Corporations
in sentence
1132 examples of Corporations in a sentence
The accumulation of local broadcasters by a handful of media
corporations
has left its mark on journalism across the country.
But neither
corporations
nor governments can do it alone.
Rising inequality is redistributing income to those with a high propensity to save (the rich and corporations), and is exacerbated by capital-intensive, labor-saving technological innovation.
In fact, before the crisis, Russia had acquiesced to the logic of global capitalism, recognizing the need to cooperate with multinational
corporations
to modernize and diversify an economy based on raw materials and energy production.
We, the
Corporations?
But public opinion does not seem to matter if the issue is mandatory disclosure of political spending by
corporations.
Thus, corporations, as associations of individuals, have the right to spend as much as they want to disseminate their views, including in support of electoral campaigns.
And that logic applies outside of the United States as well, and can lead to similar consequences everywhere: an enormous increase in the largest corporations’ political power.
A logical implication of the view that
corporations
are “people” is that shareholders should learn about the political spending carried out by the companies in which they invest.
He would sharply reduce income taxes on
corporations
and wealthy individuals.
The US Supreme Court, in its notorious Citizens United decision, has given
corporations
free rein to use their money to influence the direction of politics.
With
corporations
sitting on cash, governments trying to rein in deficits by cutting expenditure and raising taxes, and households spending less on residential construction, demand is weak and uncertainty is high.
(Some point out that this means that America’s
corporations
can buy senators from such states at a lower price.)
Corporations
have learned how to take bad news in stride, write down losses, and move on, but our governments have not.
When European
corporations
outsource labor-intensive manufacturing to low-cost countries but keep the rest of the production process in Europe, they greatly complicate matters for anyone trying to evaluate the economics of trade defense.
The operations of the so-called state
corporations
are particularly problematic.
But they are established through the donation of state funds or property: when six such
corporations
were created in 2007, some $80 billion of assets and $36 billion of fresh state funds were transferred to them.
And, indeed, Russia’s state
corporations
are supposedly focused on advancing the public interest or creating public goods.
Powerful computers led to potent states and powerful and centrally directed business
corporations.
Our indigenous communities continue to lose their land to foreign
corporations.
At the same time, the US has every right to insist on fair access for its multinational
corporations
to operate in foreign markets; over the years, more than 3,000 bilateral investment treaties have been signed around the world to guarantee such equitable treatment.
People are increasingly angry at giant corporations’ perceived monopolistic power.
According to a November 2006 report by The Task Force on the Future of American Innovation, made up of prominent universities, think tanks, industry trade associations, and corporations, the high-tech trade deficit widened in 2005, for the third consecutive year.
We will see more persecution of scientists, journalists, and businessmen, whose work with international charities, media, or
corporations
will now be construed as treachery.
Fear of lowered wages plays into a broader coalition based on umbrella anti-globalization resentments directed against multi-national
corporations
and international financial institutions.
After a massive private-sector boom-and-bust cycle, banks and households are deleveraging, and
corporations
are hoarding cash.
And the Republican tax-reform plan that he has endorsed would overwhelmingly favor multinational
corporations
and the top 1% of households, many of which stand to benefit especially from the repeal of the estate tax.
Ingenious entrepreneurs, access to abundant natural resources, and the country's growth oriented economic policies contributed to creating a number of successful
corporations
that are among the world's largest multinationals: Volvo, Ericsson, SKF, Alfa Laval, SAAB, Scania, AGA, Electrolux.
Modern China has long been a magnet for global multinational
corporations
seeking both efficiency and a toehold in the world’s most populous market.
These numbers represent more than higher profits for corporations; they also amount to millions of jobs created, and billions of lives improved.
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