Industrialized
in sentence
62 examples of Industrialized in a sentence
A few recently
industrialized
countries have pursued successful government-driven education strategies that seem to boost economic development.
Thanks to export markets, South Korea
industrialized
exceptionally rapidly.
Easing restrictions on migration would allow young people from developing countries to expand
industrialized
economies’ diminishing workforces – and generate the taxes needed to pay for care for the elderly.
For example, in India, the cities of Bangalore and Mumbai might become enclaves comparable in attitude and achievement to the world's rich
industrialized
countries, capable of leading their respective states, Karnataka and Maharashtra, toward prosperity.
Industrialized
nations have developed and made great use of nuclear, solar, wind, and bio-gas, and other renewable energy resources.
There is the wall between those states that are already
industrialized
and those that do not want to be held back in their economic development.
Globalization is enabling economies that are not yet fully
industrialized
to reap the benefits of industrialization and become integrated into global markets – a trend that has redefined the global division of labor and transformed value chains.
Through it, the world’s main
industrialized
and emerging countries have worked together toward constructing a shared global order that can deliver increasing prosperity.
Emerging-market economies have not only cushioned the global impact of the recent crisis, but have also helped
industrialized
countries reverse the recessionary trend of 2008-2009.
Some countries responded by doing nothing, but many, including
industrialized
countries like Japan and Switzerland, intervened heavily in currency markets.
As a result, by the middle of the twentieth century, the extreme social and economic inequality that had characterized
industrialized
countries seemed to be disappearing.
In only a few years, more than 90% of agricultural land was collectivized and
industrialized.
While much lower than previously, it is higher than in most
industrialized
nations.
For
industrialized
countries, carbon credits have proved to be an easy way to meet their international commitments under agreements like the Kyoto Protocol.
Moreover, many high-income newly
industrialized
economies (NIEs) with few structural problems were not spared the effects of the 2008 crisis.
Unlike Transnistria or Abkhazia, Donbas is heavily
industrialized
and dependent on subsidies; its infrastructure is devastated; and its businesses are largely owned by oligarchs, who have fled to Kyiv, London, or Paris, rather than Moscow, to escape the conflict.
Stark realities in
industrialized
countries – such as the impact of aging populations on tax-based and employer-funded health-care models – are leading governments to adopt regulatory regimes that demand more economical, value-based, and transparent drug pricing.
Without such targets, the international community will not take the necessary action to address climate change, and developing countries will not have confidence that
industrialized
countries are willing to take the lead on solving a problem that they caused.
For example,
industrialized
countries have suggested auctioning emission rights and using part of the revenue for international cooperation – something that Germany is already doing.
Large, dynamic emerging-market economies (particularly Brazil, Russia, India, China, and South Africa) that have
industrialized
quickly offer unprecedented opportunities for other developing economies to emulate their success – and thus to jumpstart their own industrialization processes.
For a decade or more, the grouping of Brazil, Russia, India, China, and recently South Africa has been a major feature of world politics, challenging the might and influence of
industrialized
Europe and America.
To be sure, fossil fuels conferred enormous benefits on the Western world as it
industrialized
over the past 200 years.
Asia’s developing and newly
industrialized
economies grew at an 8.5% average annual rate over 2010-11 – nearly triple the 3% growth elsewhere in the world.
By 2035, China expects its economy to be fully
industrialized.
The question now concerns the degree to which this increase reflected rising productivity and prosperity – as did comparable gains in newly
industrialized
economies like Japan, Hong Kong, Taiwan, and Korea – rather than speculation motivated by easy credit.
And, third, financial flows to developing countries – both official development assistance and foreign direct investment – must rise, and must come not only from
industrialized
economies, but also from emerging and oil-exporting countries.
But America’s ongoing trade deficits with highly
industrialized
countries, particularly in Asia, are accelerating de-industrialization in the US, while providing fodder for American protectionists.
Geopolitically, the benefits would similarly obvious, as the ability of major oil exporters to blackmail
industrialized
countries would be significantly reduced.
Instead, the WTO has largely benefited its chief architects, namely, countries that had already
industrialized
or were otherwise in positions of strength.
As carbon dioxide emissions from larger, wealthier
industrialized
countries continue to warm the planet, rising sea levels claim these islands’ territory.
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