Industrialized
in sentence
62 examples of Industrialized in a sentence
It takes 10 calories of fossil fuel energy in our highly
industrialized
food system in order to produce one calorie of food energy.
And many of these chemicals are now linked to the skyrocketing incidents of chronic childhood disease that we're seeing across
industrialized
nations.
Then in my late 20s, I shifted to the sprawling metropolis of Mumbai, and my framework, like the newly
industrialized
aspirational humanity, began to alter.
And the decimation of sleep throughout
industrialized
nations is having a catastrophic impact on our health, our wellness, even the safety and the education of our children.
And so in many greenhouses,
industrialized
greenhouses, they add CO2 because the plants turn that into plant matter.
And in 1962, there was really a group of countries here that were
industrialized
countries, and they had small families and long lives.
In fact, it's so massively rich that it can contain the four other top
industrialized
nations' economies inside itself, it's so vastly rich.
By the time this movie was made Women's issues were alive in the media of all
industrialized
nations ... This movie was meant to shock and shock it does.
as Kurosawa's High And Low showed the best and worst of Japanese society in the early 60s, this film shows the potential of a country that was newly industrialized, but still coping with the changes of capitalism and being humiliated by world war II.
Since the end of WWII the state played an increasing role in maintaining economic stability, striving to ensure equality of opportunity, and providing a social safety net, particularly in the highly
industrialized
countries of Europe and North America.
But then fortunes rapidly diverged, with a few Western
industrialized
countries quickly achieving political and economic dominance worldwide.
With technological breakthroughs in electronic communication and increasing bandwidth, many jobs that were done in
industrialized
nations, but that did not require face-to-face interaction, can now be moved to poorer countries, which have cheap labor, an educated workforce, and high rates of computer literacy.
If BPO were stopped,
industrialized
nations—and their workers—would be worse off in absolute terms.
The newly
industrialized
city of Manchester, which horrified Friedrich Engels when he worked there in the 1840s, had the highest level of labor productivity the world had ever seen.
Moreover, investment rates in the newly
industrialized
economies of Asia have never recovered to their pre-1997-8 crisis levels, and investment rates in the rest of Asia outside China have fallen off as well.
“We are feeling climate change’s fast-growing impact now,” said India’s Prime Minister Narendra Modi, pointing to Chennai and calling upon
industrialized
countries to do more to mitigate global warming.
Real GDP in South Korea – long considered the darling of Asia’s newly
industrialized
economies – contracted by 5.7% that year.
Last year, ADB economist Juzhong Zhuang highlighted the contrast between the “growth with equity” that characterized the transformation of the newly
industrialized
economies in the 1960’s-1970’s and recent experience.
As the world
industrialized
and filled up with people, the flow of people from developed to developing areas reversed.
Aside from Antarctica, Africa is the only continent that has not
industrialized.
In the Doha trade negotiations,
industrialized
nations accepted the need to liberalize their agricultural markets by reducing subsidies to domestic producers and tariff barriers on agricultural imports.
A World of UnderinvestmentMILAN – When World War II ended 70 years ago, much of the world – including
industrialized
Europe, Japan, and other countries that had been occupied – was left geopolitically riven and burdened by heavy sovereign debt, with many major economies in ruins.
To be “developed” means to be
industrialized
and urbanized.
In the rich
industrialized
countries, after an era of cynical and short-sighted profit-maximizing behavior, we may be at the dawn of a new age of modesty and sustainability.
In response to the crisis of 2007-2009, governments in most
industrialized
countries put in place some of the most generous bailouts ever seen for large financial institutions.
If the older
industrialized
countries caused the problem, it seems reasonable to ask them to do the most to fix it.
A 2007 study, commissioned for a United Nations forum, showed a “pervasive” pattern: over the last four decades, nearly all of the so-called developed,
industrialized
democracies have been experiencing a decrease in the public trust in government.
Developing countries have begun sharing in these gains: responsible for next-to-none of the world’s fertilizer consumption in 1960, by 2000 they used more than
industrialized
countries.
As globalization of financial markets and the emergence of newly
industrialized
countries fueled demand for credit, the anti-inflationary monetary policies implemented in the early 1980s restricted its supply.
Moreover, US policymakers must find ways to limit health-care costs, bringing them in line with costs in other rich
industrialized
countries.
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