Word: outputted
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...Pechiney Ugine Kuhlmann's sales generated abroad, French officials see the new giant as an answer to "the American Challenge." Already the combine, among many other ventures, is negotiating with the Soviets to help design and build a $500 million aluminum complex in Siberia, which will have an output equal to nearly half Pechiney's worldwide capacity...
...with the recognition that all these factors are interlocked. Human population cannot grow without food for sustenance. Since just about all the globe's best land is already under cultivation, farm production can rise only through use of tractors, fertilizers, pesticides -all products of industry. But more industrial output not only demands a heavier drain on natural resources that are scarce even now; it also creates more pollution. And pollution ultimately interferes with the growth of both population and food...
...André Breton, the pope of Surrealism, hailed him as one of the "fixed points" of the new sensibility. But then De Chirico's own aims switched, and the admiration was reversed. Hardly anyone in 50 years has had a kind word for De Chirico's later output. It is generally written off as the work of a self-plagiarizing bore...
...economic adviser and the leading candidate to succeed Maurice Stans as Commerce Secretary soon. Peterson's figures show that the U.S. position is eroding, and that the nation's share of total world production between 1950 and 1970 fell from 39% to 30%. Its share of auto output dropped from 76% to 31%, of steel output from 46% to 20%, and its proportion of world exports from 16% to 14%. As recently as 1964, U.S. exports ran $6.8 billion ahead of imports, but last year imports exceeded exports by about $2 billion...
This slippage reflects a panoply of causes: the strong recovery of war-shattered economies overseas during the 1950s, U.S. inflation and lagging productivity in recent years, and the shift of the American economy from one dominated by manufacturing to one in which 42% of output is now accounted for by services, which are less readily exportable than goods...