Businesses
in sentence
2499 examples of Businesses in a sentence
But more and more American
businesses
realize that still-growing Asian markets are vital for their future profits and overall economic recovery.
The everyday oppression, stifled media, and shakedowns and extortion of
businesses
for bribes all point to a mafia state on Europe’s border.
Abe’s plan calls for introducing a series of less strictly regulated special economic zones, each with a specific objective – for example, adopting new medical technologies or attracting foreign
businesses.
Policymakers and financial regulators lately have been seeking to reduce funding costs for businesses, which have been piling on risky debt in recent years, as insufficient access to official loans has pushed them to the shadow banking system.
Now available for pre-order.Learn moreWhen it comes to technology and trade with China, there are legitimate national security concerns, which are all the more salient because technologies developed by US
businesses
for commercial purposes increasingly match the sophistication of those developed by the military in key areas like virtual reality, facial recognition, and drones.
It also means that US
businesses
operating in China are vital links and major beneficiaries of the very supply chains that will be disrupted by Trump’s tariffs.So if tariffs cannot counter China’s violations of US and international trade law, what can?
When it comes to technology and trade with China, there are legitimate national security concerns, which are all the more salient because technologies developed by US
businesses
for commercial purposes increasingly match the sophistication of those developed by the military in key areas like virtual reality, facial recognition, and drones.
It also means that US
businesses
operating in China are vital links and major beneficiaries of the very supply chains that will be disrupted by Trump’s tariffs.
If Western
businesses
hope to keep up, they will need to tap into the African countries and sectors with the highest potential for growth.
Africa is the world’s last frontier market, and Western
businesses
need to start taking advantage of its tremendous potential, as Chinese firms already are.
BDS activists have picketed Jewish-owned
businesses
– from single shops in Glasgow to the retail giant Marks & Spencer – while making many university campuses increasingly uncomfortable for Jewish students.
He reports that, in the United Kingdom, there are ongoing efforts to contest local councils’ right to introduce “gestural” BDS motions aimed at banning procurement from Israeli
businesses.
Indeed, accurate maps break down geographic barriers, empowering individuals to reach their desired destinations, enabling
businesses
to reach consumers anywhere, and enriching people’s outlooks.
Increasingly open borders have made it easier for
businesses
to find the cheapest locations for their operations.
Reducing public-sector dependence requires increasing citizens’ involvement in local businesses, so increasing the private sector’s role in generating employment is vital.
An influx of Western NGOs often bids talent away from nascent
businesses
that could help the country long after the NGOs reset their priorities and move on.
Indeed, with banks failing to impose hard budget constraints on financially unsustainable businesses, and with the planning system incapable of imposing alternative effective discipline, China is already awash with apartment blocks in third-tier cities which will never be occupied, and with huge overcapacity in heavy industry.
The lack of information about how Brexit will play out has
businesses
worried.
This chorus of grievance is so loud that tech “theft” may be a bigger concern for Americans than the size of the US trade deficit.And yet, given that the
businesses
involved are all willing participants, terms like “forced” and “theft” are red herrings.
And yet, given that the
businesses
involved are all willing participants, terms like “forced” and “theft” are red herrings.
After all, while
businesses
or neighborhood associations may offer childcare options to working parents, costs and quality vary widely.
In the last decade, Japan passed several laws obliging both
businesses
and individuals to separate plastics waste.
It is up to African
businesses
and governments to refocus Britain’s attention.
Moreover, government and
businesses
have clearly become increasingly hostile to trade unions over the last 25 years.
As I travel in small towns, many of the
businesses
that I see – most of them, it seems – belong to large chains, with mass-purchasing contracts, standardized training procedures, consistent quality, and, I assume, profitability.
There are some new business models (such as social-impact bonds), and there are certainly
businesses
that sell social programs to payers such as governments, just as there are charities that outsource.
Here is one message from the markets worth pondering, even for non-investors: political confidence may be at a low ebb in Europe;
businesses
and consumers may be shell-shocked by the last recession and gloomy about the future; but judging by the market's behavior the years ahead are more likely to resemble the stable and prosperous 1950s and 1960s than the crisis-ridden decades from 1973 to 1989.
The stock markets, particularly in Europe, represent only a small cross-section of
businesses.
Employment is up in health care, Internet-related businesses, and perhaps in logging and mining.
Studies show that few successful
businesses
begin as small, informal firms; they are started, instead, at a fairly large scale, by entrepreneurs who pick up their skills and market knowledge in the more advanced parts of the economy.
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