Consumers
in sentence
1831 examples of Consumers in a sentence
One large Venetian merchant, Walmartius, is buying V$50 billion worth of Chinese goods each year to sell for profit locally, an endeavor that supports the creation of thousands of local retail jobs and lowers costs for Venetian
consumers.
First, farming is geographically concentrated and farmers vote on agricultural policy above everything else, greatly enhancing the power of their votes – something that few, if any, urban
consumers
do.
That is good news for farmers and
consumers
around the world.
And where will the resources come from to manufacture all the stuff these new
consumers
will buy?
A global trade war would undermine economic recovery, hurting businesses and
consumers
by encumbering global supply chains and raising prices for imported goods.
No surprisingly,
consumers
over-consumed and firms under-invested.
More than 40 governments worldwide have committed to opening up their electronic data – including weather records, crime statistics, transport information, and much more – to businesses, consumers, and the general public.
These benefits come in the form of new and better goods and services, as well as efficiency savings for businesses, consumers, and citizens.
And, by analyzing online comments about their products, manufacturers can identify which features
consumers
are most willing to pay for, and develop their business and investment strategies accordingly.
Consumers
are the main beneficiaries, especially in the household-goods market.
It is estimated that
consumers
making better-informed buying decisions across sectors could capture an estimated $1.1 trillion in value annually.
Consumers, policymakers, and companies must work together, not just to agree on common standards of analysis, but also to set the ground rules for the protection of privacy and property.
American
consumers
are shopped-out, saving-less, debt-burdened (136% of income, on average), and buffeted by many negative shocks.
For most producers and consumers, it usually makes more economic sense to maintain the status quo than to change their habits, even if they know that the status quo will be disastrous for the environment.
This is a challenge even for high-income countries such as Germany and the United States, where some utilities are seeing their business upended as
consumers
sell power back into the grid.
Western
consumers
who call a local company are likely to speak to someone in India.
Female freedom of choice -- both as
consumers
and as producers - is remorselessly curtailed.
Unilaterally imposing tariffs on Chinese imports would likely trigger trade disputes, invite Chinese retaliation, and hurt US businesses that create wealth – and deliver affordable products to American
consumers
– by basing their production facilities in China.
First and foremost,
consumers
must be better informed about the long-term impact of sponsors’ products.
Nissan entered China in 2003, when Chinese
consumers
bought 4.5 million cars.
What a difference a decade makes: In 2012, Chinese
consumers
purchased an estimated 18 million new cars, a 300% increase.
This is one of the highest such subsidies in the world, attesting to the authorities’ seriousness about encouraging
consumers
and fleet owners to switch.
But Trump’s ad nauseam tweets about failing newspapers and fake news have also spurred more reasonable
consumers
to embrace newspapers as a bastion of anti-Trumpism.
With their incomes and jobs under long and sustained pressure, American
consumers
count on low prices for their economic survival.
Because, fortunately for all of us, soon one billion and more new Asian producers will – first in their tens of millions, then in their hundreds of millions – become new middle-class consumers, too.
News
consumers
are twice as likely to express the most trust in local broadcast and cable news compared to social media, attesting to voters’ reliance on television journalism to inform their thinking.
Or cut taxes to change the marginal calculus of firms on layoffs and
consumers
on spending – for example, by suspending the payroll tax on firms and workers for a year or suspending part or all of the sales tax or national value-added tax.
It thus seems unavoidable that energy consumers, especially in many rich countries, will have to learn to exchange their current worries about the distant future consequences of global warming for the reality of energy shortages during periods of peak demand.
Consumer debt remains high in many places, and certainly in the UK there are few signs that the prospect of higher interest rates is dissuading
consumers
from taking on more debt.
There is clearly a risk that
consumers
may react more sharply to rate increases when they eventually occur.
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