Manufacturing
in sentence
1925 examples of Manufacturing in a sentence
In Latin America, for example,
manufacturing
productivity has grown by leaps and bounds since the region liberalized and opened itself to international trade.
Redundant workers have ended up in worse-performing activities, such as informal services, causing economy-wide productivity to stagnate, despite impressive
manufacturing
performance.
Asian economies have opened up too, but policymakers there have taken greater care to support
manufacturing
industries.
Employment in the
manufacturing
sector has tended to increase (as a share of total employment), even in India, with its services-driven growth.
As economies develop and become richer,
manufacturing
– “making things” – inevitably becomes less important.
Ever since China rejoined the global economy three decades ago, its trading partners have been snapping up its
manufacturing
exports, because low Chinese wages made them super-competitive.
Some
manufacturing
is migrating inland, where wages and land prices are still relatively low, and some export operations are shifting to countries like Vietnam, where they are lower still.
The project is often credited for leading to the boom in
manufacturing
of photovoltaic panels in China, which has dethroned Germany and the United States to become the world’s largest producer.
With modern
manufacturing
underdeveloped, many young workers with fewer skills and less education are consigned to the informal sector.
There has also been a tendency to push students into fields like engineering, even though the Chinese economy is now beginning to shift from
manufacturing
to services.
Much of Taiwan's
manufacturing
sector has migrated across the Taiwan Strait--despite restrictions on direct contacts with the mainland--and Singapore is becoming a kind of Asian Switzerland, betting its prosperity on investments in China.
The US wants to reduce the bilateral trade deficit and repatriate
manufacturing
jobs.
Modi also argued for a new economic-growth model based on export-oriented
manufacturing.
By contrast, the industrial sector’s share of GDP has remain unchanged, at around 26%, for the last three decades (the
manufacturing
segment is even smaller, at 14.9% of GDP).
When Modi’s emphasis on export-led
manufacturing
is viewed in the context of his government’s focus on heavy infrastructure projects – ranging from power generation to railways – it becomes clear that his growth model, with its mass deployment of labor and capital in industry, looks similar to East Asian countries’ strategy.
By contrast, construction and
manufacturing
are rightly seen to be more promising outlets for the mass deployment of semi-skilled workers.
As the rising importance of robotics and AI blunts China’s
manufacturing
edge, the ability to lead in technology will become more important.
True, it is highly unlikely that President Donald Trump’s huffing and puffing and bluffing will bring about a large-scale return of
manufacturing
jobs to the US.
But the US has the potential to expand the size of its
manufacturing
base anyway, in terms of output if not jobs.
And the robots and AI are coming not just in
manufacturing
and driverless cars.
He emphasized that Brussels has neither the funds nor the desire to rescue the motor industry, and sees little similarity between the systemic risks of the financial services sector and the problems faced by the
manufacturing
branches.
A more likely scenario, however, is that both countries would initiate disputes in specific sectors, particularly traditional
manufacturing
industries like iron and steel production.
For example, the roughly 180 enterprises in the Ministry of Industry and Minerals, which controls all state-owned
manufacturing
companies, never employed much more than 100,000 workers in a nation of roughly 27 million people.
In the US, hourly
manufacturing
wages are $15.00; in Taiwan they are $5.00.
After globalization made it easier to move
manufacturing
and service jobs from rich to poor countries, growing automation now threatens to move jobs from humans to robots.
Suzuki’s joint venture in India suggests that cooperation in high-tech
manufacturing
is eminently possible.
Indeed, while Indians often lament their country’s dysfunction, inadequate infrastructure, antiquated industrial processes, and uneven
manufacturing
record, it rose to the challenge and delivered.
Getting more farmers into better-paid
manufacturing
and service-industry jobs will mean not only a reduction in poverty, but lower income disparity.
He once even called climate change a “hoax,” invented by the Chinese to make US
manufacturing
less competitive (though he later walked back that accusation).
As much as Trump might like to revive steel and coal in the so-called Rust Belt states that were crucial to his electoral victory, that is likely impossible (as is bringing back large numbers of
manufacturing
jobs from abroad).
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