law.
Proposed bipartisan legislation to expand the jurisdiction of the Committee on Foreign Investment in the US (which reviews mergers and acquisitions of domestic companies by foreign entities) to a broader range of investments – including Chinese venture capital and private-equity investments in US start-ups – is consistent with this recommendation.The PCAST report acknowledges that the US cannot stop China from pursuing
industrial
policies to build its advanced technology industries.
After all, in the nineteenth century, many countries, including the US, used such policies to build their
industrial
bases.
The challenge for US policy is to ensure that Chinese policies comply with WTO rules, including the requirement to notify other countries of subsidy programs and the prohibition of zero-sum tactics like IP theft, forced technology transfer, and discriminatory procurement practices.Finally, the PCAST report underscores the need for the US to respond to China’s challenge in semiconductors with an
industrial
policy of its own.
The PCAST report acknowledges that the US cannot stop China from pursuing
industrial
policies to build its advanced technology industries.
Finally, the PCAST report underscores the need for the US to respond to China’s challenge in semiconductors with an
industrial
policy of its own.
Another reason is that many of the manufacturing opportunities in Africa happen to be in globally competitive sectors such as automobiles and transport equipment, refined petroleum, computers, and office and
industrial
machinery.
And, after China, India looms as the next emerging coal-based
industrial
superpower.
But rising CO2 emissions constitute what is really happening on the ground: a rapidly growing
industrial
base in emerging markets is being hard-wired to intensive use of coal.
By underwriting the development of our
industrial
society and the coal that has powered it, the insurance industry was one of the
Industrial
Revolution’s crucial but often overlooked enablers.
But the lion’s share of this
industrial
haze – like the growing pollution of its coastal waters – is a direct result of the rapid industrialization of the Pearl River Delta across the border in China’s Guangdong Province.
This can be done by refitting households with high-efficiency light bulbs and other technological improvements, and by retrofitting
industrial
plants with energy-saving technologies.
Neo-Liberalism Meets Neo-ConfucianismThe West has dominated the world ever since the
industrial
revolution.
Since Confucianism was essentially an agnostic ideology, concerned with the management of the visible world, the post-Confucians experienced little of the spiritual angst that afflicted Hindus, Muslims, and Christians in their collision with the “materialism” of
industrial
society.
Both decisions acknowledge that the current rules of the international economic game reflect the interests of the advanced
industrial
countries – especially of their big corporations – more than the interests of the developing world.
Intellectual property is important, but the appropriate intellectual-property regime for a developing country is different from that for an advanced
industrial
country.
Economic growth results from increases in labor productivity caused by technological advance and
industrial
upgrading.
Those who predict a slowdown in China are correct to look at its per capita GDP, which is a reflection of a country’s average labor productivity and thus the level of its technical and
industrial
advancement.
While a person in Europe or North America uses 11,000 kWh per year on average (much of it through
industrial
processes), a person in Sub-Sahara Africa uses only 137kWh – less than a typical American refrigerator uses in four months.
These funds could then be reinvested into better infrastructure – such as port construction, improved cold storage, and modern processing facilities – to support our artisanal and
industrial
fishing fleets.
Second, targeted
industrial
policy would create the demand for those workers and their newly acquired skills.
The recent downturn in France’s
industrial
output has created large trade deficits, and is undermining the competitiveness of small and medium-size enterprises.
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