Examples of using Not all developing in English and their translations into Russian
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Official
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Colloquial
Not all developing countries benefit in return from"brain gain.
Thirdly, sustainable funding mechanisms are an issue for most if not all developing countries, such as Tonga.
However, not all developing countries benefit from trade in the same manner.
Second, the regional distribution of financial transfers was uneven, for not all developing countries had benefited from them.
Thus, not all developing countries could take advantage of trade liberalization.
There are, however, some general policy options andresponses that are relevant to the challenges faced by most, if not all, developing countries.
Not all developing regions participate equally in the emergence of international investment flows.
Negotiations on the post-2015 development agenda must begin with the fact that not all developing countries had achieved all the MDGs.
It was noted that not all developing countries had enjoyed a period of sustained growth and income convergence.
Despite the emergence of international private capital flows as a key source of external finance for developing countries, not all developing countries have access to international capital markets.
Not all developing regions have participated equally in the emergence of international investment flows.
Although growth prospects for developing countries were relatively bright, not all developing countries had been able to participate in the world economic recovery, particularly the poorest countries.
Not all developing countries have been as successful at embedding foreign TNCs into the local economy through linkages.
In the area of finance, despite some positive developments, such as the restructuring andreplenishment of the Global Environment Facility and the increase in private financial flows to some, although not all developing countries, the overall financing of Agenda 21 and sustainable development fell significantly short of expectations and requirements.
Not all developing countries will be able to receive the same ICT-based services if these require the same technologies.
At the same time,we recognize that not all developing countries have been able to take advantage of the benefits of globalization, and certainly not to the same degree.
Not all developing countries, however, are in a position to liberalize capital movements completely towards all other countries.
Evidence shows that not all developing countries have been as successful at embedding foreign TNCs into the local economy through linkages.
Not all developing countries have attracted increased FDI, and not all inward FDI has generated the expected benefits in the host economies.
Some delegations noted that not all developing countries, especially LDCs, had the financial capacity to undertake significant trade financing or fiscal stimulus.
Not all developing countries were equipped to focus on United Nations markets and help their suppliers to win contracts.
For the foreseeable future, not all developing countries would be able to participate in space activities unless there was an immediate expansion of bilateral and multilateral cooperation.
Not all developing countries are equally able to seize the new opportunities in international trade that are likely to arise in the process of globalization.
Bearing in mind that not all developing countries were in a position to provide officers gratis, ample consultation on the matter with all Member States was of paramount importance.
Not all developing economies had the financial and fiscal capacity to mitigate the economic and social effects of the crisis, and to stimulate aggregate demand in particular.
Several representatives noted that not all developing countries possessed the electronic communication capacity necessary to be full and active members of the working group and that this need should be addressed.
Not all developing countries, however, have been successful in promoting such linkages and in attracting foreign firms to invest in the local economy in the long term.
Moreover, not all developing countries have benefited from increased ODA, trade, debt relief and international capital flows.
Some, albeit not all, developing countries are again able to arrange medium-term international lending, but the terms are more stringent than before the crisis began.
Although not all developing countries are expected to realize net trade gains from liberalization of agricultural trade, for developing countries as a whole the gains would outweigh the losses;