Infrastructure
in sentence
4036 examples of Infrastructure in a sentence
And these countries certainly do not have the financial resources, facilities, equipment, technology, infrastructure, staff, or training to cope with the long-term demands of cancer care.”
Whereas the US and Europe approach development from a poverty-reduction and good governance standpoint, China places a higher priority on supporting
infrastructure
development as part of its industrial policy.
It has even acquired
infrastructure
in distressed eurozone countries like Portugal and Greece – a move that reflects a lack of strategic thinking on Europe’s part.
Third, Africa is economically isolated, owing to very poor infrastructure, large over-land distances, and many landlocked countries.
Do we spend more on “communications,” meaning the hardware and infrastructure, even as the real value is unaccounted for?
Haiti ’s
infrastructure
was meager before the earthquake (hence the shocking mortality rate), and most of that is now rubble.
The IDB’s deep, long-term commitments in Haiti and professional expertise in agriculture, health, education, and
infrastructure
qualify it to coordinate the multitude of agencies that will be involved.
The left understands that the government’s role in providing
infrastructure
and education, developing technology, and even acting as an entrepreneur is vital.
Infrastructure
is crumbling.
Tackling rural electrification with mini-grids is not a new idea; communities from the United States to Cambodia have long used this approach to weave local
infrastructure
into regional or national grids.
Inadequate financing means large classes, insufficient books and teaching supplies, poorly constructed schools, and aging
infrastructure.
But, since February, the taps have run dry, owing to disruption and damage to the oil
infrastructure.
The government is making special efforts to develop these areas in the framework of its “Great Western Development Strategy,” including by building modern infrastructure, promoting high-quality education, supporting science and technology (all key determinants of the location of production), and encouraging investment there.
Likewise, he would probably advocate a fiscal policy aimed at advancing the common good, with higher taxes on the wealthiest companies and households funding, say,
infrastructure
development, quality education, and universal health care.
More than 40% of the fruits and vegetables that India produces rot, owing to mismanagement and corruption, inadequate infrastructure, lack of refrigerated storage, shoddy logistics, and underdeveloped marketing channels.
Morocco boasts solid infrastructure, a robust banking system, sound public finances, low inflation, and manageable unemployment.
Today, China’s proclivity for industrial production is manifested in large-scale manufacturing and
infrastructure
projects, encouraged by direct and indirect government subsidies.
The challenges fall into ten categories – a familiar list of key issues in this part of the world: democracy, education, employment, the environment, fiscal problems, health, infrastructure, poverty and inequality, public administration, and crime.
Within the framework of this project, we are seeking to halt the dehydration of the Dead Sea, build a joint airport and a joint water network with Jordan, and develop tourism infrastructure, at a cost of up to $5 billion.
Notwithstanding the narrowing income gap, rural residents still face inferior access to education, infrastructure, and public services.
Tax avoidance by multinational companies is draining developing-country incomes, limiting their ability to invest in education and
infrastructure.
One structural reform that could drive global growth is substantial
infrastructure
investment in developing and developed countries alike.
Apart from a World Bank presentation for a possible pilot
infrastructure
program, there is little to suggest how the 2% target could be met over the medium term.
G-20 governments, especially those with strong balance sheets, should be calling for large-scale public and private
infrastructure
investment to expand the productive capacity of member economies.
But this does not imply laissez-faire; on the contrary, it requires activist policies in many areas, such as education and training, infrastructure, R&D, business promotion, and the development of links to the global economy.
This would mean launching a Marshall Plan to upgrade Gaza’s
infrastructure
and improve social conditions.
In Afghanistan, America’s military was so tactically dependent on Pakistan that, on several occasions, the US encouraged India to curtail development projects, such as rebuilding Afghanistan’s
infrastructure.
Beyond the wars, terrorism, and political turbulence plaguing the Arab world – not to mention the usual challenges facing entrepreneurs outside Silicon Valley, such as lack of adequate risk capital, talent, or
infrastructure
– is a slew of deep-rooted structural problems.
China’s explanation for its push to establish the AIIB is that developing countries have inadequate access to capital for
infrastructure.
He also points out that in the AIIB, where China is expected to have overwhelming voting power, “Asian countries, especially China and India, will procure funding for their own infrastructure.”
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