Ví dụ về việc sử dụng China would need trong Tiếng anh và bản dịch của chúng sang Tiếng việt
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Adding more details, Kudlow said China would need to report any intervention in the foreign exchange market.
But to navigate the next phase of consumption andinnovation-driven development, China would need a more sophisticated model.
Bass implied that China would need those reserves to stabilize its banking system, though he did not say so.
To reduce the risks associated with capital-account liberalization, China would need to liberalize its interest rate.
To achieve the net-zero target, China would need to more than double its overall electricity production, the report said.
Randy Tinseth, vice president of marketing for Boeing's commercial airplane division, said the company has revised up its expectations from last year,when it predicted China would need 4,330 new planes by 2029.
Chinese Ambassador to Bolivia Liang Yu estimated China would need 800,000 tons of the metal by 2025.
Boeing figures showed China would need 128,500 new pilots, while the countries of South East Asia would need 48,500 and South Asia 42,750.
In another scenario assuming an exchange rate at today's price, China would need about 525,000 tons, Bloomberg Intelligence estimates.
Boeing figures showed China would need 128,500 new pilots, while the countries of South East Asia would need 48,500 and South Asia 42,750.
Ruslan Pukhov, the director of the Center for Analysis of Strategic Technologies and an adviser to Russia's ministry of defense,predicted that China would need a decade to perfect a jet engine, among other key weapons technologies.
To benefit from specialization, China would need to depend on other countries and deal with competition.
Mr Ruslan Pukhov, the director of the Centre for Analysis of Strategic Technologies and an adviser to Russia's Ministry of Defence,predicted that China would need a decade to perfect a jet engine, among other key weapons technologies.
However, the IMF has said that China would need to liberalize its currency before such a step could take place.
First, China would need to accept that being guaranteed a share of the profits from oil and gas resources throughout the South China Sea would be enough to satisfy its demand for“historic rights.”.
The Chinese Ambassador to Bolivia estimates that China would need some 800,000 tons of the light metal by 2025.
In a war there, China would need to cycle forces between the combat theatre and a small number of bases hundreds of miles away in southern China. .
Mr Yang says that, for an invasion to succeed, China would need promptly to destroy 85% or more of Taiwan's own missiles;
More importantly, China would need to privatize its state-owned enterprises so that their profits become income for households and/or massively tax SOEs' profits and then transfer those fiscal resources to the household sector.
Mr Yang says that, for an invasion to succeed, China would need promptly to destroy 85% or more of Taiwan's own missiles;
In a war there, China would need to cycle forces between the combat theatre and a small number of bases hundreds of miles away in southern China. .
Made in China 2025, published in summer 2015,laid out how and why China would need to move up the technology ladder and close the gap with developed countries in higher-end or intelligent.
In practice, this means that China would need to run a chronic current-account deficit, which it may not be willing to do.
In 2016,AVIC official Zhu Qian raised eyebrows by claiming that China would need at least one thousand Y-20s- more than the number of heavy cargo jets in service around the world!
To meet their biofuels targets, China would need to produce 26 percent more maize and India 16 percent more sugarcane, the study found.
To fulfil the targets, U.S. exports to China would need to climb to USD 263 billion in 2020 and USD 309 billion in 2021, an increase without precedent in the history of U.S. trade.
The US and Japanese cases suggest China would need two things to enforce its claim to the South China Sea: a regional monopoly of naval power and a military presence on the landmasses surrounding the Sea.
Shanghai-based military analyst Ni Lexiong said China would need to provide military assistance to North Korea if US land forces invaded, but Pyongyang's violation of the UN non-proliferation treaty was a“strong reason” for Beijing to choose not to help.