Enterprises
in sentence
1058 examples of Enterprises in a sentence
Moreover, the economy was opened, state
enterprises
were privatized, and the country participated in an important regional free-trade initiative.
But there aren’t enough safe, secure, and sound
enterprises
to absorb all the workers laid off from risky
enterprises.
Ever since 1825, central banks’ standard response in such situations – except during the Great Depression of the 1930’s – has been the same: raise and support the prices of risky financial assets, and prevent financial markets from sending a signal to the real economy to shut down risky
enterprises
and eschew risky investments.
Moreover, at least 200 million small- and medium-size
enterprises
lack sufficient credit, or have no access to credit at all.
Some offshore money made this way is returning to Russia as banks try to buy up privatized
enterprises.
This constituency could grow dramatically if democrats and economic reformers focused renewed energy on the need for honesty and fairness in government; on an enhanced social safety net financed by higher taxation of natural resource enterprises; and on further market reforms aimed at separating the economy from the grasping hands of politicians and bureaucrats.
But there also seems to be a bit of a reaction against the “new kids on the block,” namely multinational
enterprises
from emerging markets, especially when these are state-owned and seek to enter the US market through mergers and acquisitions.
With harder budget constraints imposed by the central government, local officials and state-owned
enterprises
(SOEs) have curbed their spending on investment, and are now being overly cautious.
Similarly, both private
enterprises
and SOEs could use market buoyancy to raise equity to fund new investments.
For example, various incentives have been provided to encourage
enterprises
to use the RMB to settle transactions.
Hu, by contrast, seems to find little fault with the status quo, under which the Party remains in charge of not only government, but also state
enterprises.
Industry’s share of value added is stuck at 25%, and the share of micro and small
enterprises
in manufacturing employment in India is 84%, compared to 25% in China.
The Female EconomyWASHINGTON, DC – Today, women own roughly 35% of small and medium-size
enterprises
in developing countries, and make up approximately 40% of the global workforce.
Since 2007, the bank has provided nearly $20 million to women-owned enterprises, and in the process, has been helping to drive Uganda’s economic growth.
Fiscal consolidation and the abrupt closure and restructuring of inefficient banks and state
enterprises
would, after all, constitute a powerful brake on short-term growth, threatening social peace and political stability.
Simply put, today’s muddled market incentives impede transformation by favoring state-owned
enterprises.
Europe should take a page from the Syrian business community’s efforts to relocate some of their country’s
enterprises
to the Gaziantep Free Economic Zone in Turkey.
But this sharp wage increase hit small and medium-size
enterprises
(SMEs) and self-employed businesses hard.
The continuing focus is the lack of growth in China -- it has fallen to "only" 7.1% -- along with deflation, the lack of confidence on the part of households who will feel the impact of the formidable restructuring problems in state enterprises, and the loss of international competitiveness.
A vast number of people can be employed if only the government stops protecting State
enterprises
by restrictions on production and internal trade.
First, it allows for many savers to pool their wealth to finance large
enterprises
that can achieve the efficiencies of scale possible from capital-intensive modern industry.
More generally, China has made recent progress in boosting labor productivity, encouraging technological innovation, and improving service quality in key urban areas, despite severe financial repression and inadequate access to funding by small and medium-size private
enterprises.
China’s bank regulators have already permitted experiments in debt-equity swaps, which the International Monetary Fund says should be incorporated in a comprehensive strategy to accelerate reform of state-owned
enterprises.
But much of it has also gone toward sustaining money-losing public
enterprises
and endless investments in superfluous public facilities and housing.
Under the umbrella of common deposit insurance, US savings banks made a “gamble for resurrection” – borrowing excessively from their depositors and lending the money out to risky enterprises, knowing that potential profits could be paid out as dividends to shareholders while potential losses would be socialized.
But that agreement didn’t cover theft by state-owned
enterprises
and private firms.
The legislation also imposed a deadline to abolish “policy-based bankruptcy” – the practice adopted by the State Council to liquidate loss-making state-owned
enterprises
(SOEs) and resettle laid-off employees.
The new code also introduces the concept of “administrative receivership,” whereby lawyers, certified accountants, and other intermediaries act as managers of
enterprises
undergoing bankruptcy.
The possibility of restructuring balances the interests of stakeholders and uses legal protections to help potentially risky
enterprises
prevent or avoid bankruptcy if a bailout is worthwhile or possible.
It includes developing the services sector, funding the social safety net, liberalizing an antiquated residential-permit system (hukou), reforming state-owned enterprises, and ending financial repression on households by lifting artificially low interest rates on savings.
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