Corporate
in sentence
2366 examples of Corporate in a sentence
If something like this under-reporting of reinvested earnings or other balance-of-payments credits has gone on in the past, it may still be going on today – especially with US firms becoming aggressive about arbitraging
corporate
income tax.
After three years in which his administration coddled
corporate
lobbyists, he has finally begun to emphasize the need for the rich to pay more taxes.
Most politicians know that sound economics would call for these benefits to be eliminated; but those who complain the loudest that the government must not pick
corporate
winners and losers seem to be the least able to summon the political will to act.
The dearth of pale actors, actresses,
corporate
leaders, and politicians confirms that a tan is identified with health, wealth, and power, rather than the travails of the working class, as in the past.
The approach is two-pronged: the government is privatizing some SOEs, so that market competition can check the behavior of
corporate
managers, while treating the managers of other (typically larger) SOEs as public servants, subject to the increasingly severe rules of public accountability, including party discipline.
First, investors, recognizing that the dollar is overvalued and that they are likely to suffer large losses when it returns to its fundamental value, could start selling their Treasury bonds,
corporate
bonds, and mortgage-backed securities.
Some propose replacing the current personal and
corporate
income taxes with a flat tax on consumption.
The central government has given a "green light" to the sale of small SOEs run by local governments (counties and cities), which can be sold to private owners, individual, corporate, or foreign investors, as well as workers in the firms themselves.
The major achievement of China's 17 years of institutional reform and economic growth has been the growth of a dynamic non-state sector consisting of private firms, self-employed businesses,
corporate
joint-ventures with foreign capital, and community owned rural enterprises.
Corporate
Liability for Human RightsWittingly or unwittingly, individuals do things that injure other individuals.
After all, corporations don't have a conscience; it is only the conscience of those who run the corporation, and as America's recent
corporate
scandals have made all too clear, conscience often takes a backseat to profits.
In other realms, however, we are only beginning to think about what
corporate
responsibility should mean for our legal system.
So far, there appears to be no rush to make amends in South Africa, and, as elsewhere, the evidence is meager that the
corporate
conscience runs very deep.
The US political system has been captured by the greed of its wealthy elites, whose narrow goals are to cut
corporate
and personal tax rates, maximize their vast personal fortunes, and curtail constructive US leadership in global economic development.
The Republican-controlled House of Representatives has been preparing for this for years, creating detailed plans for overhauling how
corporate
and personal income are taxed.
The proposed
corporate
tax reform is especially significant.
A lower tax rate on
corporate
profits.
The House Republicans and the Trump administration have both proposed halving that rate, which would cause capital to shift to
corporate
investment from real estate, unincorporated businesses, and foreign holdings.
A cash-flow
corporate
tax.
With a 20%
corporate
tax rate, that would be equivalent to a 20% import tax.
The border tax adjustment therefore pays for about two-thirds of the $190 billion cost of the
corporate
tax cut, and an even larger share when the lower
corporate
rate’s favorable effect on growth is taken into account.
Think Japan, and its
corporate
zombies of the 1990’s.
Corporate
welfare capitalism substituted for what in Europe would have been government provided social democracy.
In doing so, they would effectively transform the
corporate
debt problem into a public debt problem.
In 2012, American “prime” money-market funds, which buy bank and
corporate
debt, were worth nearly $1.5 trillion.
Deflation would weaken aggregate demand by raising the real (inflation-adjusted) value of household and
corporate
debt, and by increasing real interest rates.
Stories of
corporate
malfeasance do, of course, abound in the US.
But it is facile to jump from individual
corporate
scandals to broad conclusions about the supposed rottenness of the American economy.
Two candidates stand out: attitudes toward work and
corporate
governance.
During the 1980's, a wave of leveraged buyouts transformed US
corporate
culture, evidently making bosses more receptive to technological innovation.
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