Resource
in sentence
854 examples of Resource in a sentence
They are going about it in ways that reflect their different
resource
endowments, industrial histories, and political pressures.
While there have been numerous well-intentioned attempts to improve management of these resources, all rely on individual actors’ willingness to concede the short-term economic benefits of intensive
resource
use for the sake of the long-term common good.
Some fisheries remain outside the jurisdiction of any of the regional bodies that play a role in
resource
management.
With the onset of the current global crisis, and given dramatic changes in social media, demographics, urbanization, and
resource
constraints, all four pillars are now under stress.
The WBG report points to four foundational pillars of development financing: domestic
resource
mobilization; better and smarter aid; domestic private finance; and external private finance.
Improved domestic
resource
mobilization and management – for example, through better tax administration, greater capacity to negotiate and manage natural-resource contracts, and stronger mechanisms for limiting capital flight and illicit financial flows – would improve the situation considerably.
In 2002, the United Nations International Conference on Financing for Development produced the Monterrey Consensus, which emphasized the importance of domestic
resource
mobilization, aid, investment, trade, institutions, and policy coherence in financing development.
By short-changing the world’s children, we are squandering the most valuable untapped
resource
we have.
The Rising Cost of NatureA fundamental global trend nowadays is growing natural
resource
scarcity.
The most basic reason for the rise in natural
resource
prices is strong growth, especially in China and India, which is hitting against the physical limits of land, timber, oil and gas reserves, and water supplies.
As a result, they have huge potential for productivity gains, which would strengthen global economic growth, and massive demand for sustainable infrastructure to reduce
resource
depletion and address global warming.
There is, of course, no single correct response that would simultaneously and uniformly deal with
resource
scarcity, fossil-fuel depletion, climate change, and the risks of nuclear power.
This recognition of mutual dependence on a valuable
resource
outside their territory aligns the interests of the three main ethnic groups.
As labor and capital moved from low-productivity sectors and regions to high-productivity activities,
resource
allocation became more efficient, real wages rose, and the economic structure was upgraded.
Overcoming the
resource
constraints that limit developing countries’ investment in the digital economy will not be easy.
Climate change and environmental change, given their implications for
resource
security and social and economic stability, are clearly threat multipliers.
A similar dichotomy applies to many other critical issues, including adaptation to climate change, efforts to improve
resource
management, urbanization and the rise of megacities, increased labor mobility, and human-capital expansion.
Where necessary, they can be supported by air and maritime rapid response assets, and thus constitute a fully-fledged military
resource
for armed intervention.
Either the global community will join together to fight poverty,
resource
depletion, and climate change, or it will face a generation of
resource
wars, political instability, and environmental ruin.
For example, more efficient energy and
resource
use can lower costs; better management of human talent can boost productivity; stricter safety, health, and environmental rules can reduce the risk of serious accidents; and new green or fair-trade products that appeal to consumers can increase revenues.
That is why the energy tax must be imposed as a tax substitution, with income or payroll taxes simultaneously reduced to keep real
resource
transfers to government at a constant level.
Having said this, there would be immediate upside potential, owing to better
resource
allocation, more harmonized investment regimes, stronger standards, and the elimination of outdated non-tariff and regulatory barriers.
To take one example,BASF has developed a compostable plastic that can be used to make bags to helpcollect organic waste and turn it into a valuable
resource.
But now assume that there is only enough of some critical
resource
to produce vaccines for half the population.
At that point, the Armageddon scenarios of droughts, rising sea levels, floods, energy and
resource
wars, and mass migration will become a reality.
But it faces serious obstacles, beginning with limited institutional and human capabilities – a constraint that could hinder domestic innovation and efficient
resource
allocation.
At GPE, we are conscious that at current
resource
levels we can do only so much.
But it will also require increased engagement by countries, cities, and industries on three key areas:
resource
management, disaster mitigation, and migration.
History is replete with examples of technological advances interacting with
resource
availability, with enormous geopolitical impact.
Making matters more urgent,
resource
extraction is becoming increasingly expensive, as production shifts to locations that present difficult logistical – and often political – challenges.
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