Enterprises
in sentence
1058 examples of Enterprises in a sentence
For example, despite nationalist rhetoric by state
enterprises
and associated trade unions, the government should decide that the vast telecommunications network should be privatized, including to foreign investors.
Most of these countries have very small financial systems relative to the size of their economies, and, with small and medium-size
enterprises
(SMEs), households, and infrastructure projects facing credit constraints, they certainly have ample room for sustainable market deepening.
International banks will cease to finance Greek enterprises, including imports, creating shortages of fuel, food, and medicines.
Moreover, Doing Business helps to break down barriers – particularly in developing countries – that can discourage the establishment of small and medium-size enterprises, provide opportunities for corruption, and drive small business owners to the informal sector.
It should also design provisions to support small and medium-size enterprises, while fighting tax evasion among big firms.
Indeed, with state companies now producing one-third of Russia’s oil, output growth has plummeted, as owners of private
enterprises
– the source of dynamism in the sector – are now afraid to invest in new capacity.
Similarly, while France exports much less than Germany outside the EU, many large French
enterprises
rival Germany’s in global reach and technical know-how.
For small and medium-size
enterprises
(SMEs), which often struggle to obtain loans, government-run institutes can be used for collaborative research and development.
This money should be loaned out to small and medium-size enterprises, which are the lifeblood of Europe’s economy.
So, too, would legislation to allow full ownership of
enterprises
by foreigners and the proper protection of their property rights – which would have the added benefit of encouraging expatriates to save and invest locally.
There is little that officials can do to monitor or modify the children's workloads on large farms or small family
enterprises.
The fourth option would be wonderful; but, if anyone knew how to bring southern Europe's
enterprises
up to the productivity levels of the north, it would have happened already.
Another fundamental communist tenet has been the concentration of industrial production in a small number of gigantic monopolistic
enterprises.
The 20 biggest Russian
enterprises
have a smaller absolute number of employees than the 20 biggest enterprises, not only in the USA and Japan, but also in Germany, France, Italy and Britain.
Russia's structural conditions also precluded Chinese-style gradualist reforms of the state
enterprises.
China, after all, was a peasant society in 1978 when it began its own market reforms: 70% of the Chinese population lived in rural areas; only 18% worked in state
enterprises.
(China, by the way, has still not solved the problems of its loss-making state enterprises!).
In Russia, by contrast, more than 90% of the population worked in state
enterprises
as of 1992.
These benefactors, together with private
enterprises
and the public sector, will be essential to ensuring that all young Africans – not just those from wealthy families – gain access to quality education.
Countries as diverse as Peru, Vietnam, and Mexico would have signed on to labor laws enshrining workers’ rights to form independent unions and engage in collective bargaining, as well as intellectual property protections to defend against counterfeiting and unfair subsidies to state-owned
enterprises.
Moreover, electrification can help stimulate growth in small- and medium-sized enterprises, which suffer disproportionately when power is expensive or unreliable.
His 60-point plan included reforms of fiscal policy and the financial sector that would set market interest rates on loans and deposits, permit some private-investor participation in state-owned enterprises, increase the role of small and medium-size enterprises, loosen labor restrictions, and introduce property taxes to boost revenue for local authorities.
But Pakistan, North Korea, and Iran – all potentially unstable countries with growing nuclear
enterprises
– may in the future.
This matters, especially for labor-intensive activities (ranging from toy manufacturing to data-entry services), whether by affiliates of foreign multinational
enterprises
(which account for more than half of China’s exports) or by local firms, which are losing competitiveness in international markets.
Multinational
enterprises
can do that within their integrated global production networks, which allow them to organize an international intra-firm division of labor.
In so doing, they should aim not only for big state-owned companies, but also for the rising number of vibrant, private small and medium-size
enterprises
in China that can be found in all sectors of the economy.
Smaller
enterprises
exist, but are typically retail or service establishments with one or only a few employees.
Bureaucratic
enterprises
are typically allergic to taking big risks – that is, developing and commercializing the radical innovations that push out the production-possibility frontier and generate large sustained jumps in productivity and thus in economic growth.
The optimal mix of firms contains a healthy dose of large enterprises, which have the financial and human resources to refine and mass-produce radical innovations, along with newer firms.
Some insufficient tax improvements for small
enterprises
are under way.
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