Enterprises
in sentence
1058 examples of Enterprises in a sentence
Finally, in many Sub-Saharan countries, portions of the debt build-up can be traced to shocks in the migration of liabilities – such as losses by state-owned
enterprises
– to the public-sector balance sheet and exchange-rate depreciations.
Moreover, only a small portion of the liquidity created by unconventional monetary policy has been channeled toward households and the small and medium-size
enterprises
that generate most new jobs.
These investors must focus on the small and medium-size
enterprises
that banks often neglect.
Bangladesh’s central bank has incorporated into its regulatory framework capital-steerage requirements that favor historically credit-starved rural
enterprises.
However, as with technology, the public and nonprofit sectors have been slow to keep up; both still need to recognize the value of social
enterprises
focused on education.
Powerful white men, it is suggested, do not like to sign their names to projects or
enterprises
in trouble, and they are often happy to have the cosmetic benefit of a female – or nonwhite – face at the helm, when the real power may be draining away behind the scenes, or moving on elsewhere.
Most of China 460,000 foreign-owned
enterprises
are concentrated in manufacturing and assembling, increasing the import-intensiveness of exports and de-linking the external-trade sector from domestic industries.
Indeed, if foreign-owned
enterprises
exports are deducted from the total trade volume, the surplus vanishes, because both the overall balance of merchandise trade and the balance of trade in services normally run deficits.
Although the expansion of exports has been dramatic, now accounting for 70% of China’s GDP, it has exerted no pull on other economic sectors, because it has been confined to foreign-owned manufacturing and assembling
enterprises.
With its huge domestic economy, China would never have been able to accumulate such an enormous external surplus if its growth had not been confined to such
enterprises.
An impaired banking system, it is argued, starves businesses, particularly small and medium-size
enterprises
(SMEs), of the funds they need to expand.
Because of this fragility, few countries have been able to establish highly productive scientific enterprises, even though scientific innovation and technological breakthroughs are crucial to a country’s productivity, economic growth, and influence.
This explains the almost continuous stream of measures that emanate from Beijing these days: increased public spending, monetary easing, pressure on state
enterprises
to expand activity, subsidies to exporters, partial convertibility of the remninbi to spur trade with neighboring countries, and so on.
There are highly successful large industrial enterprises, most of them politically well connected, and tiny mom-and-pop businesses that are vestiges of a lost country.
But the panoply of small and medium-size
enterprises
that make Germany and Spain entrepreneurial and economically successful is almost entirely missing in France.
The proposed changes were reported to include an amendment that would guarantee the same rights to property for private entrepreneurs as for state-owned enterprises, the constitutional right of Party members to choose their leaders, and even some steps toward a multi-party political system.
Managing mixed economies that include state-owned
enterprises
and an inchoate private sector will require discipline, so that productive assets are not squandered, or privatized at fire-sale prices.
To Trump’s mind, the trade deficit reflects difficulties for American enterprises, and implies that Americans are buying foreign instead of US goods.
Their behavior also reflects the implied guarantee of official government mercantilism, as well as the complacency of China’s state-owned enterprises, which account for most Chinese overseas investment.
For example, the Assets Supervision and Administration Commission of the State Council (SASAC) is the ministry-level government institution responsible for state-owned
enterprises.
Much of the income from GDP growth went to large state-owned enterprises, which strengthened their monopoly power.
State-owned
enterprises
will be forced to distribute more of their profits.
Though land reforms over the last three decades have recognized property rights for individuals and enterprises, rural land rights remain weak relative to legal conditions in urban areas.
Many public utilities in China – such as airlines, railways, ports, and telecommunications – are single-product entities administered by state-owned
enterprises
(SOEs).
But policy changes have barely touched the other Mexico, where traditional
enterprises
operate in the same old ways and are experiencing falling labor productivity.
While the largest modern companies have been ratcheting up productivity by 5.8% annually, productivity at traditional Mexican
enterprises
– tiny stores, bakeries, low-skill manufacturers – has been declining by 6.5%.
Three-quarters of that gap is under-lending to small and medium-size enterprises, which in other economies create new products and services and deliver the most employment growth.
With a population of 1.3 billion, China has no lack of people with leadership potential, and I believe that more and more of this talent is situated outside the Party bureaucracy in NGOs, startup enterprises, philanthropy, and even missionary work.
Moreover, state-owned
enterprises
will be required to pay out a larger portion of their earnings as dividends.
Better management of China’s considerable public assets – which include $3.5-4 trillion of foreign-exchange reserves, substantial land holdings, and majority ownership of the state-owned
enterprises
that dominate the economy – would complement these efforts.
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