Trade
in sentence
11085 examples of Trade in a sentence
For example, the Inter-American Development Bank reports that the
trade
gains from Latin America’s 33 small regional
trade
agreements have been meager.
This suggests that, for the UK, mega-regional
trade
agreements – which provide access to multiple markets, but entail lower levels of fiscal and regulatory integration than the EU – are the best way forward.
Another multilateral forum that could prove invaluable to the UK is the Trans-Pacific Partnership, a mega-regional
trade
agreement that provides for duty-free
trade
and includes modest commitments in areas like state aid and competition policy, without requiring EU-level integration.
Given its free-trade credentials and international stature, the UK could help to breathe new life into these and other
trade
negotiations that have been thrown into disarray by the Trump administration’s protectionist impulses.
As a major producer of sophisticated components, its long-term
trade
strategy should focus on gaining deep and unfettered access to integrated cross-border supply chains.
This has stalled progress on many of the issues – including reducing carbon emissions, establishing global financial regulatory measures, and concluding the Doha Round of global
trade
talks, to name a few – that require global attention.
As for
trade
with China, The Economist points out that “for every dollar’s worth of exports to China [principally raw materials], India imports three.”
When the fighting finally ended in 1988, the US followed up with financial and
trade
sanctions on Iran that remain in place to this day.
The EU is Turkey’s leading
trade
partner and one of its largest investors, and has long considered Turkey to be a stable ally in a volatile region.
It could be authorized to enter into
trade
agreements as well as agreements concerning individuals (for example, admission and circulation of foreigners, or extradition), plus the right to seek admission to the UN (which does not require full sovereignty and independence).
Navigating China’s New Silk RoadBEIJING – Since its introduction by Chinese President Xi Jinping in 2013, the “one belt, one road” initiative – an ambitious plan to revitalize the ancient Silk Road overland and maritime
trade
routes linking East and West – has attracted considerable attention.
The original Silk Road, established more than 2,000 years ago, was a critical network of
trade
routes that promoted economic, political, and cultural exchange among Asia, Africa, and Europe.
China’s new “Silk Road Economic Belt” and “Twenty-First Century Maritime Silk Road” will do the same, with newly built or upgraded infrastructure facilitating the flow of trade, investment, culture, and ideas – and thus supporting shared economic growth.
China has already laid the groundwork for these relationships, strengthening economic cooperation and
trade
with countries along the “belt and road.”
Private capital flows have exploded since, dwarfing
trade
in goods and services.
An important
trade
deal advanced, and no issue was made of the new Abbott government’s embarrassingly fulsome embrace of US leadership in the region, and its rookie mistake in describing Japan as “our best friend in Asia” (the right formula in these cases being “We have no better friend than…”).
CAMBRIDGE – China’s
trade
balance is on course for another bumper surplus this year.
Discussion of China’s currency focuses around the need to shrink the country’s
trade
surplus and correct global macroeconomic imbalances.
With the decline in trade, foreign competition became less of a problem for import-sensitive sectors.
The World Bank estimates that only 2% of the decline in
trade
during the crisis was due to increased protectionism.
In the 1930’s, by contrast, roughly half of the decline in world
trade
was due to protectionism.
But
trade
restrictions were a poor substitute for domestic reflationary measures, as they did little to arrest the downward spiral of output and prices.
For example, greater integration with world markets can be achieved via export subsidies (South Korea), export-processing zones (Malaysia), investment incentives for multinational enterprises (Singapore), special economic zones (China), regional free
trade
agreements (Mexico), or import liberalization (Chile).
Practically every French administration in recent memory has tried to rewrite the country’s gargantuan labor code, typically failing in the face of
trade
union protests.
Indeed, the Philippines is well known as a center of the illegal organ
trade
and a “hot spot” for transplant tourism.
Trade
in humans and their bodies is not a new phenomenon, but today’s businesses are historically unique, because they require advanced biomedicine, as well as ideas and values that enhance the
trade
in organs.
Indeed, multilateral
trade
agreements were being eclipsed by bilateral deals, such as between the EU and various developing countries, long before the divisions over Iraq appeared.
Higher oil prices and lower
trade
turnover aggravate the problem.
Excluding Croatia, 74% of Western Balkan countries’ total
trade
is with the EU, compared to only 6% with China, 5% with Russia, and 4% with Turkey.
Even when Obama was actively supporting Russia’s accession to the World
Trade
Organization earlier in his presidency, he had to expend considerable political capital just to repeal the 1974 Jackson-Vanik Amendment, which secured freer Jewish emigration from the Soviet Union as a condition for normal
trade
relations.
Back
Next
Related words
Global
Countries
Would
Which
Economic
World
Their
Investment
International
Other
Growth
Could
Deficit
Policy
Should
Economy
About
Country
Between
While