Trade
in sentence
11085 examples of Trade in a sentence
Britain was a much more socialized economy, with widespread government ownership and dominant
trade
unions.
Thatcher supported Britain’s entry into the European Union in order to benefit from free trade, but she forcefully opposed joining the single currency.
If history is any guide, it is highly unlikely that the 2018 World Cup will increase Russia’s international investment or trade, boost its tourism industry, or strengthen its people’s commitment to physical fitness.
Every aspect of globalization – free trade, free movement of capital, and international migration – is under attack.
But this is not because of international
trade
or movements of people; after all, cross-border
trade
and migration have been happening for thousands of years.
The anti-globalization movements’ proposed solution – closing national borders to trade, people, or anything else – thus makes little sense.
So it is a lack of consolidated, documented knowledge – not free
trade
– that is fueling inequality worldwide.
Sri Lanka’s Chinese ElectionNEW DELHI – Sri Lanka’s parliamentary election this month promises to shape not only the country’s political future, but also geopolitics in the wider Indian Ocean region, a global center of
trade
and energy flows that accounts for half of the world’s container traffic and 70% of its petroleum shipments.
The maritime Silk Road is not just a
trade
initiative; it will also provide several access points for China’s navy in the Indian Ocean region, through accords for refueling, replenishment, crew rest, and maintenance.
In fact, the opposite is true: the logic of national sovereignty has staged a comeback, with major economies consistently undermining cooperation on issues ranging from security to
trade
to climate change.
In 2008, the US abandoned its commitment to the World
Trade
Organization’s Doha Round of global
trade
negotiations.
Given that the Doha Round has failed to address the main problems that the US and Europe have encountered in
trade
relations with China – non-compliance with intellectual-property rules, subsidies for state-owned enterprises, closed government-procurement markets, and limits on access to the services market – both are now emphasizing bilateral
trade
agreements.
The WTO will survive, but its centrality in the
trade
system is rapidly diminishing.
But possibly not, if it allows society to ignore the underlying problem, either moving the
trade
underground, or forcing people in such circumstances to resort to worse remedies.
The buyer is giving up only money – perhaps earned on a lucky stock
trade
or at an overpaid job.
On the economic front, Trump’s
trade
policies will become even less popular in the months ahead as the American economy cools from the “sugar high” of the corporate tax cut, as growing uncertainty about global
trade
policy hamstrings business investment, and as both the budget deficit and interest rates rise.
Lower long-term interest rates and a weaker dollar are good news for US stock markets, and Trump’s pro-business agenda is still good for individual stocks in principle, even if the air has been let out of the so-called Trump reflation
trade.
On trade, there is good news and bad news.
And he could still start a
trade
war with China by introducing tariffs on steel and other products – especially now that China has been uncooperative in responding to North Korea’s escalating nuclear threat.
China’s Patient InvestorsBEIJING – A common sentiment among investors in China is that the best way to make money is to
trade
frequently, lest you end up holding the short straw.
Because these permits
trade
at a market price, companies have an incentive to reduce their emissions, thereby requiring them to buy fewer permits or enabling them to sell excess permits for a profit.
Permits that used to sell for more than $30 per ton before the crisis now
trade
for under $10.
At the time, many policymakers blamed rapid price increases on “cost push” factors, such as pressure from
trade
unions for excessive wage hikes.
The most positive thing that can be said about Trump’s first year of economic policymaking is that he did not deliver on his campaign promise to disrupt
trade.
The North American Free
Trade
Agreement (NAFTA) remains intact, as do
trade
relations with China and other major US partners.
That is because home buyers are mostly ordinary people with little financial sophistication, unlike the professionals who
trade
in stocks.
WASHINGTON, DC – As Canada, Mexico, and the United States focus on the next round of negotiations on modernizing the North American Free
Trade
Agreement – a highly uncertain endeavor – governments in the rest of the Americas are grappling with a more fundamental question about
trade.
Who will be their dominant
trade
partner in the future: the US, Europe, or China?
Moreover, whereas the US has a large and recurring
trade
deficit with China, the country typically posts a surplus with its southern neighbors, which traditionally favor the high-value goods and sophisticated services that US companies provide.
Thanks to a host of agreements, fully 80% of
trade
among Latin American and Caribbean countries is already tariff-free.
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