Manufacturing
in sentence
1925 examples of Manufacturing in a sentence
Way, way back in the 1980s, long before NAFTA was drafted and corporations began to shed their national identities, the United States and Japan were at each other's throat in the world
manufacturing
race.
Animated children's movies should really stick to real fairy tales rather than
manufacturing
them out of grim novels and grimmer history.
All those sarcastic remarks about lack of British
manufacturing
and dark murmurings about the Japanese taking over, all seem irrelevant as an expanded service industry and tourism helped by cheaper imports from China and India, seems to have more than filled the gap.
He is saved from a bad situation by Vanessa Bloome(Renee Zellweger)a florist; and through that relationship Barry decides to sue the human race for
manufacturing
honey.
Tim Matheson plays a well-meaning, but out-of-touch business executive at a tractor
manufacturing
company to one of its factories in Athens, Nebraska to determine whom to fire as part of the company's plans to downsize.
Trying to link vinyl chloride monomer, the stuff that's reacted to form PVC, and allegedly poor
manufacturing
processes from 30 yrs ago to DES, a pharmaceutical that was created specifically to interact with and was prescribed to people was a bit of a stretch.
Don't get me wrong, the
manufacturing
industry, and the chemical industry in particular, had and has issues.
At a time when the war chest is drained and the battle seemed to be drawn out longer than expected, you need public support to cough out funds and make donations to the
manufacturing
of arms.
As China shifts its economic model away from heavy infrastructure investment and bulk manufacturing, many of these small industrial cities will lose their core industry.
In 2004, the investment share of GDP rose to 45%—one of the highest levels in recorded financial history—as banks financed a huge expansion of property development and
manufacturing
capacity.
These funds’ managers rightly complain that insufficient investment opportunities exist in the region in agriculture and
manufacturing.
The development of vast reserves of shale energy has moved America toward its long-sought goal of energy independence and reduced gas prices to record lows, contributing to the first glimmer of a
manufacturing
revival.
Given unlimited time, less-developed commodity-rich countries would first invest in human capital and institutions, then direct their growing commodity revenues into infrastructure, and move on to diversify their economies by strengthening the agriculture, manufacturing, and service sectors.
They saw a clear edge in Japan’s competitiveness relative to the North Atlantic across a broad range of high-tech precision and mass-production industries
manufacturing
tradable goods.
Political and economic pressure would lead more Japanese sectors to undergo the transformation to machine-intensive, high-productivity modes of organization that export-oriented
manufacturing
had already undergone (and that sectors like agriculture and distribution had undergone or were undergoing in the North Atlantic region).
Japan’s export-oriented
manufacturing
industries have maintained their edge but have not attracted other high-end activities – in fashion, finance, or corporate control – to any significant degree.
And Japanese politics entrenched rural and small-business interests in a way that impeded the diffusion of export-oriented
manufacturing.
And the export-oriented
manufacturing
firms that had been stimulated and shepherded by the Ministry of International Trade and Industry were not the core around which the rest of the Japanese economy would crystallize, but rather a separate and walled-off estate.
The decades-old shift to a multipolar world for
manufacturing
could thus lead to a more multipolar currency world, with the renminbi as an important player.
Encouraged by our discussions, Blue Moon made a significant investment in liquid detergents, spending heavily on manufacturing, marketing, and distribution.
Indeed, from slashing coal consumption to address air pollution to plans for integrating information technologies with modern manufacturing, the government has shown time and again that it recognizes its reform imperatives.
But a growing share is now being channeled to
manufacturing
in sectors that generate higher-wage jobs and transfer much-needed skills to host economies.
Moreover, many of Trump’s campaign promises – building a Mexico-funded wall on America’s southern border, bringing back lost
manufacturing
jobs, deporting millions of illegal immigrants – are patently impossible to implement.
A leading fashion industry executive argues that a key engine driving the economic boom has been the influx of women into the workforce, particularly in the
manufacturing
zones of the south.
In the 1990s, the small city of Kunshan became China’s leading center for
manufacturing
electronic products.
Indeed, it was the combination of broad-based education, openness to science and innovation, investment in advanced telecommunications infrastructure, and knowhow in
manufacturing
smart-phones that fueled China’s rapid advancement in the e-tail and Internet industries.
In the United States, presidential candidates appeal to anxious voters by blaming the North American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA) for the erosion of the country’s
manufacturing
base.
After all, advanced countries have been losing
manufacturing
jobs to less developed countries for more than fifty years.
Oddly, the smartphones’ magic computing power does not seem to offset the slowdown in efficiency gains in
manufacturing
and standard services.
The Obama administration, for example, cooperated with an arm of the National Association of Manufacturers to launch a
manufacturing
skills certification system based on standards established by industry groups.
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