Enterprises
in sentence
1058 examples of Enterprises in a sentence
Likewise, the EU should devise ways to support civil society, students, researchers, and small- and medium-size
enterprises
in Russia, as they struggle for freedom, democracy, and prosperity.
This requires that a more rational strategy be mapped out in the planning of major industrial projects and energy-hungry
enterprises.
The true explanation is that, in the past few years, there has formed in Russia a critical mass of well-managed, market-oriented
enterprises
capable of normal production, with resources released from the inefficient Soviet-era public sector.
But the economy is still too heavily regulated, and more of the country’s 1,800 state-owned
enterprises
need to be privatized.
Within each industry, the best
enterprises
dash ahead, as should be the case when real restructuring is taking place.
One reason was that in 1999 almost 10,000 loss-making Russian
enterprises
were put into bankruptcy.
The financial crash introduced hard budget constraints on Russian enterprises; they realized they had to make money, prompting rapid monetization.
In Italy, the difficulties arise from banks’ continued lending to domestic companies, especially small and medium-size
enterprises
(SMEs), while GDP has stagnated.
While he was party boss of nearby Zhejiang Province, Xi won fame for effectively promoting high-tech private
enterprises
and advocating the integration of the economies of the Greater Shanghai Region.
The American government also played an important role in developing the country's financial markets--by providing credit directly or through government-sponsored enterprises, and by partially guaranteeing a quarter or more of all loans.
The largest of the BRICS, China, faces additional risk stemming from a credit-fueled investment boom, with excessive borrowing by local governments, state-owned enterprises, and real-estate firms severely weakening the asset portfolios of banks and shadow banks.
Meanwhile, emerging-market commodity exporters failed to take advantage of the windfall and implement market-oriented structural reforms in the last decade; on the contrary, many of them embraced state capitalism, giving too large a role to state-owned
enterprises
and banks.
With small and medium-sized
enterprises
(SMEs) – by far the economy’s most important growth engine – unable to acquire sufficient funding from the formal financial sector, they have been forced to turn to informal channels.
This is why, whether reluctantly or enthusiastically, public
enterprises
are for sale, even if unions strike.
The first of these pillars, the China-based “world factory,” was largely created by foreign multinational corporations and their associated suppliers and subcontractors, with labor-intensive processing and assembly carried out by small and medium-size
enterprises
(SMEs) that have direct access to global markets through a complex web of contracts.
The “world factory” could not have been built without the second pillar: the “China infrastructure network,” installed and operated mostly by vertically integrated state-owned
enterprises
in logistics, energy, roads, telecoms, shipping, and ports.
SHANGHAI – The recent release of a book of speeches by former Chinese Premier Zhu Rongji has refocused attention on his bold – and often highly controversial – economic reforms of the 1990’s, which included reining in state-owned
enterprises
(SOEs) and overhauling the banking system.
In fact, it implies that regulators now believe that state-owned
enterprises
(SOEs) deserve special regulatory treatment.
This will require reforming and deepening the banking system to ensure enough lending capacity for long-term investments, including for small- and medium-sized
enterprises.
Third, the large government-sponsored mortgage enterprises, Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, should be used as macroeconomic-policy tools to restore housing construction to its long-term trend level.
Building a robust private sector capable of fostering inclusive growth, creating jobs, and broadening the domestic revenue base demands improved access to finance for micro, small, and medium-size
enterprises.
To avoid a continuation of conflict and aid-dependency, the main focus of the international aid commitment should be to reactivate small
enterprises
and promote startup companies in various sectors in order to create viable economies that enable people to earn a legal and decent living.
The FCIC Republicans point the finger firmly at Fannie Mae, Freddie Mac, and other government-sponsored
enterprises
that supported housing loans by providing guarantees of various kinds.
Thus far, such policies have failed to revive the global economy largely because commercial banks and other lenders retained the liquidity they received from their central banks, instead of channeling it to the real economy by providing credit to small and medium-size
enterprises
and investing in long-term infrastructure projects.
Unlike universities, for-profit media
enterprises
have never been up to the task of nurturing a robust “public sphere.”
In the process, the labor force of China’s state
enterprises
declined by 50 million, China lost 25 million manufacturing jobs, and central-government employment was slashed.
The bureaucracy expanded from 40 million to 70 million, and power devolved to provinces, bureaucracies, and state-owned
enterprises
(SOEs).
And it announced its intention to slow local governments’ seizures of farmland and excessive borrowing through captive
enterprises.
From the mid-1980s to the early 1990s, they introduced both the “rural household responsibility system” and the “enterprise contract responsibility system” for state-owned
enterprises
(SOEs).
The remaining large state-owned banks and
enterprises
then became profitable, thanks largely to their monopolistic positions, which allowed them to be listed on the Hong Kong, Shanghai, and Shenzhen stock exchanges.
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