Supply
in sentence
3107 examples of Supply in a sentence
A secure energy supply, moreover, greatly extends learning possibilities and improves access to information.
When services do not arrive on schedule (owing to, say, a bottleneck in construction or corruption in the
supply
chain), the data system will enable the public to pinpoint problems and hold governments and businesses to account.
The resulting excess
supply
of goods, services, and labor would cause inflation to fall.
As technology has been added, many of the associations are going online to match
supply
and demand in the informal labor market more effectively.
List of priorities, outcome document from Copenhagen Consensus by UN ambassadors, June 16-17 2006 at Georgetown University:challengeopportunity1Communicable DiseasesScaled-up basic health services2Sanitation and WaterCommunity-managed water
supply
and sanitation3EducationPhysical expansion4Malnutrition and HungerImproving infant and child nutrition5Malnutrition and HungerInvestment in technology in developing country agriculture6Communicable DiseasesControl of HIV/AIDS7Communicable DiseasesControl of malaria8Malnutrition and HungerReducing micro nutrient deficiencies9Subsidies and Trade BarriersOptimistic Doha: 50% liberalization10EducationImprove quality / Systemic reforms11Sanitation and WaterSmall-scale water technology for livelihoods12EducationExpand demand for schooling13Malnutrition and HungerReducing Low Birth Weight for high risk pregnancies14EducationReductions in the cost of schooling to increase demand15Sanitation and WaterResearch to increase water productivity in food production16MigrationMigration for development17CorruptionProcurement reform18ConflictsAid post-conflict to reduce the risk of repeat conflict19Sanitation and WaterRe-using waste water for agriculture20MigrationGuest worker policies21Sanitation and WaterSustainable food and fish production in wetlands22CorruptionGrassroots monitoring and service delivery23CorruptionTechnical assistance to develop monitoring and transparency initiatives24MigrationActive immigration policies25Subsidies and Trade BarriersPessimistic Doha: 25% liberalization26CorruptionReduction in the state-imposed costs of business/government relations27Climate ChangeThe Kyoto Protocol28ConflictsAid as conflict prevention29CorruptionReform of revenue collection30Financial InstabilityInternational solution to the currency-mismatch problem31ConflictsTransparency in natural resource rents as conflict prevention32ConflictsMilitary spending post-conflict to reduce the risk of repeat conflict33Financial InstabilityRe-regulate domestic financial markets34ConflictsShortening conflicts: Natural resource tracking35Financial InstabilityReimpose capital controls36Financial InstabilityAdopt a common currency37Subsidies and Trade BarriersFull reform: 100% liberalization38Climate ChangeOptimal carbon tax39Climate ChangeValue-at-risk carbon tax40Climate ChangeA carbon tax starting at $2 and ending at $20The Eurozone According to MerkelBRUSSELS – We had almost given up waiting for them, but then they came in a quasi-clandestine form.
Elsewhere,
supply
constraints are not the problem.
At the Fukushima site, the backup power supply, essential for maintaining vital safety functions such as cooling the reactors and spent fuel rods, was not properly protected.
Regulatory support has been effective in creating demand and allowing sources of renewable
supply
to reach scale.
In order to avoid asset fire-sales – which would have led to the disorderly unraveling of private-sector balance sheets, possibly triggering a new “Great Depression” or even bringing down the eurozone – advanced countries’ central banks began to purchase risky assets and increase lending to financial institutions, thus expanding the money
supply.
(According to Scotland Yard, Murdoch hacks reportedly bribed mid-level police officers to
supply
information as well.)
In the past two decades, Mozambique has become a functioning democracy; grown its agriculture sector; raised literacy rates; increased water
supply
and electricity in rural areas; and reduced child mortality dramatically, from 219 per 1,000 live births in 1990, two years before the civil war ended, to 135 per 1,000 in 2010.
The Anti-Terrorism Special Law, passed by Japan's Diet in October, enabled Japan to send its Self-Defense Forces (SDF) overseas to support - through supply, transportation, repair, maintenance, medical services and so on - American forces.
Then a very popular leader – he restored to Russia its self-regard as a global power through deft use of the country’s control of a large share of the world’s
supply
of oil and gas at a time of limited availability – he would have won hands down.
Whether there is an apparent reason - or none at all - is irrelevant: psychoanalysis can always
supply
an explanation.
Given the escalating trade war between the United States and China, countries around the world are rushing to consolidate their trade relations and preserve existing
supply
chains.
Likewise, the UK government’s Brexit plans will disrupt the
supply
chains on which British firms depend.
To take just one example, the crankshaft of a BMW Mini crosses the English Channel three times before the car is completed, which means that any delay at the border will destroy the profitability of that
supply
chain.
Mini-grids are essentially localized electricity networks that
supply
several users, whether households or businesses.
In other words, while the laws stymie one
supply
channel, they do not shut down the pipeline – and they do nothing to curb demand.
Whether that fall reflected low demand for credit or constrained
supply
may seem like a technical issue.
The prevailing view has usually stressed
supply
constraints and the policies needed to fix them.
In the eurozone, it is hoped that this year’s asset quality review (AQR) and stress tests will finally dispel concerns about bank solvency and free up credit
supply.
Taxpayer-funded bank rescues, higher bank capital requirements, and ultra-easy monetary policy have all been vital to overcome credit
supply
constraints.
But there is strong evidence that once the immediate crisis was over, lack of demand for credit played a far larger role than restricted
supply
in impeding economic growth.
Economic growth can indeed continue to be severely depressed by a debt overhang even when credit
supply
is unrestricted and cheap.
Simultaneous private deleveraging and fiscal consolidation are restricting eurozone growth far more than remaining restrictions on credit
supply.
Lower interest rates can thus lead to lower consumption in surplus countries, thereby increasing the
supply
of loanable funds.
With a stable power supply, Nigeria’s economy could grow 8-12% annually, according to Nigerian Finance Minister Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala, strengthening the middle class and, in turn, increasing demand for European products.
Given that nearly all consumer and industrial products are in short
supply
in Africa, similar job-creation partnerships could be established in other sectors, resulting in permanent, mutually beneficial cooperation between Europe and Africa.
The list goes on to focus on agricultural technologies to tackle food production and hunger, as well as technologies to boost the
supply
of clean drinking water and improve sanitation.
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