Example sentences of "developing country [adv] " in BNC.

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1 One was to acknowledge that GATT 's rules should take account of levels of economic development , and that developing countries henceforward would not invariably be expected to make reciprocal concessions to the rich , developed countries .
2 In developing countries particularly , early marriage has as one consequence a lengthening of the period that women spend in childbearing .
3 This study investigates whether there is prima facie support for this view , through a statistical analysis of wage and employment changes , disaggregated by sectors of manufacturing and size of enterprises for approximately 8-10 developing countries over two decades .
4 However , the only individual who appears to have a plan that will appeal to the developing world is Dr. Mustapha Tolba , head of the United Nations Enviroment Plan who proposed a users ' tax paid by the consumers of ozone depleting chemicals , to be collected by governments and used by developing countries both to modernise their production systems and to compensate the multi-nationals for the transfer of their most advanced energy effective technology .
5 So prices have tend to have fallen on world markets for agricultural goods because of support right , and they 've also become a lot more volatile and that , and that is the er the source of the international frustration with erm the common agricultural policy and this is why we 've got agriculture er being introduced into the G A T T. Not only does it impose huge costs on domestic tax payers and consumers , it also in incurs erm a large cost on third country exporters , right now if you think that most of those countries may well be developing countries and agricultural output is their only source of foreign exchange erm then er the policies of the rich countries in the West are erm a actively erm hindering the development prospects of developing countries alright and that may not be the desired intention .
6 The energy consumption is about 100 units ( kg of coal equivalent per person ) in a developing country and about 10000 units in Europe and the U.S.A. This is affected by the fact that developing countries mostly have tropical or sub-tropical climates while developed countries are in the temperate zone , but there is a similar difference of about 100 : 1 in income per head between the rich countries and the poor countries ( The Economist — the world in figures ) .
7 4/ The developing countries mostly need to be able to compete in the developed world market , which needs increased co-operation .
8 Quality of data in developing countries also presents special difficulties .
9 This level , however , has been achieved by many of the developing countries today and expansion of their secondary and further education sectors will not by itself solve their economic problems .
10 In developing countries today , in spite of the relevant laws , the age at which girls first marry or enter a union depends largely upon cultural standards and the tolerance for deviation .
11 The lag in birth rate decrease behind death rate decrease is as characteristic of developing countries today .
12 The recession of the 1970s hit developing countries even harder than rich ones — the shockwaves that rock the world economy always crash against the poorer nations with most violence .
13 For example a big pesticide firm may become the only outlet for a seed resistant to its own weedkiller chemicals , which could force farmers in developing countries especially into potentially ruinous dependence .
14 For developing countries especially , the contradictory tugs from the imperatives of economics and competition pose dilemmas of choice .
15 Women in developing countries typically have their first child when they are very young and , except where circumstances of custom proscribe it or where family planning is not widely practised , continue childbearing until they are nearing the end of the reproductive years .
16 In developed and developing countries alike indigenous paraprofessionals seem to be more effective than professionals in working with certain clients and communities or at the very least they are seen as adding a valuable dimension to social service provision .
17 Lack of communication underlies the very different problems facing developed and developing countries alike .
18 This refers to the shock treatment applied by Western-dominated financial institutions like the International Monetary Fund ( IMF ) to the economies of developing countries so as to make them more efficient .
19 Another reason why they are peripheral is that they are so largely rural — in the developing countries too , the rural areas are in a peripheral relation to the urban centre .
20 But attitudes towards underground or informal work have been changing in developing countries too .
21 The US and the Anglo-Saxon countries , for example , complain that it spends too much time and makes too little progress on basic standards , which they see as of benefit to developing countries alone .
22 While Western and developing countries apparently agree that they should prevent the ‘ environmentally unsound disposal ’ of hazardous waste , there is no consensus about what the term ‘ hazardous ’ means .
23 We were too pessimistic about manufacturing companies withdrawing from the the Third World as automation in the West took over — in fact there is much more manufacturing in developing countries now than in 1980 , as our next issue will make plain .
24 George L. Monahan Jr , had said that although the prospect of East-West nuclear conflict had declined , the spread of ballistic missiles among developing countries now made the project more important than ever .
25 That 's right in , in a current case of in developing countries now
26 For example a semi-feudal landlord in a developing country today may employ a large number of retainers or family servants who will work for cash rent , labour rent or a proportion of the harvest on his land .
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