Trade
in sentence
11085 examples of Trade in a sentence
But the United States and the United Kingdom then underwent a kind of conservative revolution and a revival of neoliberal economic policies, including widespread deregulation,
trade
liberalization, and unprecedented capital-account openness.
But polarizing new models of competition and resistance to
trade
are not the way to restore trust.
Barring another round of deep financial crises, it won’t be – as long as politicians do not stand in the way of the new paradigm of trade, technology, and artificial intelligence.
The past ten years saw industries and social security privatized and international
trade
liberalized.
Argentina’s
trade
is overwhelmingly concentrated in a small number of commodities, including cereals, meats, processed foods, and other agricultural products.
When it comes to boosting transatlantic
trade
and investment ties, the Canada-EU CETA may well be Europe’s best hope.
In fact, Canada’s higher international profile is not limited to trade; its diplomatic stature has grown as well.
The story behind certain parts of the global
trade
in natural resources today, whether spoken or not, is no less a source of anguish.
In many of these countries, the
trade
in natural resources motivates, funds, and prolongs conflict and egregious human-rights abuses.
The deadly
trade
in conflict resources is facilitated by supply chains that feed major consumer markets, such as the European Union and the United States, with cash flowing back the other way.
Better regulating the
trade
in these resources will not itself bring peace to conflict-affected areas.
And both countries’ leaders must deliver reforms within a limited tenure, with limited resources, and within a global context of
trade
rivalry and interdependence.
A typical case is a country whose terms of
trade
abruptly deteriorate - for example, Nicaragua after the recent collapse of coffee prices caused by Vietnam's bumper crop.
They also can conclude
trade
agreements with more advanced economies.
Higher interest rates will undercut construction jobs and increase the value of the dollar, leading to larger
trade
deficits and fewer manufacturing jobs – just the opposite of what Trump promised.
If Trump starts a
trade
war – by, say, following through on his vow to impose a 45% tariff on imports from China and to build a wall on the US border with Mexico – the economic impact will be even more severe.
The rules of the global economy also remain untouchable, making it nearly impossible to restructure financial and
trade
policies to ensure that they do not result in more poverty, unchecked climate change, and irreversible resource destruction.
After World War II, the West dismantled barriers to
trade
and investment flows, and worked to eliminate exchange controls and move to currency convertibility.
Indeed, the West accepted the view that globalization would result (as with trade) in mutual gain, embracing what I called in 1997 the notion of “benign neglect.”
The East had feared that it could not gain from
trade
with the West, which had superior infrastructure and human capital; now, the West had come to fear that it would lose from
trade
with the East, which had abundant, cheap labor.
For example, on trade, there has been a remarkable commitment to efforts – largely successful – to avoid significant backsliding into protectionism.
America cannot get the outcomes it wants in trade, antitrust, or other areas without the cooperation of the European Union, China, Japan, and others.
On the bottom board of transnational relations outside the control of governments – pandemics, climate change, the drug trade, or transnational terrorism, for example – power is chaotically distributed.
There will, after all be inflation in southern and eastern Europe – there must be, for as regions develop and industrialize their terms of
trade
must improve, and under a monetary union regional inflation is how this can happen.
So far, no member country of the Organization of American States has recognized the new government, several countries have withdrawn their ambassadors from Paraguay, and the Mercosur trading bloc has suspended Paraguay from
trade
negotiations.
The
Trade
Numbers GameCAMBRIDGE – The Trans-Pacific Partnership (TPP) – a mega
trade
deal covering 12 countries that together account for more than one-third of global GDP and a quarter of world exports – is the latest battleground in the decades-long confrontation between proponents and opponents of
trade
agreements.
There is no disagreement between the models on the
trade
effects.
In fact, Capaldo and his collaborators take as their starting point the
trade
predictions from an earlier version of the Petri-Plummer study.
The differences arise largely from contrasting assumptions about how economies respond to changes in
trade
volumes sparked by liberalization.
The Petri-Plummer model is squarely rooted in decades of academic
trade
modeling, which makes a sharp distinction between microeconomic effects (shaping resource allocation across sectors) and macroeconomic effects (related to overall levels of demand and employment).
Back
Next
Related words
Global
Countries
Would
Which
Economic
World
Their
Investment
International
Other
Growth
Could
Deficit
Policy
Should
Economy
About
Country
Between
While