Enterprises
in sentence
1058 examples of Enterprises in a sentence
But these strategies cannot fully address China’s debt problem, not least because the largest share of debt in China is held by state-owned
enterprises.
Likewise, small and medium-size
enterprises
in emerging economies are starved for financing.
This lack of uniformity is a major motivation for China to negotiate a single treaty: it wants to ensure that its
enterprises
have equal market access in all EU member countries and avoid the costs and complications associated with adhering to different regimes.
Amid this global rollback of statist and socialist economics, some state-owned
enterprises
(SOEs) were privatized outright.
It also witnessed economic interventionism on a massive scale, including the proliferation of public-sector
enterprises
in areas beyond public utilities.
Higher dividends from state-owned
enterprises
could help to finance such an initiative, while removing incentives for overinvestment.
State-owned enterprises, for example, currently account for 40% of total corporate assets, but only 2% of all firms, which implies significant policy influence.
But Italian voters overwhelmingly rejected his approach, in part because austerity did not appear to extend to elected officials or to major parts of the large ecosystem of departments, enterprises, and unions that surround government.
Although Internet connectivity and digital devices have become ubiquitous in the MENA region, they are used for accessing social media, rather than for launching new
enterprises
or employing people.
Usually, bailouts calm markets; but this one recalled early post-Soviet experiments, when the CBR issued direct loans to
enterprises
– invariably fueling higher inflation.
By manipulating product prices, they transferred profits to
enterprises
with no minority shareholders.
A key indicator of economic vitality is the number of legally registered
enterprises
per population.
The Union for the Mediterranean, launched by French President Nicolas Sarkozy in 2008, must be revitalized and re-directed towards development projects ranging from highways and ports to the promotion of small and medium-size
enterprises
(SMEs).
The London-based European Bank for Reconstruction and Development could join this effort by extending its activities to the region, which could be coupled with the creation of dedicated services to support the growth of job-creating
enterprises.
Nevertheless, developing countries have been falling over each other to establish export zones and subsidize assembly operations of multinational
enterprises.
Similarly, the infamous inter-enterprise arrears are swiftly contracting, as
enterprises
force each other to pay.
Big
enterprises
pay ever more of their taxes in real money rather than in promissory notes of dubious value.
There is no longer any escape for big loss-makers who are forced into bankruptcy, while sound
enterprises
expand in their place.
The number of bankruptcies has multiplied in a year, while the number of profitable
enterprises
has increased greatly, as a radical differentiation is occurring between successful and failing enterprises, signifying radical enterprise restructuring.
The very fierceness of the financial crash convinced everybody that there was no longer any free money that
enterprises
had to manage on their own.
At the moment, the chaebols’ proximity to political power reduces the transparency of corporate governance, discourages competition, and weakens the innovative potential of small- and medium-size
enterprises.
In order to stimulate GDP growth, encourage the establishment of competitive and dynamic enterprises, facilitate larger trade flows, and create more jobs, they must dismantle barriers that raise costs, inhibit competition, and deter new investment.
China’s New Reforms in Theory and PracticeHONG KONG – On November 12, the Third Plenary of the 18th Central Committee of the Chinese Communist Party (CCP) announced a major turn to market-oriented policies: interest-rate and currency liberalization, reform of banks and state enterprises, clearer land ownership for rural inhabitants, and a better deal for urban migrants.
China’s success has been driven by cheap exports based on cheap labor, infrastructure built by state
enterprises
with low-cost bank funding, and government budgets funded by land sales.
The solution is a rapid shift from China’s export-based growth model to one based on domestic demand; from infrastructure to consumption; from the dominance of large state-owned
enterprises
(SOEs) to that of small and medium-size private enterprises; from industry to services; and, more broadly, from bureaucratic control to market control.
Nor have small and micro enterprises, the backbone of India’s economy, many of which closed because of demonetization and never reopened, throwing millions out of work.
Whatever downside they may see to this approach, the fact remains that foreign
enterprises
– including completely foreign-owned companies and foreign partners of Chinese firms – have benefited greatly from their investments in China.
That said, the earnings before interest and taxes of foreign
enterprises
in China had been worsening since 2009, but in 2017 the situation improved.
And, even if regarded as true, such claims would not definitively prove that forcing foreign
enterprises
to transfer their technology is prevalent in China.
That means reducing the unprecedentedly high savings rate, a large share of which accrues to state-owned
enterprises.
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