Supply
in sentence
3107 examples of Supply in a sentence
Indeed, demand is outstripping
supply.
Continuing EU integration is likely to align the business cycles of these countries in a manner similar to the synchronization of
supply
and demand shocks in the EU in the 1990's.
The renowned American economist Irving Fisher actually built an elaborate hydraulic machine with pumps and levers, allowing him to demonstrate visually how equilibrium prices in the market adjust in response to changes in
supply
or demand.
Unfortunately, many policies focus on demand and financing, rather than
supply.
As long as investors were content to hold money rather than gold, the partial gold backing of the money
supply
was not a major problem.
Today, these transportation systems are far more advanced – augmented by the Internet and its enhancement of global
supply
chains.
In theory, the People’s Bank of China can sterilize any amount of money
supply
caused by foreign-capital inflows simply by issuing the requisite amount of bonds.
The Bank sterilizes the money
supply
caused by today’s trade surplus, but in the meantime causes further current-account surpluses in the future.
We have global
supply
lines in which goods are developed in one country, manufactured in another, and assembled in a third.
When demand begins to exceed supply, demand-side stimulus policies will become increasingly ineffective, and it will be time to launch the third arrow of Abenomics: growth-enhancing structural reforms.
What China lacked was not demand for consumption goods, but a
supply
of high-quality financial assets.
For example, segmented production for global
supply
chains has stimulated trade in intermediate goods and promoted foreign direct investment.
If the threat of
supply
disruptions spreads beyond Libya, even the mere risk of lower output may sharply increase the “fear premium” via precautionary stockpiling of oil by investors and final users.
In the short run, there are very few: Saudi Arabia – the only OPEC producer with excess capacity – could increase its output, and the US could use its Strategic Petroleum Reserve to increase the
supply
of oil.
The other engine of world trade has been global
supply
chains.
“The majority raises formidable barriers around the liberty of opinion,” and “undertakes to
supply
a multitude of ready-made opinions for the use of individuals, who are thus relieved from the necessity of forming opinions of their own.”
For starters, tariffs on solar panels and washing machines are hopelessly out of step with transformative shifts in the global
supply
chains of both industries.
Traditionally, “awash with liquidity” would suggest that the world’s central banks are expanding the money
supply
too much, causing too much money chasing too few goods.
In response to this offer (and to bad publicity), Merck, Abbott Laboratories, and Bristol Myers Squibb, three large patent-holding companies, announced that their willingness to
supply
the African market at "zero profit" – ie, at around $500 per patient per year for the AIDS drugs they produce.
The answer is simple, and it is a matter of demand, not
supply.
America’s biofuels policies inevitably lead to larger price responses to
supply
shocks in the short run.
The goal is breathtaking: more than 80% of Denmark’s energy
supply
comes from fossil fuels, which are dramatically cheaper and more reliable than any green energy source.
The lasting legacy is a massive bill, and lots of inefficient solar technology sitting on rooftops throughout a fairly cloudy country, delivering a trivial 0.1% of its total energy
supply.
But trade patterns have changed so much since the 1980s, particularly owing to the emergence of regional and global
supply
chains, that the very notion of a bilateral trade imbalance – one of the main sticking points for Trump – seems outdated.
With the world’s energy needs growing, how can policymakers guarantee
supply?
But as countries work to balance security of
supply
with environmental goals, they must also commit to getting their facts straight.
In the drug
supply
chain, women are most commonly found at the bottom, often acting as “mules.”
The “Muslim ban” doesn’t affect the
supply
of labor in the US.
On the
supply
side of the economy, the state can invest or coinvest with the private sector in physical capital (infrastructure), institutions, human capital, and the knowledge and technology underpinnings of the economy.
With eurozone exports increasingly reliant on global
supply
chains, a cheaper currency provides less of a boost than before.
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