Industries
in sentence
1758 examples of Industries in a sentence
Restructuring companies and
industries
takes time and is likely to result in lay-offs.
After all, local governments often offer tax returns, refunds, and breaks, meaning that the tax burden varies greatly across enterprises, industries, and regions.
Most governments, too, are eagerly building highways and promoting domestic car
industries.
Its University of Chicago-trained economists argue that attracting private investment into primary lithium production is all that matters, and that fostering local
industries
that rely on lithium as an input is not a public-policy goal.
Regulatory institutions – such as bank supervisory agencies and bodies that oversee the telecommunications, food, and energy
industries
– play a vital role by maintaining the always-delicate balance between “free” markets and the actions of elected governments and legislatures.
Indeed, in the
industries
and regions hit hardest by import competition, years of simmering discontent have now boiled over, fueling support for populists promising to roll back globalization.
The crisis in Ukraine, many of whose Soviet-era
industries
depend on cheap Russian gas, soon spread to Europe, which consumes 80% of Russian gas exports, when Ukraine began to divert gas from the pipeline that crosses its territory.
Other approaches are also possible: tightening up patent laws or imposing price controls for monopolistic industries, such as pharmaceuticals, as many market economies have done.
More than half of their investments are in
industries
exposed to the dangers of climate change; less than 2% are in low-carbon intensive
industries.
As this realization percolates through the market, asset owners are hedging their bets by increasing their investments in low-carbon
industries
and companies like Tesla.
If there is one lesson that economic policymakers should heed in 2015 and beyond, it is this: Just as invention is dynamic, so are the
industries
it creates.
Trump’s overriding motivation is to serve the economic interests of the US coal, oil, and gas industries, which provide ample campaign financing and media backing for the Republicans in Congress and in state governments across the country.
After the inconclusive end of the UN led Bali talks on the global environment, worry has grown among US and European
industries
– especially iron, steel, cement, glass, chemicals, and pulp and paper – that any new climate treaty would put them at a big disadvantage against their fast-growing competitors in China.
The tariff proposal – contained in the central piece of global warming legislation now before Congress – would impose emission controls on domestic
industries
starting in 2012.
The past ten years saw
industries
and social security privatized and international trade liberalized.
Moreover, foreign investment in emerging markets shifted after 1994 to factories, real estate, service industries, and so forth.
Moreover, this model – developed by Peter Petri and Michael Plummer, from Brandeis and Johns Hopkins Universities, respectively, building on a long line of similar frameworks by them and others – foresees relatively insignificant cost to employment in affected
industries.
In regions with
industries
hit hard by competition from Chinese imports, wages have remained depressed and unemployment levels elevated for more than a decade.
Falling employment in such
industries
was expected; the surprise was the absence of offsetting employment gains in other
industries.
As a result, unemployed workers had to find jobs in new industries, which took more time and training.
As a result, their citizens will enjoy quick access to new medicines, and their researchers will find it easier to participate in global clinical research, a boon to domestic
industries.
The benefits are shared among workers: Obama’s Council of Economic Advisers found that, on average, US export-intensive
industries
pay workers up to 18% more than non-exporting firms.
In most industries, head-to-head competition with Asia would be senseless, given Russia’s higher labor costs.
Around the globe, entire
industries
are being redefined and created from scratch, owing to groundbreaking developments in artificial intelligence, robotics, the Internet of Things, autonomous vehicles, 3D printing, nanotechnology, biotechnology, materials science, energy storage, and quantum computing.
That way, states or
industries
cannot simply decide that they are too poor, too small, or too strategically important to do what is necessary.
China, however, is utterly dependent on these sea-lanes, because its economic-growth model relies on southern China’s export-oriented manufacturing industries, as well as the ports of Hong Kong, Shenzhen, and Guangzhou.
BELLEVUE, WASHINGTON – Everyone wants to know how to build the next Silicon Valley: an innovation hub that draws talent and capital, and that creates jobs, companies, and whole new
industries.
It also motivates innovators from a variety of
industries
to take on complex problems that must be addressed by more than one kind of invention.
Venture capital, biopharmaceutical, and other high-tech industries, he pointed out, “cluster about major research centers” precisely because “basic science drives innovation.”
The profitability of tradable
industries
– those most likely to suffer from appropriability problems – takes a hit, and investment demand falls further.
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