Produces
in sentence
644 examples of Produces in a sentence
The world could continue to close its eyes to global warming and hope for the best: a slightly warmer climate that
produces
as many winners (on the Siberian, Northern European, and Canadian prairies) as losers (in already-hot regions that become hotter and dryer), and that the Gulf Stream continues warming Europe, the monsoons are not disrupted, and that the Ganges delta is not drowned by stronger typhoons.
It does not take into account the financial cycle, and thus
produces
excessively expansionary and asymmetric monetary policy.
Biofuel technology kills four birds with one stone: It improves energy security, recycles waste, reduces greenhouse-gas emissions, and
produces
jobs (often in rural areas).
But while technology is consumer-friendly, it
produces
its own considerable costs.
The Natural-Resource Curse Strikes AgainSANTIAGO – Chile today
produces
one-third of the world’s lithium – used in batteries that power everything from computers to cars – and has great potential to expand that share.
Nigeria presently
produces
two million barrels per day.
The Memorandum, revised in 1991, entitled Shell to a guaranteed profit of between $2 and $2.50 per barrel produced as long as oil prices remain in the range of $12.50 to $23.50, and provided that it invests a minimum of $1.50 on every barrel it
produces.
Facing the sharp end of the stick are the seven million Niger delta peasants, who bear the brunt of the violence, environmental devastation, and social anarchy that Big Oil
produces
wherever it sets up its drilling rigs.
In reality, Europe's system typically
produces
less research, worse students (especially at the doctoral level), and is probably less egalitarian than the US system.
By contrast, Europe's centralization and bureaucratization control over universities
produces
only mediocrity.
What
produces
good appointments is the threat that mediocre professors will make it difficult to attract good students and large research grants.
Research is needed to ensure that nanomaterials, and the industry that
produces
them, evolve as environmental assets rather than liabilities.
Rewarding bankers for short-term results, even when those results are subsequently reversed,
produces
incentives to take excessive risks.
And wherever research is conducted, it
produces
spillover effects within the surrounding local economy.
Still, a broad definition
produces
wide variation in frequency across countries.
It is not that raising poor people’s standard of living above bare subsistence
produces
Malthusian catastrophe, or that taxes and withdrawal of welfare benefits make people work, at the margin, for nothing.
But perhaps what countries really fear is not so much high prices but a total market breakdown and descent into an autarkic “Mad Max” world in which oil is scarce, no country is willing to allow trade in the oil it produces, and there is no world market clearing price.
Likewise, in the United Kingdom, Cyndi Rhoades launched “Worn Again,” which
produces
fashionable products from unusual recycled materials like scrap leather from car seats, parachutes, and prison blankets.
Sometimes, Russian imitation
produces
works of genius.
But the damage to China’s economy would be worse, because the US
produces
even more critical intermediate goods that China needs and would be unable to get anywhere else.
Or will they place themselves in the tradition of paranoid nihilism and pollute their ranks with the political vandals that France still
produces
in abundance?
The former engage in predatory and unpredictable regulation, which
produces
a bad business environment.
Moreover, in addition to expanding the workforce, immigrants actually boost per capita GDP by increasing productivity – that is, the amount that each worker
produces.
But, as Martin Feldstein and George Shultz recently put it, “if a country consumes more than it produces, it must import more than it exports.
Private investors and philanthropic organizations finance the upfront costs of the pilot projects, and local or state governments (sometimes supplemented with federal money) pay the investors only if the project
produces
the promised results.
The world today
produces
enough food to feed everyone.
But, even if it is not, well-chosen public investment
produces
high returns: new roads reduce transportation costs, and new hospitals produce a healthier workforce.
French President Emmanuel Macron has introduced a bill to phase out all oil and gas exploration and production in France and its overseas territories by 2040; the Scottish government has banned fracking altogether; and Costa Rica now
produces
the vast majority of its electricity without oil.
By concentrating wealth narrowly, globalization
produces
more threats than opportunities.
Each country should specialize in producing those things that it
produces
most efficiently, rather than producing a bit of everything, because that way its income will be higher.
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