Printing
in sentence
434 examples of Printing in a sentence
The first Industrial Revolution was driven by coal and steam power, combined with the
printing
press; the second was fueled by centralized electricity and the oil-powered internal-combustion engine, together with the telephone, radio, and television.
There is an alarming pattern of press manipulation throughout the region, from Honduran authorities cutting off a national radio station’s telephone service to Argentine officials shuttering a
printing
press.
Chinese producers can use 3D printing, robotization, and Big Data and AI applications at the local level, while still tapping into global markets and sourcing ideas and skills from abroad.
After all, the US Federal Reserve could always decide that its debt burden has grown too heavy, and attempt to inflate it away by
printing
more dollars.
In the near future, 3D
printing
could further reduce the need to ship goods across long distances.
To pay for it all, it need only turn on the
printing
press.
To overcome stagnation government should run bigger deficits, financed directly by
printing
money.
Governments suddenly found themselves with much lower revenues than they expected; when markets proved unwilling to lend them the difference, they ended up
printing
money, causing exchange rates to weaken and inflation to rise.
Eventually, in the late 1980s, they adopted a different strategy: They restructured the debt, eliminated financial controls, and imposed austerity, raising taxes and cutting spending in order to stop
printing
money.
The need for austerity went out the window, as more spending could occur without
printing
money or running out of foreign exchange.
Around the globe, entire industries are being redefined and created from scratch, owing to groundbreaking developments in artificial intelligence, robotics, the Internet of Things, autonomous vehicles, 3D printing, nanotechnology, biotechnology, materials science, energy storage, and quantum computing.
Because the dollar is no longer pegged to gold and is an international reserve currency, the US can sustain its trade deficit by
printing
more dollars to support imports.
Monetizing the fiscal deficits would then become the path of least resistance: running the
printing
presses is much easier than politically painful deficit reduction.
Indeed, machines are becoming smarter, with innovations like advanced robotics, 3D printing, and big data analytics enabling companies to save money by eliminating even highly skilled workers.
Second, they overestimated the extent to which quantitative easing (QE) by the monetary authorities – that is,
printing
money – could counterbalance fiscal tightening.
The Bank of England hoped that by
printing
£375 billion of new money, ($600 billion), it would stimulate total spending to the tune of £50 billion, or 3% of GDP.
In effect, America pays for all this simply by
printing
more dollars, secure in the knowledge that most of those dollars will remain in foreign hands.
That is why some economists are urging the ECB to go even further, with so-called “helicopter drops” – that is, financing private consumption by
printing
money.
The first is quantitative easing
(printing
money) on a heroic scale.
The authorities could have used public expenditure to finance this construction boom, borrowing or
printing
the money required.
The reason this is not widely understood is because of the traditional method used to calculate seigniorage – the profits governments make from the
printing
of money.
A new master plan for growth would not be about
printing
money.
The IMF often ruthlessly requires a reform program which, inter alia, increases tax revenues, restricts the
printing
of money, and frees up international trade and payments.
A government of a country with its own central bank and its own currency can simply continue to borrow by
printing
the money which is lent to it.
Robots are already in our operating rooms and fast-food restaurants; we can now use 3D imaging and stem-cell extraction to grow human bones from a patient’s own cells; and 3D
printing
is creating a circular economy in which we can use and then reuse raw materials.
In what is now called the Fourth Industrial Revolution, technologies that are coming of age – including robotics, nanotechnology, virtual reality, 3D printing, the Internet of Things, artificial intelligence, and advanced biology – will converge.
From nanotechnologies that make possible new types of microelectronics and medical treatments to additive manufacturing systems (better known as 3D printing), emerging new materials and methods are set to revolutionize how products are designed and made.
For example, it will take many highly-trained and creative workers to move 3D
printing
from an astounding possibility to a practical production tool.
Budget deficits and
printing
money, effective in the short run, provide only limited answers.
What they can cause – through intensifying competition within the ecosystem – is h-index inflation, just as
printing
more money can cause price inflation.
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