Corporate
in sentence
2366 examples of Corporate in a sentence
A
corporate
giant has little incentive to change its practices if the fines imposed on it amount to, say, less than a week’s earnings.
Similarly, if Trump really does want to redistribute some income from capital to labor, and from
corporate
profits to wages (admittedly a big “if”), his policies could boost consumption; but his populist, protectionist policies would undermine business confidence, and thus capital expenditures, while reducing consumers’ purchasing power through higher inflation.
Moreover, the movement of a limited number of individuals between government agencies and private contractors results in a form of regulatory capture, particularly when government employees are tasked with overseeing former colleagues and potential employers in the
corporate
world.
In this environment, Argentine consumers naturally also went on a spending spree, and
corporate
profits rose accordingly.
In the US, it has behaved similarly, using
corporate
media power to breathe life into a stand-alone political organization, the Tea Party.
Even his call for energy independence should be seen for what it is – a new rationale for old
corporate
subsidies.
His creed became the ethos of a decade of
corporate
and financial-sector excesses that ended in the late 1980’s collapse of the junk-bond market and the Savings & Loan crisis.
Thus, repeated financial crises are also the result of a failed system of
corporate
governance.
Senior executives – those who are drawn to the arguments presented in such groundbreaking analyses of the workplace as Sheryl Sandberg’s Lean In – know that
corporate
realpolitik can include calling in a woman when the ship is sinking.
But his main policy initiatives for
corporate
tax reform and infrastructure spending remain on the drawing board.
In the case of China, a key part of its 12th five-year plan is to shift income to the household sector, where the savings rate is high but still lower than the
corporate
rate.
The economy can then use household savings (with appropriate financial intermediation) to finance
corporate
and government investment, rather than the US government.
Even low positive interest rates, if maintained for a prolonged period, could backfire, fueling asset bubbles and enabling household and
corporate
debt to grow to unsustainable levels.
Further down, he claims that the bill “would reduce [the corporate-tax] rate to 25% or less,” which, he asserts, is “likely to boost domestic
corporate
investment.”
With private investment remaining weak, owing to the
corporate
sector's heavy debt burden and banks' huge volume of bad assets, the government has clearly decided to jumpstart the process through infrastructure spending.
The Society of Jesus – whose spirituality is based on a seemingly discordant yet enduring combination of mysticism and realpolitik – has forged a paradoxical alliance of fidelity to
corporate
commands and willingness to give individual talents their due.
Moreover, there is nothing in economic theory that should have made economic technocrats think that Anglo-American institutions of
corporate
governance or "flexible labor markets," to pick just two examples, produce unambiguously superior economic performance when compared to German-style insider control or institutionalized labor markets.
It certainly does not imply that a system of private property rights and Anglo-American
corporate
governance is the right approach for all countries at all times.
For France, the equivalent weakness is a proclivity for
corporate
gigantism.
Yet he has never proposed comprehensive reform of either the personal or
corporate
income tax.
By contrast, Romney would reduce America’s
corporate
tax rate (the highest in the OECD) to 25% and tax American multinationals on a territorial, rather than a worldwide, basis in order to increase their tax competitiveness.
One, less likely and less discussed, is that the UK leaves the EU and pursues social and economic policies – for example, concerning
corporate
taxes – that are deliberately intended to undercut the competitive position of Ireland and other European countries.
Corporate
saving is also up.
Most of today’s transformative companies are well known for having an innovative
corporate
culture and working environment that inspires and empowers employees.
Perhaps the most visible sign of this has been our decision to cut the
corporate
tax rate to the lowest level in the G-20.
Foreign investors’ purchases of emerging-market sovereign and
corporate
bonds almost tripled from 2009 to 2012, reaching $264 billion.
Despite growing concerns about China’s
corporate
debt – which is now close to 170% of GDP – and its ability to escape the middle-income trap, rapid digitization will allow the Chinese economy to continue moving up the value chain.
In Japan, the CEO of a major bank would have apologized to his employees and his country, and would have refused his pension and bonus so that those who suffered as a result of
corporate
failures could share the money.
After all, the unraveling of that order started long ago, with the rise of footloose capital, the abandonment of full employment as a policy goal, the delinking of wages from productivity, and the intertwining of
corporate
and political power.
Many major
corporate
decisions are made during one-on-one meetings between Putin and a company’s CEO.
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