Manufacturing
in sentence
1925 examples of Manufacturing in a sentence
Likewise, a September 2013 report by IHS concludes that midstream industries like transportation and downstream industries like
manufacturing
and chemicals are also receiving a massive stimulus.
In successful economies, such as China and India, the movement of workers from traditional agriculture to
manufacturing
and modern services accounts for a substantial part of overall productivity growth, just as Lewis predicted.
Its phenomenal
manufacturing
prowess rests in large part on public assistance to new industries.
The opportunities seem endless, from building stronger, lighter materials and
manufacturing
tremendously powerful yet incredibly small computers, to developing new sustainable energy sources and devising personalized cures for cancer.
Today, it boasts the world’s second-largest economy, a thriving
manufacturing
sector, and a rapidly growing, prosperous middle class, while more than half of China’s 1.5 billion citizens now live in cities.
But those movements produce big changes in real exchange rates, i.e., in
manufacturing
competitiveness, and thus fuel demands for trade protection.
This means that China needs less of the iron ore and other raw materials that it imports from Australia and South America and less of the specialized
manufacturing
equipment that it imports from Germany and Japan.
But Mexico has gone further, by embracing
manufacturing
as a way to diversify its economy away from oil extraction.
Obama has proposed a rate of 28%, with a preferential rate of 25% for manufacturing, and additional special provisions to promote investment in research and development and clean energy.
However, once fulfilled, Ukrainian businesses would be able to join European
manufacturing
supply chains, and the government would be able to pursue a much-needed diversified industrial strategy to capitalize on its geographical proximity to the world’s biggest market.
Most of the job losses in the tradable sector were in
manufacturing
industries, especially after the year 2000.
However, these jobs – often in domestic services – usually generated lower value added than the
manufacturing
jobs that had disappeared.
Unfortunately for advanced economies, the gains in per capita value added in the tradable sector were not large enough to overcome the effect of moving labor from
manufacturing
jobs to non-tradable service jobs (many of which existed only because of credit-fueled domestic demand in the halcyon days before 2008).
This undercuts
manufacturing
in the developing world more than in the West.
Boycotts of sweated college t-shirts in the United States led to fairer
manufacturing
practices, and boycotts of coffee and produce, led mostly by women consumers, resulted in fair-trade purchases by major supermarkets.
Depreciation, moreover, may also not improve the competitiveness of Chinese goods either, as up to 40% of China’s exports nowadays are from
manufacturing
industries using imported parts and materials.
The old style of Anglo-American capitalism was built on manufacturing; but the new style rests on debt – particularly home ownership – to maintain consumption and high standards of living.
By contrast, the Modi government plans to pursue a pro-growth agenda that includes reducing bureaucratic delays, increasing infrastructure investment, stimulating
manufacturing
activity, and shifting to a simpler unified tax system.
In China, for example, youth unemployment is rooted in the dominance of the
manufacturing
sector, which provides far more job opportunities for high-school graduates than university-educated workers.
Second, Obama has attacked the outsourcing of service jobs to places like India and the offshoring of
manufacturing
jobs to Asia as a whole.
Commercial and high-end residential investment has been excessive, automobile capacity has outstripped even the recent surge in sales, and overcapacity in steel, cement, and other
manufacturing
sectors is increasing further.
But overcapacity will lead inevitably to serious deflationary pressures, starting with the
manufacturing
and real-estate sectors.
Continuing down the investment-led growth path will exacerbate the visible glut of capacity in manufacturing, real estate, and infrastructure, and thus will intensify the coming economic slowdown once further fixed-investment growth becomes impossible.
In turn, this can spur sustainable non-farm employment growth in services, agro-processing, and small-scale
manufacturing.
Even in China and other parts of the world with growing
manufacturing
sectors, productivity improvements – often related to job-killing automated processes – account for most of the growth in output.
Trump knows that fulfilling his promise to revive US
manufacturing
with domestic policy changes that boost American companies’ international competitiveness would be difficult to implement and take a long time to pay off.
His promises to increase US exports and bring back
manufacturing
jobs from countries with cheaper labor would be difficult to fulfill in the best of times.
If China imposes a carbon price for its energy-intensive
manufacturing
industries, the US won’t need to do so at its border, lowering risks to the international trading system on which both countries rely.
If China consolidates its energy-intensive manufacturing, thereby freeing up investment capital for lighter
manufacturing
and services, then it will emerge from the crisis with a growth model that pollutes less and employs more.
Today, the Russian economy is no more resilient than it was in the late Soviet era, with commodities, especially oil and natural gas, accounting for around 90% of total exports and
manufacturing
for only about 6%.
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