Trade
in sentence
11085 examples of Trade in a sentence
They must offer voters a realistic economic program that is market-friendly and open to international trade, while promising tangible benefits to the poorer 60-70% of the population who are understandably frustrated with their lack of economic progress.
It emphasized multilateralism, including through the United Nations, and promoted free
trade.
The Internet, migration, trade, and the enforcement of international law will be turned into weapons in new conflicts, rather than governed effectively by global rules.
She said all the right things about NATO, the EU, and free trade, but pleaded for a special deal with the US outside of those frameworks.
Of course, tariffs are far from the only way to create obstacles to
trade.
Indeed, in many ways, tariffs are yesterday’s problem – at least they were, until Trump dusted them off as a weapon for his
trade
war.
To be sure, it is difficult to measure the overall importance of non-tariff barriers to trade, because they can take so many forms.
But, according to the independent Global
Trade
Alert observatory, since 2008, China has introduced only 25 measures (referred to as “state interventions”) per year, on average, that might restrict
trade
with the US.
Meanwhile, China enacted about the same number of new measures that liberalize
trade
with the US.
When Western companies had a near-monopoly on know-how and technology, their competitive edge more than compensated for distortions created by Chinese barriers to
trade
and investment.
Complaints about unfair Chinese
trade
practices, therefore, are actually complaints about the mismatch between the slow pace of economic opening and the very fast pace of modernization.
And to do that, the last thing policymakers need is an ongoing
trade
war.
Withdrawal from the Trans-Pacific Partnership
trade
agreement turns into a possible decision to re-enter TPP.
The global risk to US inflation reflects not only a cyclical upturn in the world economy, but also mounting
trade
frictions that pose serious threats to the stability of global value, or supply, chains (GVCs).
First and foremost is the Trump administration’s
trade
war with China.
While this new strain of global pressures on US inflation reflects the impact of aggressive
trade
policies on GVCs, the domestic pressures stem from a more familiar source: an extremely tight labor market.
Le Défi ChinoisNEW YORK – So far, discussions about whether or not China should revalue its currency, the renminbi, have focused almost exclusively on the impact of the currency’s exchange rate on China’s
trade
balance.
In evaluating China’s currency policy, the effects of any change on the
trade
balance are no more important than the potential consequences for inward FDI, which plays such a crucial role in China’s economic development, and China’s outward FDI, which is receiving increased attention worldwide.
Moreover, FDI, like trade, is a key means to integrate China into the world economy and make it a responsible stakeholder.
If I had suggested to my superiors at that time that the UN would one day observe and even run elections in sovereign states, conduct intrusive inspections for weapons of mass destruction, impose comprehensive sanctions on the entire import-export
trade
of a member state, or set up international criminal tribunals and coerce governments into handing over their citizens to be tried by foreigners under international law, they would have told me that I did not understand what the UN was all about.
Complicating matters further, these problems’ backdrop is likely to change considerably over the next few decades, owing to demographic shifts, population growth, urbanization, migration within and among countries, globalization,
trade
liberalization, and rapid expansion of middle classes in the developing world.
It is the oldest international environmental agreement and one of the few with real teeth, because it can impose
trade
sanctions for non-compliance – and because virtually all countries have joined.
The mission of CITES is to prevent illegal wildlife trafficking and illicit
trade
in endangered and protected species.
Commercial
trade
in species that are threatened with extinction – including elephants, rhinos, and tigers – as well as derivative products, such as tusks, horns, and powders, is completely prohibited.
Commercial
trade
in species that are not yet threatened with extinction but are still protected by CITES – for example, pythons – is subject to a permit.
We believe that innovative development finance can play a role in helping the 180 CITES parties to realize the convention’s full potential, by adapting widely available cutting-edge technologies and tools to the business of
trade
permits.
The international
trade
in CITES-listed species is a multibillion-dollar business, ranging from timber to exotic pets to luxury leather products.
Since CITES entered into force, the number of
trade
permits issued annually has risen significantly, to more than one million.
For example, the official python
trade
covered by permits has an annual market value of $1 billion; but another estimated $1 billion in python products is traded on the black market.
Imagine the world’s first impact fund to invest in cutting-edge devices and services that improve the regulation, enforcement, and public awareness of international
trade
in endangered species.
Back
Next
Related words
Global
Countries
Would
Which
Economic
World
Their
Investment
International
Other
Growth
Could
Deficit
Policy
Should
Economy
About
Country
Between
While