Products
in sentence
2435 examples of Products in a sentence
Moreover, suppliers re-tool to manufacture more energy-efficient products, causing prices to fall.
It would also levy punitive tariffs on greenhouse-gas-intensive
products
imported from countries that lack “comparable action” to that of the US, starting in 2020.
Argentina’s trade is overwhelmingly concentrated in a small number of commodities, including cereals, meats, processed foods, and other agricultural
products.
Traditional investment tax credits have been used successfully in the past to encourage businesses to expand their capacity to produce the
products
they make and sell.
Natural resources, such as tin, tantalum, tungsten, and gold – all minerals that have been linked in some parts of the world to conflict and human-rights abuses – are found in our jewelry, cars, mobile phones, games consoles, medical equipment, and countless other everyday
products.
The Securities and Exchange Commission requires companies that use tantalum, tin, gold or tungsten in their
products
to investigate these raw materials’ origin, and to mitigate risks in their supply chains in line with the OECD Guidance if they are found to originate in certain conflict-affected or high-risk areas.
The proposal, furthermore, focuses exclusively on raw ores and metals, and excludes
products
that contain the relevant minerals, such as mobile phones, vehicles, and medical equipment.
It is crucial that both institutions seize this opportunity to strengthen the EU’s response by making disclosure and compliance mandatory and extending coverage to include finished and semi-finished
products.
Our opinion, released in May 1995, deemed food safety a fundamental ethical imperative and called for barring the commercialization of questionable
products.
Ironically, while younger Chinese
(products
of China’s one-child policy) are obsessed with personal stylistic statements, the drama of the opening ceremony consisted in collective expression at the service of the state.
Forests ensure water supplies, counter soil erosion, and safeguard an abundance of genetic resources that will become increasingly important in developing the new products, pharmaceuticals, and crop strains needed to support the lives and livelihoods of more than nine billion people by 2050.
The European Commission has been considering retaliatory tariffs on a variety of imports from the United States – ranging from Harley Davidson motorcycles to food
products
like orange juice and peanut butter – in the hope that affected American producers put pressure on the Trump administration.
And it collects extremely high import duties for agricultural
products.
Europe’s agricultural protectionism also harms developing countries, which are unable to sell their agricultural
products
– in many cases, the only goods they can export – in European markets.
But putting in place an effective regulatory and enforcement infrastructure can be equally important, especially in areas where consumers have difficulty assessing the value of
products
and the risks they can pose.
Confidence in local
products
boosts domestic consumption and makes exports more attractive in foreign markets.
In China, for example, the manufacturers of pharmaceutical ingredients can dodge drug regulation by claiming that their
products
will be used for non-medical purposes.
Even as reputable firms ensure the quality of all their inputs, this loophole can allow unsafe
products
to enter the market, as occurred in 2008, when at least 81 Americans died after receiving doses of the blood thinner heparin that contained adulterated Chinese material.
Unlike the West, Russia imports from China not so much consumer goods as engineering
products.
Companies that depend solely on their products’ commercial appeal are limited in the kinds of innovations that they can safely introduce, because if one of their
products
fails in the marketplace, they may not survive to build another one.
At some point, companies will be ready to sell products, and market demand can take over.
The US and EU keep out
products
from developing countries, alleging that they charge less than the cost of production.
New manufacturing techniques and new
products
or product improvements are usually embodied in new machines and skills.
The few Estonian
products
allowed into Russia were heavily taxed, and Russia even threatened military intervention.
A 1994 free-trade treaty with the EU enabled Estonian
products
to find new markets, and Estonia eventually became one of the most successful postcommunist transition countries, joining the EU and NATO in 2004.
Starting from the 1950s and 1960s, the US began importing these
products
from East Asia and registered a trade deficit with the region.
Moreover, the size of China’s trade surplus with the US has been systematically overstated, because the capital-intensive components of its labor-intensive manufacturing
products
are primarily imported from South Korea and Taiwan.
One country that will not benefit from this shift in labor-intensive manufacturing is the US, which lost its comparative advantage for such
products
a half-century ago.
The possibility that it will manufacture these types of
products
again is slim, to say the least.
US consumer demand for daily necessities will not change simply by raising the costs of imported
products.
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