Supply
in sentence
3107 examples of Supply in a sentence
Others also certainly worry about secular decline, though most have emphasized the
supply
side rather than the demand side.
The third factor is excessive control of the currency
supply.
Russia has begun a war of words over Ukraine’s
supply
of arms to Georgia.
The EU should also launch a comprehensive study of all aspects of Europe’s reliance on Russian energy supplies, including transit, energy security and conservation,
supply
diversification, and the impact of “bypass” pipelines like Nord Stream and South Stream.
This trend must be reversed by allowing developing countries to support their farmers and, where domestic
supply
is sufficient, protect them from dumping by foreign producers.
In the future, climate change can be expected to cause more
supply
shocks.
Fifty-foot waves breached the seawall of the Fukushima Daiichi nuclear power plant, cutting off its emergency power
supply
and disabling its cooling systems.
An abundant
supply
of workers who have been appropriately trained and can continue to learn boosts investor confidence and thus job growth.
Moreover, the magnitude of some of the necessary supply-side reforms will be markedly diminished, precisely because the demand-side measures will reduce excess
supply.
The first line of the IPCC’s press release declared, “Close to 80% of the world‘s energy
supply
could be met by renewables by mid-century if backed by the right enabling public policies.”
“The report clearly demonstrates that renewable technologies could
supply
the world with more energy than it would ever need,” boasted Steve Sawyer, Secretary-General of the Global Wind Energy Council.
One particular worry is that euro-zone money
supply
is well above the ECB’s benchmark level, indicating an excess
supply
of liquidity.
Added to this are planning issues, which usually go one of two ways: either too much or too little
supply.
With better infrastructure and increased supply, this figure could be many times more.
The need to
supply
fuel and open land during rapid economic development had a devastating effect on European and American forests.
Both the CDU and the SPD face a shrinking electoral base and a falling
supply
of leadership cadres.
In 2012, China’s current leaders recognized that the country’s “demographic dividend” had run its course: the Chinese economy was reaching its “Lewis turning point,” the stage at which its surplus labor
supply
would be exhausted, and wages would start to rise.
More disturbingly, coal, oil, and gas are projected to
supply
most of the world’s growing energy needs for decades to come.
Some part of it may be “hoarded,” in which case demand may fall short of
supply.
Prices moved smoothly up as demand outpaced
supply
and rushed back down when the tables were turned, keeping markets in equilibrium.
But even for them, the concept was only an assumption; they never managed to explain why wages and interest rates so often resisted the pressures of
supply
and demand.
Of course, if this works for one firm, it will work for others, and so wages will rise, and eventually the
supply
of labor will exceed demand.
Rapid urbanization in many emerging markets has also driven up home prices, as demand outstrips
supply.
Despite innovation in the financial products channeling ESG investment, the
supply
of ESG instruments, such as green bonds, remains insufficient.
Not surprisingly, many Russians’ responses would strike an economist as failing to appreciate the market’s virtues as a mechanism to bring
supply
and demand into equilibrium.
The US would, of course, need to respond to the conclusion of any trilateral Northeast Asian FTA in order to preserve its own role in global trade – and in the
supply
chains that dominate the Asian economies.
In fact, returns to education have been falling partly because the
supply
of skilled workers has outpaced demand, as most informal firms do not require them.
In December 2004, Dokubu’s militias took 75 oil workers hostage and forced Shell to shut down about 10% of the country’s oil
supply.
For example, the Tibetan Plateau, which contains the world’s third-largest store of ice, is warming at almost twice the average global rate, owing to the rare convergence of high altitudes and low latitudes – with potentially serious consequences for Asia’s freshwater
supply.
Faced with severe
supply
constraints, Asian economies are increasingly tapping other continents’ fossil fuels, mineral ores, and timber.
Back
Next
Related words
Demand
Chains
Global
Which
Would
Money
Their
Countries
Could
Prices
There
Energy
Chain
Growth
World
Other
Labor
Economy
Water
About