Skilled
in sentence
560 examples of Skilled in a sentence
Latin America and Southeast Asia have rapidly increased coverage, but at the current rate of progress in Africa, 50% of women will still deliver without
skilled
care in the year 2015.
In Ethiopia, a quarter of pregnant women in the highest income group use
skilled
care at delivery, compared to 1% of the poorest women.
Most of the children I grew up with received an inferior education that did not train them for university or
skilled
jobs.
To be on the safe side, host countries often try to limit immigration to
skilled
workers, because they join segments of the labor market in which sufficient downward wage flexibility provides immigrants with additional jobs.
But countries have so far had mixed success in attracting
skilled
immigrants.
America’s postwar growth and dynamism largely resulted from
skilled
immigrants.
Before and after World War II, many
skilled
people came from Europe, Germany in particular; in recent decades, Asian immigrants dominate, with India, Pakistan, and the Philippines occupying the top ranks.
This may reflect the high interchange in both directions between the Anglo-Saxon countries, or replacement migration in which
skilled
people arrive from elsewhere as the domestic
skilled
migrate to other Anglo-Saxon countries.
True, highly
skilled
workers, especially those with sought-after technology skills and postgraduate degrees, have fared much better.
And treatment is complex, requiring the kind of highly
skilled
medical staff that is difficult to find in the affected areas.
Because the US labor force is highly
skilled
overall, American companies have an advantage over their foreign competitors.
Germany and Japan have expensive
skilled
labor forces, but their firms are able to compete in world markets precisely because they can outsource high-cost, low-skill production stages.
When a well-educated,
skilled
foreigner emigrates to the US, he or she can hope to obtain citizenship relatively soon.
Second, these are
skilled
interventions, delivered by practitioners with well defined and well regulated professional skills, who are either clinical psychologists or psychiatrists.
For them finding
skilled
psychological therapies and therapists is rarely easy, even though in all of these instances the evidence of effectiveness is beyond dispute.
For example, in 2013, more than one-third of the Chinese firms surveyed said that they struggled to recruit
skilled
workers, with 61% attributing this to a shortage of general employable skills.
Finally, though some evidence suggests that there is an over-supply of university graduates in China, ongoing demographic and sectoral shifts mean that China will encounter a supply deficit of 24 million highly
skilled
graduates of universities or higher-level vocational schools by 2020.
Low paid jobs, which is where low
skilled
labor goes, are plentiful in the US and are concentrated in trade and services.
Competition among countries for
skilled
individuals and profitable industries, in turn, constrains governments’ abilities to maintain high tax rates on the wealthy.
Globally, childbirth has shifted from the home to health facilities where a
skilled
clinician could provide safer care.
And, indeed, as the UN report underscored, Daesh remains
skilled
at using social networks to attract and indoctrinate young people across the region.
It is also highly competitive in unit-labor-cost terms, enjoys its highest-ever labor participation rates, and benefits from a steady inflow of
skilled
labor from other parts of Europe.
On the contrary, in many cases, migrants into Germany, particularly the young and
skilled
among them, have contributed to potential output.
The refugees arriving on Europe’s shores are often young, well educated, skilled, and eager to integrate quickly into society.
It is the government that subsidizes the higher-education institutions that train the
skilled
work force.
The first explanation for earned-income inequality is technological change, which raises the demand for
skilled
workers faster than the supply.
But, while this can explain a widening wage or income gap between
skilled
and “unskilled” workers (defined according to whether they are college-educated), this has little to do with the gap between the top 1% and the rest.
For any emerging or developing economy, success depends on the presence of a broad set of complementary factors: access to finance, quality infrastructure, sufficient
skilled
labor, and sound managerial and organizational practices.
The first, in pre-colonial times, included those who left as travelers, teachers, and traders; the second involved the forced migration of Indian labor as indentured servants of the British Empire; the third was the tragic displacement of millions by the horrors of Partition; and now we have the contemporary phenomenon of
skilled
Indians seeking new challenges and opportunities in our globalized world.
One could regard these various penalties as an effective response in a world where multinational corporations have become extremely
skilled
at reducing their conventional tax liabilities.
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