Corporations
in sentence
1132 examples of Corporations in a sentence
Big German
corporations
no longer depend exclusively on banks for their finance but, increasingly, are tapping international capital markets directly, so as to raise funds through commercial paper, bond, or equity issues.
EMU will further accelerate these fundamental changes by stimulating cut-throat competition and creating a large and liquid capital market, leading to a shake-out in the financial sector itself, as
corporations
consolidate their European banking relations among a smaller number of institutions.
Power and wealth are not only diffusing across the international system, but also within states, such that corporations, foundations, wealthy individuals, private investment funds, civil-society groups, and most recently, municipal governments all have a role to play in development.
Corporations, foundations, and civil-society groups, in turn, are much more likely to forge lasting ties with their counterparts in local communities in the host countries – relationships that will survive changes of government and fiscal turbulence.
Households, corporations, financial institutions, and governments are all facing balance-sheet constraints, which it seems plausible to assume, are holding back expenditure and investment, elevating savings, and contributing to a broadly deflationary environment.
All the real work in
corporations
is done by skilled immigrants;Ivy League colleges have adopted the names of their Asian counterparts in order to survive; the economy is beholden to China’s central bank; and “yuan-pegged US dollars” have replaced regular currency as the safe asset of choice.
But, given that these bilateral arrangements are executed by state-owned corporations, they often do not adhere to international best practices.
And if defaults on loans to
corporations
are widespread, as these organizations predict, the implications for the banks could be dire.
But they believe that good and secure jobs are gone, and that greedy multinational
corporations
are responsible, primarily the bosses who behind closed doors made reckless decisions about people's lives and became unbelievably rich from doing so.
Some of the reasons why this is happening reflect fundamental changes in the world, including the diffusion of power to an increasing number of states and non-state actors, ranging from terrorist organizations and militias to
corporations
and NGOs.
They inform corporations’ decisions regarding whom to do business with, and on what terms.
A few decades ago, large organizations like multinational
corporations
or the Roman Catholic Church were the most typical type of transnational organization.
Similarly, transnational
corporations
are often targets of NGO campaigns to "name and shame" companies that pay low wages in poor countries.
Furthermore,
corporations
and privacy advocates should be encouraged to use the court system to challenge government requests to install spy software in commercial products.
Now South Africa, the region’s economic engine and home to its most sophisticated universities, media, and corporations, has a former goat herder at its helm, a rare African leader with the common touch.
Corrupt rulers can use the billions they receive from oil and mining
corporations
for personal extravagance, or to buy arms for troops to crush democratic resistance movements.
This, one hopes, will change the attitude of
corporations
that enrich themselves by paying dictators for the right to extract valuable resources that belong to the whole country.
And the Wikileaks Web site points out that while openness may lead to some highly visible bad consequences, what we fail to see are the consequences of not publishing, and the way in which a climate of openness makes it more likely that governments and
corporations
will act more ethically.
As they pursue growth opportunities abroad and are encouraged by improved polices at home, emerging-market
corporations
will play an increasingly prominent role in global business and cross-border investment, while large pools of capital within their borders will allow emerging economies to become key players in financial markets.
The size and dynamism of China’s economy, and the rapid globalization of its
corporations
and banks, makes the renminbi especially likely to take on a more important international role.
Corporations
have benefited massively from these stimulus measures, but at the expense of the working population.
Suddenly, many Turkish
corporations
found it increasingly difficult to service their dollar-denominated debts with liras.
There is now an overwhelming consensus that open, transparent, and accountable mechanisms of shareholder control are essential for the efficient functioning of public
corporations.
China, for its part, has become a major workhorse of globalization – an assembly hub for inputs produced by multi-country supply chains and an offshore efficiency solution for hard-pressed Western multinational
corporations.
Orphan IdeasCHICAGO – Since the United States Supreme Court’s “Citizens United” decision, which prohibited the government from restricting independent political expenditures by
corporations
and unions, concern about business interests’ influence over US elections has been growing.
After all, the use of big data is not confined to governments and corporations; anonymous criminal groups can easily abuse the information, too.
Such blights are not imposed by the European Union or by global capital with its transnational corporations, or by evil foreigners.
These “entertainments” are not filmed and published by bureaucrats from Brussels or by representatives of international institutions, foreign states or large international corporations: they are marketed by citizens to fellow citizens.
This has been especially true when Chinese state-owned enterprises (SOEs) have aspired to buy, or buy into, iconic US
corporations
that have a blush of national-security significance about them.
BERKELEY – At a recent conference in Washington, DC, former Treasury Secretary Larry Summers said that US policymakers should focus on productive activities that take place in the United States and employ American workers, not on
corporations
that are legally registered in the US but locate production elsewhere.
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