Trade
in sentence
11085 examples of Trade in a sentence
That, in turn, would produce still more dollar appreciation and even bigger
trade
deficits, as happened under Reagan and Bush.
Furthermore, countries such as China, India, and Brazil has provided a platform for increased exports and the inception of a model of cooperation based on trade, investment, and technology transfer, rather than “aid.”
China-Africa
trade
alone increased from $10 billion in 2000 to $107 billion in 2008, and billions of dollars are being invested in oil production, mining, transportation, electricity generation and transmission, telecommunications, and other infrastructure.
Improved governance, higher food production, increased inter-regional trade, debt cancellation, better use of official development assistance (ODA), and thriving telecommunications and housing markets have helped as well.
France has a veto within the boards of directors of the Franc Zone’s two central banks, while two French commercial banks, BNP-Paribas and Société Générale, exercise a quasi-monopoly on lending programs, mainly centered on short-term
trade
financing and the needs of governments, public and private companies, and the elite.
Among other things, the USMCA will limit the number of vehicles that can be imported into the US, which effectively opens the door to managed
trade.
Trump’s stated goals in renegotiating NAFTA – if “renegotiation” is the right word for when a bully attacks his smaller neighbors until they accede to his demands – were to reduce the bilateral US
trade
deficits with Canada and Mexico and “bring good jobs back home.”
But in the long run, it will likely reduce US employment, shrink North America’s share of the global auto market, and undermine America’s credibility on international
trade
issues – all while failing to reduce the US current-account deficit.
Up until 2017, the US had been a global leader in
trade
liberalization; not anymore.
Even if forcing friends and allies to the negotiating table actually benefited US trade, it still would not be worth the loss of US soft power.
But the flip side of the
trade
surplus is the capital outflow.
Trade
flows may be driven substantially by longevity: countries expecting a relatively large number of elderly in the future should be running
trade
surpluses now and deficits later.
Today, too, the world should expect the US dollar to remain the key reserve currency, used to invoice and settle international trade, for a long time to come.
Even China itself uses the renminbi in only about a quarter of its international trade, and its international finance remains dollar-denominated.
Exports to the Union have soared since 1991, when the collapse of the Soviet-era COMECON trading system forced a radical reorientation of
trade
- helped by massive foreign investment from the EU - towards Western markets.
The hard truth is that the US remains reluctant to
trade
its sovereignty for multilateral solutions.
Japan’s past predilection toward saving has long implied a large
trade
and current-account surplus, but now these surpluses are starting to swing the other way.
Economists have long known that
trade
liberalization causes income redistribution and absolute losses for some groups, even as it enlarges a country’s overall economic pie.
Therefore,
trade
deals unambiguously enhance national wellbeing only to the extent that winners compensate losers.
Compensation also ensures support for
trade
openness from broader constituencies and should be good politics.
Prior to the welfare state, the tension between openness and redistribution was resolved either by large-scale emigration of workers or by re-imposing
trade
protection, especially in agriculture.
With the rise of the welfare state, the constraint became less binding, allowing for more
trade
liberalization.
If opposition to
trade
has not become politically salient in Europe today, it is partly because such social protections remain strong there, despite having weakened in recent years.
And all of this could have been done “before administering ‘shocks’ by expanding
trade
with low-wage countries.”
Before a new policy – say, a
trade
agreement – is adopted, beneficiaries have an incentive to promise compensation.
The idea is that when shareowners furiously
trade
their stock, corporate executives feel pressed to ensure high earnings every quarter, so that the share price does not fall.
The problem is that a falling tax rate for capital gains will not stop most stockholders from trading; at most, it will impel some of them
trade
less often.
They projected that developing countries would enter the Kyoto framework at some point, and would
trade
their rights to emit CO2 and other greenhouse gases to the United States and Europe in return for development aid.
The Fraught Politics of the TPPTOKYO – This month, 12 countries on both sides of the Pacific finalized the historic Trans-Pacific Partnership
trade
agreement.
If ratified and implemented, it will have a monumental impact on
trade
and capital flows along the Pacific Rim.
Back
Next
Related words
Global
Countries
Would
Which
Economic
World
Their
Investment
International
Other
Growth
Could
Deficit
Policy
Should
Economy
About
Country
Between
While