Beneficiaries
in sentence
229 examples of Beneficiaries in a sentence
But most workers are not covered by such plans, and the biggest
beneficiaries
have been CEOs and top managers, a significant fraction of whose pay is tied to productivity, as reflected in profits and stock performance.
We have also reformed the OCHA and IOM human-resource structures to ensure better protection for aid
beneficiaries
across regional- and country-level offices.
Its primary
beneficiaries
were Southern European countries, which had sold a disproportionately large share of their government bonds to foreign investors to finance their huge current-account deficits in the decade leading up to the global financial crisis.
Far more often, the main
beneficiaries
are the rich and politically connected, while the losers are consumers who pay higher prices.
Support from around the world is fitful: only 60% of aid pledges have come in, with only a fraction actually reaching the intended
beneficiaries.
When the 2005 bankruptcy law was passed, lenders were the beneficiaries; they didn’t worry about how the law affected the rights of debtors.
In 2007, only 7.4% of
beneficiaries
had received more than $1,000,000.
But it is what I often inelegantly call “Man-Sheff-Leeds-Pool” that distinguishes the Northern Powerhouse, and Manchester, which sits at the heart of it, is certainly among the early
beneficiaries.
Those changes should also be phased in gradually to protect
beneficiaries
and avoid an economic downturn.
The
beneficiaries
of these trends may have accumulated enough political influence to maintain the status quo, highlighting distributional issues that have generally received too little attention in understanding policy responses or their absence.
As countries move closer to their potential per capita output levels, the power of convergence diminishes, forcing its
beneficiaries
to adjust their growth models accordingly.
The only
beneficiaries
are the human traffickers that charge Syrian refugees some €6,000 for space in a dangerous boat or freighter.
It is a fear based on the instinctive realization that the “White Man’s World” – a lived reality assumed by its
beneficiaries
as a matter of course – is in terminal decline, both globally and in the societies of the West.
Across the region, the richest are the overwhelming
beneficiaries
of economic growth, while the poorest are falling further behind.
The main
beneficiaries
of free trade and technological change must actively compensate the losers through taxation, subsidies, and employment support.
Moreover, impartial observers recognize that Latin America will be one of the great
beneficiaries
of the twenty-first century, and that closer relations between the two continents should be a key goal for both.
Also, Nigerians need to decide whether all
beneficiaries
receive equal shares, or whether those who face the environmental consequences of oil exploration and production -- for example, in the Nigerian delta -- should receive more.
Nor can you ameliorate the painful effects of globalization if you believe that social-insurance programs turn their
beneficiaries
into lethargic “takers.”
Moreover, only half of those expenditures show up as more health care received by program beneficiaries; the other half flow into the general US health-care financing system and cover care that was previously uncompensated.
The biggest
beneficiaries
will be the top 1% of domestic households which own about half of outstanding shares.
By contrast, the benefits of public investments are slower to be felt, and their
beneficiaries
are more diffuse.
Economists typically make the point in reverse, when they argue against focusing excessively on the losers from freer trade, and they decry the tendency to overlook the
beneficiaries
on the export side.
They should not be prone to the same fallacy now, by ignoring that US protectionism surely will generate some
beneficiaries
as well in other countries.
In the 1980s, such programs helped thousands of Ethiopians, Vietnamese, and Argentines, and a look at the communities in which the
beneficiaries
were resettled reveals that the vast majority have become self-reliant taxpayers.
The Brexiteers were the
beneficiaries
of this wave.
So in this bizarre dance, where the big parties and important candidates know that it is better to start later, the real
beneficiaries
of today’s media circus are the candidates without any real chance of winning: a fascist, another extreme rightist, a communist, two Trotskyites, and a few other marginal personalities.
The children of Mao’s senior cadres who enjoyed the greatest fame during the Cultural Revolution are now the principal
beneficiaries
of today’s economic reforms.
Yet the ECB seems committed to it – not least, it seems, because QE’s
beneficiaries
outnumber those who are footing the bill.
The biggest beneficiaries, of course, are the corporations whose hunger for land is driving most of the large-scale deforestation.
The experiences of countries that have “graduated” from Gavi assistance will also hold important lessons for other international health programs and their
beneficiaries.
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