Trade
in sentence
11085 examples of Trade in a sentence
These include statistics on births and deaths; growth and poverty; tax and trade; health, education, and safety; and land and the environment.
According to a 2010 United Nations report on the creative economy, global
trade
in creative goods grew at an annual rate of 14% from 2002 to 2008.
Meanwhile, exports of such goods from developing countries, which tend to experience more violence, grew at a rate of 13.5%, reaching $176 billion (43% of total world
trade
in creative industries) in 2008.
Although overall global
trade
declined by 12% that year,
trade
in creative goods and services continued to expand.
CAMBRIDGE – The burgeoning
trade
war between the United States and China has as much to do with technology as with the balance of
trade.
First, America and other
trade
partners must continue to confront China on its intellectual-property (IP) violations and market-access inequities.
Ultimately, the enemy of American innovation is not
trade
or Made in China 2025.
Almost the only concrete outcome was the commissioning of a report by a group chaired by a senior French civil servant, Philippe Jurgensen, on whether intervention was an effective instrument against the volatility that seemed to be undermining
trade
relations.
We have established a single customs territory, slashing red tape and removing non-tariff
trade
barriers.
Unfortunately, across Africa, national borders have tended to be chokepoints rather than enablers of intra-continental cooperation on trade, security, labor, and environmental issues.
Ideally, the two governments would work together to negotiate mutually beneficial
trade
and investment agreements, with sensitivity to the challenges faced by both sides.
But the opposite outcome – the escalation of mutually damaging
trade
and investment disputes – is also a distinct possibility.
Within Asia, a key factor shaping China’s economic prospects is progress on Chinese-led regional
trade
and investment agreements.
In particular, investments in regional development via the “one belt, one road” initiative and the Asian Infrastructure Investment Bank may produce expanded
trade
and growth in Asia (and beyond), though the effects will not be immediate.
A third factor suggesting that the euro's downward trend against the dollar may not last much longer is the
trade
imbalance between the US and Europe.
And as the transatlantic
trade
imbalance widens further, ever larger capital flows will be needed to keep pushing the euro down.
The US took the lead in building a system of international law, creating the UN, and fostering free
trade
and open markets around the world, while maintaining the security umbrella that allowed transnational institutions like the European Union and the Association of Southeast Asian Nations to develop.
President Barack Obama will likely raise issues such as the bilateral
trade
imbalance, the Chinese government’s manipulation of the renminbi’s exchange rate, prevention of nuclear proliferation, recent tension on the Korean peninsula, international cooperation on climate change, and China’s poor human rights record.
China will blame the
trade
imbalance on America’s ban on high-tech exports to China, deny engaging in currency manipulation, call on the US and its allies in East Asia to negotiate with North Korea without preconditions, insist on China’s entitlement as a developing country to an exemption from emissions caps on CO2, and refute criticism of its human rights record.
Its foreign
trade
and investment patterns are diversified and dynamic.
With a few minor exceptions, migration is internal to the region, and a modus vivendi has been reached with the drug trade, mainly coca leaf and cocaine in Bolivia, Peru, and Colombia.
But the scale of China’s economy and its role in global
trade
and financial markets compel us to try to understand the intentions of China’s new leadership.
The economic costs from the resulting panic, including a collapse of travel and trade, could be devastating.
This has contributed to the rejection of
trade
openness and calls for protectionism.
Other examples include migration restrictions,
trade
policies, and regulations on tax havens.
A cooperative approach could help to improve the troubled
trade
dynamics between Asia and the West, characterized by disagreement over China’s lax enforcement of IP laws.
In the Doha
trade
negotiations, industrialized nations accepted the need to liberalize their agricultural markets by reducing subsidies to domestic producers and tariff barriers on agricultural imports.
The UK’s Multilateral
Trade
FutureCAMBRIDGE – As the United Kingdom negotiates the terms of its divorce from the European Union, it would be wise for the country’s leaders to begin looking further into the future to determine what approach to international
trade
relations would serve it best.
Does the UK really want to hang its future on bilateral agreements with a long list of individual
trade
partners?
This approach limits gains from
trade.
Back
Next
Related words
Global
Countries
Would
Which
Economic
World
Their
Investment
International
Other
Growth
Could
Deficit
Policy
Should
Economy
About
Country
Between
While