Trade
in sentence
11085 examples of Trade in a sentence
America’s massive
trade
deficit is a direct consequence of an unprecedented shortfall of domestic saving.
This is where America’s multilateral
trade
deficit enters the equation, for it has long accounted for the bulk of America’s balance-of-payments gap.
Since the
trade
deficit is widely thought to put pressure on US jobs and real wages, the US-China
trade
imbalance has come under special scrutiny in these days of great angst.
Yes, China does account for the largest component of America’s multilateral
trade
deficit – making up 42% of the total
trade
gap in 2010.
In an era of open-ended US government budget deficits and chronic shortfalls in personal saving, America is doomed to suffer subpar savings and massive multilateral
trade
deficits for as far as the eye can see.
In that vein, closing down
trade
with China, while failing to address the saving shortfall, is like putting pressure on one end of a water balloon.
The Chinese component of America’s multilateral
trade
deficit will simply migrate somewhere else – most likely to a higher-cost producer.
This is not to ignore important US-China
trade
issues that need to be addressed.
At the same time, the US government should come clean with the American public about charges of Chinese currency manipulation and unfair
trade
practices.
Argentina exports corn, soybeans, fruits, and wine – as well as cars and auto parts to the rest of the regional Mercosur
trade
bloc, where it enjoys ample tariff protection against third-country competition.
And whereas 35% of China’s cross-border
trade
was settled in RMB in 2015 (with most of the remainder in dollars), that share has fallen to about 12% today.
Merchandise
trade
is falling, too, contracting 10% between 2011 and 2015, which was the largest drop over any four-year period since World War II.
Other industries, including banking and retail trade, struggled with IT until they got it right.
They should look to fast-growing Asia, argue advocates of the Transpacific
Trade
Partnership (TPP), the proposed mega-regional
trade
accord that would bind together 12 Pacific Rim countries.
That is where Pacific Rim
trade
and the TPP come in.
The TPP could help change this by easing
trade
in intermediate inputs and helping build Pacific-wide value chains.
Optimists can envision a new generation of trans-Pacific flows of trade, investment, and knowledge, with benefits for all.
The conundrum is especially vexing for Chile, a country that already has bilateral
trade
agreements with every potential member of the TPP.
If Chile is unlikely to gain substantial new market access, ask critics, why should Chile make
trade
concessions at all?
The US itself would benefit from having
trade
partners that can innovate, instead of serving only as passive buyers for American movies and songs.
The sooner US
trade
negotiators understand that, the better for everyone.
Because the state uses its apparatus to deter competition – both informally, through arbitrary enforcement of property rights, and formally, through
trade
restrictions – crony capitalism is not only unjust, but also inefficient.
As in the darker decades of the twentieth century, today’s nationalism takes the form of heightened opposition to immigration and – to a lesser degree – free
trade.
They include the security issue raised by continued fighting in Ukraine, the question of how to coordinate energy policy, the stalled Brexit negotiations, and the threat of a global
trade
war.
The EU has not proved that it is up to the task of confronting any of these issues, even
trade
(the one policy domain that fits fully within the EU’s jurisdiction).
Consider the recent G7 summit in Quebec, where
trade
was at the top of the agenda.
But its representatives missed a golden opportunity when US President Donald Trump, who might as well have written the chaos playbook, offered an alternative to the
trade
wars he himself launched: the complete dismantling of tariff barriers.
The IMF’s lending resources have shrunk dramatically relative to world
trade
and income compared over the past 50 years.
Now, as governments erect barriers and reinstate border controls, the refugee crisis is disrupting flows of people and gumming up
trade.
Only Rajasthan's economy has kept pace with the rest of the country; the other four have not benefited much from
trade
and regulatory liberalization.
Back
Next
Related words
Global
Countries
Would
Which
Economic
World
Their
Investment
International
Other
Growth
Could
Deficit
Policy
Should
Economy
About
Country
Between
While