Industrial
in sentence
2197 examples of Industrial in a sentence
Today, many blame today's alarming economic conditions in the world's
industrial
core--more than a decade of stagnation in Japan, deflation there and in Germany, recession in Germany--on other bad decisions.
The deflation that threatens Japan, Europe, and perhaps the US with the prospect of a long period of large gaps between potential and actual output is a natural failure of the semi-Monetarist orthodoxy that governed macroeconomic policy in the world's
industrial
core since the early 1980's.
Czechoslovakia's impressive
industrial
capacity and human resources were placed fully at the service of Hitler's war machine.
During Soviet times, Byelorussia was an “assembling room” of Soviet
industrial
production.
The two crises have created immense human suffering worldwide: thousands of families have lost loved ones in wars, and the financial crisis has taken people’s jobs, livelihoods, assets, pensions, and dreams, as well as worsening fiscal and debt conditions in most
industrial
countries.
In addition to restructuring the financial sector, recovery programs in the US, the United Kingdom, and other
industrial
countries hardest hit by the financial crisis must include relief for home and business owners, and job creation through infrastructure projects, clean-energy technologies, and improvements in healthcare and education.
While programs in
industrial
and emerging economies aimed at addressing the financial crisis have been broadly debated at the national and international level, the debate about Afghanistan and Iraq has been narrowly focused on military and security issues, undermining the need for a major effort at effective reconstruction.
Even as late as 1950 – more than a half-century after the US had replaced Britain as the world’s largest
industrial
power – 55% of foreign-exchange reserves were held in sterling, and many countries continued to peg their currencies to it.
Many of our Asian partners have been successful in developing their
industrial
base, something that African countries seek to do as well.
In building ties with Asia, African governments have an opportunity to learn from the region’s economic success stories, while boosting their own countries’
industrial
development.
These investments represent a long-term commitment, and Africa benefits in many ways, gaining not only jobs today, but also a more advanced
industrial
base that will underpin employment and drive economic growth long into the future.
But
industrial
activity changes within countries all the time, and creates local- and regional-level challenges.
Such practices, he argued, would lead to inefficiently high levels of
industrial
mobility, because corporations would pursue profits wherever they could, regardless of the impact on individual communities.
French Finance Minister Christine Lagarde recently highlighted the necessity of promoting “initiatives within
industrial
sectors that aim to enhance governance, integrity, and transparency in economic transactions.”
Chinese and Russian hackers routinely penetrate secure
industrial
and government networks in the US and Europe.
Every the
industrial
nation that has not ratified the Kyoto protocol, first and foremost the United States, has been criticized for being “environmentally irresponsible.”
In defining what it means to be ‘European', a crucial task is to reflect upon the double-edged nature of what we have gavin the world, to realize that Europe not only taught the world about human rights, but also introduced the Holocaust; that we generated spiritual impulses not only for the
industrial
and information revolutions, but also to plunder and contaminate nature; that we incited the advance of science and technology, but also ruthlessly ousted essential human experiences forged over several millenniums.
Its advisory role renders the IMF vulnerable to criticism by developing countries that the
industrial
world does not heed its advice.
Driven by the momentum of trends in employment,
industrial
production, consumer sentiment, and corporate earnings, the case for sound fundamentals plays like a broken record during periods of financial market volatility.
The traditional drivers of its economy – a vast pool of surplus labor and massive investments in infrastructure, housing, and
industrial
capacity – are becoming exhausted.
Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad has said that Iran wants to develop uranium enrichment technology for
industrial
use.
If as some argue Iran is being disingenuous, then once it achieves this first phase – uranium enrichment for
industrial
purposes – it can easily slide into weapons-grade enrichment, leaving the international community out in the cold, with no channels of communication, no observation teams in place, and no monitors ready to sound the whistle.
But the international community must be more respectful of Iran’s current
industrial
aims if it wants Iranian cooperation.
Eight years after the 2008 financial crisis,
industrial
production is still down by 25% from pre-crisis levels, and youth unemployment is hovering at more than 40%.
Rapid population growth, a dramatic increase in water consumption due to industrial, agricultural, and tourism growth, and rising standards of living will make the water issue even more important to the region’s political stability than it is already.
We are also starting to see the macro-level impact of certain productivity revolutions – particularly in the energy and technology sectors – that, so far, have mainly been
industrial
and sectoral phenomena.
Thatcher’s answers to the growing
industrial
disorder of the 1970’s were “monetarism” to liquidate inflation, legal curbs on trade-union power, and privatization of bloated state-owned industries – “selling off the family silver” as former Conservative Prime Minister Harold Macmillan called it.
For those growing up in the
industrial
north, Thatcherism foreclosed the future.
China is now navigating a complex economic transition that involves three sometimes-conflicting objectives: creating a market-based consumer economy; reforming the financial system; and ensuring an orderly slowdown that avoids the economic collapse often accompanying
industrial
restructuring and financial liberalization.
But doing so could cost Democrats dearly in old
industrial
states like Pennsylvania, Ohio, and Michigan, where the arrival of Mexican migrants, transformed into immigrants, has stoked passions.
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