Trade
in sentence
11085 examples of Trade in a sentence
Meanwhile, the
trade
surplus is rising again, in part because China is dumping its excess supply of goods – such as steel – in global markets.
Currency frictions can lead eventually to
trade
frictions, and currency wars can lead to
trade
wars.
If such a link between
trade
and currency policy were forced into the TPP, the Asian participants would refuse to join.
The sum of all
trade
balances in the world is equal to zero, which means that not all countries can be net exporters – and that currency wars end up being zero-sum games.
Such an agreement makes sense because more than 50% of Moldova’s
trade
is already with the EU, while roughly 70% of Moldova’s citizens and virtually all of its political parties support European integration.
Brexit in a Brave New WorldBRUSSELS – When it comes to bilateral trade, gains and losses are distributed asymmetrically between the larger and the smaller economy.
In the best of times, that would be bad news for the United Kingdom as it seeks new
trade
deals with the European Union and others.
Economic theory predicts that erecting new
trade
barriers hurts both sides.
Given this, Brexiteers are wrong to claim that the UK, as a net importer, will be in a strong position in
trade
negotiations with the EU.
What counts is relative size, not net
trade
flows.
If the UK and the EU agree to a new
trade
relationship based on World
Trade
Organization (WTO) rules, the studies predict, the UK will lose about €110 billion ($119 billion), whereas the EU will lose only about €50 billion.
The UK will also have to negotiate
trade
deals with other partners, including the world’s two largest economies: the United States and China.
After all, President Donald Trump has indicated that the UK would be “first in line” for a US
trade
deal.
But Trump has also pledged to put “America first” in all deals it makes and actions it takes, particularly regarding
trade.
Even
trade
negotiations with the EU seem too multilateral to some of Trump’s cohorts, because they involve 27 member countries.
In fact, those wishing to exploit shale deposits are receiving shiny new subsidies of their own, along with other benefits: a guaranteed price through Plan Gas for unconventional gas, reduced regional government fees per unit of gas extracted, and an agreement with the main
trade
unions that lowers workforce costs.
Beyond the labor-rights violations that deals with
trade
unions enable, shale-gas extraction violates the rights of indigenous communities.
Industrial countries would increase aid levels and lower
trade
barriers.
Strong political commitments are needed to provide the aid that is needed to accelerate progress, and to secure success for the Doha
trade
round that is so crucial for developing countries' longer-term prospects.
Tourists coming to Australia often try it, and there is a modest export
trade
as well, but much of it ends up as pet food.
One split divides firms dependent upon import protection from those engaged in international
trade.
In some Latin American countries, business organizations draw their members from the small business community, companies engaged in international trade, or business leaders who invest in new technologies.
Let a journalist call an economics professor for his view on whether free
trade
with country X or Y is a good idea.
We can be fairly certain that the economist, like the vast majority of the profession, will be enthusiastic in his support of free
trade.
Now let the reporter go undercover as a student in the professor’s advanced graduate seminar on international
trade
theory.
Let him pose the same question: Is free
trade
good?
The professor would then launch into a long and tortured exegesis that will ultimately culminate in a heavily hedged statement: “So if the long list of conditions I have just described are satisfied, and assuming we can tax the beneficiaries to compensate the losers, freer
trade
has the potential to increase everyone’s well-being.”
If he were in an expansive mood, the professor might add that the effect of free
trade
on an economy’s growth rate is not clear, either, and depends on an altogether different set of requirements.
A direct, unqualified assertion about the benefits of free
trade
has now been transformed into a statement adorned by all kinds of ifs and buts.
In 2011, the EU initiated a dialogue between Serbia and Kosovo that has since produced significant benefits in terms of freedom of movement, trade, economic opportunities, security, justice, connectivity, and much else.
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