Enterprises
in sentence
1058 examples of Enterprises in a sentence
The US economy will have to be fixed by its enterprises, one by one, on the ground.
Successful
enterprises
take time to create – time spent on inventing better products, serving customers more effectively, and supporting workers in ways that enhance their commitment.
Public support should be shifted from protecting large established corporations to encouraging the growth of newer
enterprises.
The immediate upshot is a substantial divergence in firms’ cost of funds, with many small and medium-size
enterprises
even losing access to credit completely.
One can have the most visible business summits possible, but if Western companies do not gain greater access to the Chinese market, or if they feel threatened by heavily subsidized state-owned enterprises, relations will continue to sour.
The call for enhanced social security is consistent with the Third Plenum’s proposal to allocate 30% of state-owned enterprises’ profits to fund safety-net programs such as pensions and health care.
Newer trade agreements incorporate rules on “intellectual property,” capital flows, and investment protections that are mainly designed to generate and preserve profits for financial institutions and multinational
enterprises
at the expense of other legitimate policy goals.
The root cause of Germany’s sluggish economic performance in recent years is the continuing unwillingness of its households and
enterprises
to consume and invest.
Indeed, investment has fallen despite financing conditions for
enterprises
that have never been easier, both in terms of ultra-low interest rates and banks’ willingness to lend.
Naturally, conflicts among governments or local authorities and private
enterprises
resurfaced.
Chinese
enterprises
are already taking these investment cues seriously.
The new policy explicitly encourages Chinese
enterprises
to work with local businesses in sectors like logistics, electricity, and information systems, and it promotes interaction among business, community, and government leaders.
Historically, roughly 25% of all
enterprises
are downgraded after an M&A.
Although private
enterprises
are the fastest growing part of the Chinese economy,
enterprises
that are partially or fully owned by the state continue to be major employers.
Zhao was the first to propose “expanded autonomy for Chinese enterprises” and “restoration of a healthy relationship between government and industry.”
Expanded autonomy for
enterprises
and the peasantry were critical first steps whose success led eventually to full-blown economic reform.
Zhao abolished the policy of
enterprises
being run by Party organizations and the system by which fa ren (“legal representatives”) were the core of
enterprises.
Recognizing that many European and Asian countries have successful state-owned enterprises, the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development has developed a code of best practices.
Most important, as part of its strategy for regime survival, the Chinese Communist Party favors princelings for appointments in government and state-owned
enterprises.
During the Asian financial crisis of the 1990s, some countries suffered foreign-exchange crises, in which devaluation and high real interest rates de-capitalized banks and enterprises, owing to the lack of sufficient reserves to repay foreign-exchange debts.
The debt held by non-financial
enterprises
amounts to 113% of GDP in China, compared to 72% in the US and 99% in Japan.
But, given that the largest
enterprises
are either state-owned or local-government entities, their debts are essentially domestic sovereign obligations.
With the official banking system thus constrained, it allocated the remaining credit to large
enterprises
and those with sufficient collateral, resulting in an uneven distribution of loans across regions and sectors.
As a result, large
enterprises
– mostly SOEs, which enjoy considerable financial subsidies and liquidity – accounted for 43% of total bank loans in 2011; small and medium-size
enterprises
(SMEs), which face financial repression, including higher borrowing costs and tight liquidity, accounted for only 27%.
Yet the government and the Mittelstand, the small and medium-sized
enterprises
that form the backbone of the German economy, were encouraged by the strong export-driven recovery the country enjoyed in the early part of this year.
To have the desired effect, QE should have been accompanied not only by official efforts to restore impaired lending channels (especially those directed at small- and medium-size enterprises), but also by specific lending targets for banks.
Yushchenko’s campaign alleges that Russian
enterprises
were forced by the Kremlin to put up $300 million for the Yanukovych campaign.
Going beyond the core, the cross-cutting issues include investor-friendly regulatory systems and policies that enable “innovative” or “employment-creating” small and medium-size
enterprises
to operate freely across borders within the TPP region.
These include “trade and investment in innovative products and services, including digital technologies, and ensuring state-owned
enterprises
compete fairly with private companies and do not distort competition in ways that put US companies and workers at a disadvantage.”
Managing the transformation of China’s regional economies while preserving social stability will demand a careful balance between the old growth strategy exemplified by the losers, which relied heavily on state-owned
enterprises
and public investment, and the new, more human-capital-oriented approach being developed by the winners.
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