Sentences with phrase «what most developed countries»

Not exact matches

What that means is that you are in an environment that is going to have further trouble in terms of investment returns that are in areas that are based on economic growth and areas that do relatively well like bonds... Broadly speaking, I think that investors should be looking for lower prices on most risk assets in these developed countries with the exception of Japan.»
In June he unveiled what he calls «40/20/10,» which is narrowing P&G's focus to its 40 biggest «category / country combinations» (such as laundry in China), its 20 largest innovations, and its 10 most lucrative developing markets.
Here's an interesting Bloomberg piece on what bond guru Bill Gross is calling «financial repression», but what you can just call «low interest rates» The big story is that the world is still crawling out of a near - depression, and there is not a central banker in the developed world who would dare dream of pushing interest rates to anything above a number you could count out on the fingers of one hand (and seriously, in most countries you could leave out the thumb and index finger as well).
It is a symptom of what Mark Noll has called «the scandal of the evangelical mind» that our country's most developed system for selling Christian books doesn't want to sell intellectually serious books.
In fact, although the United States is one of the most religious developed countries in the world, most Americans scored 50 percent or less on a quiz measuring knowledge of the Bible, world religions and what the Constitution says about religion in public life.
@ larryking listen jock wenger could never coach anyother club because no big club would go six season without a trophy there is no way wenger could go to madrid and go two season without a trophy no way in hell he would be fired in no time bmunich fired klinsman less than half season look at the real madrid coach grave yard pelligrinie made 95 + points last season that amount would win the league in almost any country yet he got fired i can go on if fergi goes two seasons without a trophy am sure he gone i love arsenal but football is about winning trophies wenger has hypnotize you i do nt care arsenal have gone five years without a trophy and six witout the league not even a carling cup or fa cup and loosing all our best players all for money all this talk about wenger and his youth policies i can count on both hands all the players that came through arsenal youth system that went on to be world beaters look at the current crop walcott nasri diaby denilson bedtner clichy none of these are world class they have improve minimal @ arsenal compare that to barca their youths pedro and co are world beaters event the great vanpercy who we rate he would never leave arsenal because all that chance wenger gives him he would» t get at other big clubs this does not make sense we buy young players they take ages to develop most do nt» t then we sell them or they leave because they want to win things that how you grow pretty soon that top four will become very hard to stay in if we get out of that then what i wish all you wenger fans luck am all out of patients with him last chance this year................
So the government has made permanent the former temporary ban on profiteering «vulture funds», persecuting the most indebted countries, and backed the «Publish What You Pay» campaign to bring transparency to multinational oil and mining companies» payments to developing world governments.
The report also finds what appear to be consistent differences between the gut microbial population — also called the microbiota — of individuals in developed countries like the U.S. and those the developing world and provides some of the most complete evidence that the gut microbiota usually return to normal after cholera infection.
What makes it worse is that South Africa is adopting the developed countries stance, most precisely European Union policies, towards treatment of refugees and asylum - seekers.
What we found is that we are failing in this country to develop our most competitive resource — our people.
Under Gia's leadership, our acclaimed Portfolio Defense model is helping students, in our schools and around the country, develop what they need most to thrive: academic knowledge, leadership skills, the ability to reflect, and a mindset for growth.
It's impossible to know what countries have the most weight in the «global equities» category, but we'll divide up that 13 % among the US, international developed and emerging markets.
Founding member of what are regarded as three of the country's most influential photographic groups, Giuseppe Cavalli was the recipient of numerous international awards for his work, the constant gentle theme of which developed out of a reaction against the overblown imagery of Fascist era Italy.
The developed countries of the world can talk forever about the virtues of solar panels and windmills, but what the energy - poor need most are common fuels like kerosene, propane, and gasoline.
In summary, a strong case can be made that the US emissions reduction commitment for 2025 of 26 % to 28 % clearly fails to pass minimum ethical scrutiny when one considers: (a) the 2007 IPCC report on which the US likely relied upon to establish a 80 % reduction target by 2050 also called for 25 % to 40 % reduction by developed countries by 2020, and (b) although reasonable people may disagree with what «equity» means under the UNFCCC, the US commitments can't be reconciled with any reasonable interpretation of what «equity» requires, (c) the United States has expressly acknowledged that its commitments are based upon what can be achieved under existing US law not on what is required of it as a mater of justice, (d) it is clear that more ambitious US commitments have been blocked by arguments that alleged unacceptable costs to the US economy, arguments which have ignored US responsibilities to those most vulnerable to climate change, and (e) it is virtually certain that the US commitments can not be construed to be a fair allocation of the remaining carbon budget that is available for the entire world to limit warming to 2 °C.
• Assure that those responsible for climate change provide adequate, predictable adaptation funding to enable developing countries and in particular the most vulnerable developing countries to do what is necessary to avoid climate change damages in cases where it is possible to take action and to prevent damages, or be compensated for climate change damages in cases where it is impossible to take protective action.
Because none of the developed countries were willing to make emissions reduction commitments congruent with what scientific community said was necessary to protect them, some of the most vulnerable developing countries saw the developed countries» positions in Copenhagen as ominous, perhaps a death sentence.
While some Parties are making more progress in cutting emissions than others, what unsettles us the most is that not a single developed country has indicated their intention to increase their targets for 2020, neither those countries that remain under the Kyoto Protocol or, even worse, from those who have stepped outside (or were never in).
Policymakers concerned with international climate finance, particularly board members of the nascent Green Climate Fund, should first be asking the question posed in our report: what are the needs of developing countries, especially the poorest and most vulnerable, as they confront the climate crisis?
What we should do is identify the most ambitious mitigation scenario in AR5 and, based on this, agree a global budget to 2050, as well as agreed levels of emissions for 2020, 2025 and 2030, all consistent with a reasonable chance of keeping warming below 1.5 C. Subsequently, we should identify a methodology based on historical responsibilities and respective capabilities, and which is adjusted for development needs, to define developed countries» commitments on key issues such as mitigation and finance for 2020, 2025 and 2030.
The scope of what the NDCs need to include has to be broader, and responsibility has to be differentiated; most developing countries contribute negligible amounts to global warming yet bear the brunt of the burden and this
The scope of what the NDCs need to include has to be broader, and responsibility has to be differentiated; most developing countries contribute negligible amounts to global warming yet bear the brunt of the burden and this has to be acknowledged.
Most of what we know about the informal repair industry in developing countries comes from ethnographic, qualitative case studies and documentaries like Fixers — the kind of research that doesn't translate particularly well into the cut - and - dry, numbers - based, diagrammatic form of an infographic.
Developing countries are the most likely supplier of emissions units, though it remains to be seen what new market mechanisms will be defined after the conclusion of the Kyoto Protocol.
But there is little chance that what the developing countries would most like to see — new concessional financing for adaptation and mitigation that is and provided from the national budgets of the wealthy nations — will be forthcoming.
Throw all morals to the wayside, and not pay back to developing countries what they owe them in return for most weather catastrophes they have caused to happen?
Breakthrough Institute recently completed an analysis of long - term data from 1971 to 2006, drawn from 26 developed countries to find out what reduces carbon intensity — i.e., advances «decarbonization» — most rapidly.
Most of what has been done thus far in that area is based on what justice design systems in the richer and so - called developed countries produce and teaching poorer and less developed countries do so the same.
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