Trade
in sentence
11085 examples of Trade in a sentence
The external
trade
of Paraguay, Argentina, and Brazil within the area amounted, respectively, to 65%, 33%, and 15% of their total exports.
In 2009, ASEAN regional
trade
represented 24.6% of its members’ total exports and 24.3% of total imports.
By contrast,
trade
among African countries accounts for only about 10-12% of the continent’s exports and imports.
Turkey explains its refusal by the EU’s failure (as a result of a veto by the Greek Cypriot government in Nicosia) to fulfill its own promise to open up
trade
with Northern Cyprus, which is under Turkish rule.
In 2009, as
trade
collapsed and unemployment rose dramatically, the world came together for the first time in the G-20 to prevent a great recession from spiraling into a great depression.
But the West will benefit only if it takes the right long-term decisions on the biggest economic questions – what to do about deficits, financial institutions,
trade
wars, and global cooperation?
Banning cross-border takeovers, restricting trade, and living with currency wars will hurt the US more than any other country.
In the last century, America’s own domestic market was so big and dominant that it need not worry much about
trade
rules.
But, with Asia poised to be the biggest consumer market in history, US exporters – the greatest potential beneficiaries – will need open
trade
more than ever.
America must become the champion of a new global
trade
deal.
A commitment to public investment and open
trade
are, however, necessary but insufficient conditions for sustained prosperity.
America must now lead and ask the world to agree on a modern Marshall Plan that coordinates
trade
and macroeconomic policies to boost global growth.
Instead of a world deadlocked over currencies and
trade
and retreating into the illusory shelter of protectionism, we could see $3 trillion of growth converted into 25 million to 30 million new jobs, and 40 million or more people freed from poverty.
If emerging conflicts and competitive pressures lead to, say, economic sanctions or the obstruction of key
trade
routes, the resulting balkanization of global
trade
would diminish globalization’s benefits substantially.
One promise on which Trump must not follow through is to advance
trade
protectionism.
His generally hostile attitude toward the country, particularly with regard to trade, threatens further damage to an already-tense bilateral relationship – and thus poses a risk for US multinationals and US allies alike.
We must argue the case for free trade, which has brought far-reaching benefits to humanity.
The US and Iran have been fighting proxy wars since 1979, and their ongoing conflict means that proxy wars will continue in Lebanon, Iraq, Afghanistan, and the Caspian Sea region, as will
trade
and investment wars.
Carrying the scenario further, one could even dream up an optimistic outlook for the UK’s
trade
balance, with a highly competitive exchange rate significantly improving demand in its major market, the eurozone.
While
trade
produces frictions in democracies, it also enhances wealth.
The political consensus in favor of universal education, outward-oriented trade, health for all, and a science-and-technology oriented economy must be strengthened.
Free
trade
became gospel, mass migration was welcomed, and countries embraced new global norms, like the First Geneva Convention, concluded in 1864 to cover the treatment of the sick and wounded on the battlefield.
Country after country turned inward; by 1933, world
trade
collapsed to one-third its 1929 level.
Fueled by racism and fears of overcrowding, globalism turned predatory: powerful countries imposed uneven
trade
pacts on neighbors and partners, or simply overran them.
Restraining national sovereignty allowed global trade, investment, and migration to buoy post-war prosperity.
He then withdrew the US from the Trans-Pacific Partnership
trade
deal and vowed to re-negotiate the North American Free
Trade
Agreement.
With the UK, which gave the world free
trade
in the 1840s, having now decided to go it alone, the old Atlantic Charter allies are putting national sovereignty ahead of global public goods.
Greenspan Hypnotizes HimselfOn the eve of the last G-7 meeting in London, US Federal Reserve Chairman Alan Greenspan did a startling about-face by soft-pedaling America’s
trade
deficit.
To be sure, the US
trade
figures have improved somewhat.
The expected December
trade
deficit is $57 billion—an improvement on the record $60.3 billion gap in November.
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