Word: exportable
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Dates: during 1950-1959
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...credit package made available to France $250 million from the European Payments Union and $131 million from its quota in the International Monetary Fund, enabled it to defer payments on $186 million owed to the U.S. and the Export-Import Bank during the next three years, and to pay the U.S. in francs for $88 million worth of military supplies and surplus cotton...
...private-enterprise development of petroleum has been vastly successful, but Brazil and Argentina have long since adopted the French-Italian pattern of state oil enterprises. Frankly trying to export the private-enterprise concept, Washington has long refused loans to public companies...
...rice for Soviet-bloc cement, signed in July 1955, has proved disillusioning. The cement, for which Burma had only limited use, arrived during the monsoon and hardened on the docks. The Soviets turned around and sold the rice for cash in other Asian countries, thereby depriving Burma of potential export markets. Under another 1955 agreement, Russia is to "give" Burma $28 million worth of building materials and technical help toward construction of a hospital, a technological institute, a hotel, a sports arena and an exhibition hall. The agreement requires Burma, as a token of gratitude, to give Russia in return...
...chief of production, stepped into his job. He ordered the drive into the U.S. market, pushed output from 900 cars and trucks a day to 1,500 at present. He also steered sales from $409.6 million in 1955 to more than $500 million in 1957, including $130 million in export sales, making Renault the biggest French exporter. Of Renault's $14 million-plus profit in 1956, the state got $6,600,000 in taxes and $2,100,000 in after-tax profits. Another $2,100,000 was carved up among the workers in profit sharing, $3,100,000 went...
...University procured the objects between 1890 and 1914, before the various central American governments forbade the export of antiquities...