Infrastructure
in sentence
4036 examples of Infrastructure in a sentence
Only when public health is deemed the highest priority will such
infrastructure
be created (or enhanced) and funds channeled to the neediest areas.
Israel’s high-quality
infrastructure
could easily be extended to the West Bank and Gaza if security could be assured, and a young generation of entrepreneurs and technologists has grown up on both sides of the border.
The human capital for rapid economic growth is there (roughly 2,000 Palestinians graduate every year with technical skills, yet only 30% of them find a way to use such skills in a paying job), as is the will and the investment capital; but the necessary
infrastructure
is lacking.
It took the idea of the New Silk Road and turned it into a multi-trillion-dollar trade, investment, infrastructure, and wider geopolitical/geo-economic initiative, engaging 73 different countries across much of Eurasia, Africa and beyond.
On one hand, Pakistan is seeking large investments from China to improve its physical
infrastructure
and exploit its considerable mineral wealth.
To be sure, some of China’s debt has been used to expand its industrial base and
infrastructure.
Easy access to cheap funding and high commodity prices alleviated the need to press ahead with difficult reforms of infrastructure, utilities, education, and health care, to name a few areas.
Advocates of this view argue that Iran is well positioned to make rebuilding easier, owing to its well-established
infrastructure
of personal and institutional ties in Iraq.
Iranian cooperation should be repaid with the dismantling of the MKO
infrastructure
in Iraq, perhaps linked to an Iranian commitment to crack down further on any al-Qaida activities, as well as expel al-Qaida members from Iran.
These stronger structures should permit limited resource transfers among eurozone countries, either to carry out countercyclical policy or to supplement investment spending, particularly in economic and social
infrastructure.
For example, 43% of people still lack access to basic sanitation facilities, and many of Asia’s cities, burdened by burgeoning populations, suffer from poor sanitation, deteriorating environmental conditions, and inadequate housing and
infrastructure.
As long as Greece’s finances are propped up by international creditors, the country’s policymakers will be able to abdicate their responsibility to manage the provision of public goods like education, health care, national security, and
infrastructure.
While China has kept its economy going by making investments in education, technology, and infrastructure, Europe and America have been cutting back.
These impoverished villages need financial help to buy vital inputs for farming and to invest in basic
infrastructure
such as roads and electrification.
By contrast, many developing economies have insufficient digital infrastructure, weak innovation and investment capacity, and thin skills base.
These are important issues, but not nearly as serious as the threat that malware poses to critical
infrastructure
– electricity grids, air traffic systems, oil pipelines, water supplies, financial platforms, and so on.
As the United States and other developed countries pursue “re-industrialization” and the Chinese economy’s low-wage comparative advantage diminishes, China must re-establish its competitiveness by positioning itself at the top of the global value chain, which implies the need to promote trade and upgrade its industrial
infrastructure.
At the same time, he would expand the military, spending more money on weapons that do not work against enemies that do not exist, enriching defense contractors like Halliburton at the expense of desperately needed public investment in
infrastructure
and education.
If Trump cuts taxes and manages to enact a massive
infrastructure
program, America’s budget deficits will rise, perhaps dramatically.
On the other hand, Trump might maintain his aura of unpredictability by not pursuing tax cuts, significant
infrastructure
spending, or even his promised Mexican border wall.
The Putin government must put aside wounded pride and worries about the West and embark on sustained efforts to improve
infrastructure
and promote trade in the region.
Eurozone politicians tend to believe that it is possible to regain competitiveness by carrying out reforms, undertaking
infrastructure
projects, and improving productivity, but without reducing domestic prices.
This leads to underinvestment in infrastructure, education, and technology, impeding the engines of growth.
Productivity growth can be boosted by public investment in infrastructure, as illustrated by the 1930’s examples of the Hoover Dam and the Tennessee Valley Authority.
These include legal impediments to labor mobility, reform of a complex tax system beset by excessive rates and porous loopholes, and substandard road
infrastructure.
This is especially the case as the three countries assess the feasibility of common migration policies, border development and infrastructure, shared natural resources, environmental protection, economic and social policy coordination, and other issues of common concern.
Possible subjects for that commission's agenda include: financial, fiscal and customs harmonization; transport infrastructure; natural resources and regional development.
And companies need public
infrastructure
– not only physical
infrastructure
like highways and airports, but also social
infrastructure
like good schools, safe neighborhoods, and effective legal systems.
Tax revenues transferred to pensioners could have been invested in infrastructure, education, scientific research, defense, and all the other urgent causes that politicians claim to support.
Another study, by the Boston Consulting Group, points out that many small export-oriented European Union member countries – namely, the Benelux, Baltic, and Nordic countries – rank well above the US in so-called “e-intensity,” which covers IT infrastructure, Internet access, as well as businesses, consumer, and government engagement in Internet-related activities.
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