Entrepreneurs
in sentence
795 examples of Entrepreneurs in a sentence
Whereas America’s
entrepreneurs
had traditionally been inclined to create sustainable legacies, now many of them strive for an early IPO that will let them cash out quickly.
Second, non-profit organizations working to improve public policy need the same rights to secure international funding as for-profit
entrepreneurs
seeking to provide goods and services.
One could have predicted in advance of the recent boom how the 12 large OECD economies would rank simply by knowing the percentage of the population with a university degree, the OECD index of barriers to entrepreneurs, and the breadth of the stock exchange (measured by the market value of outstanding shares relative to GDP years before the boom).
Scoring high on the OECD index of barriers to
entrepreneurs
is bad for all three elements of performance.
Entrepreneurs
are allowed to set up shops, but they do not feel legal security, because they are harassed by the authorities, with an arbitrary tax system and various licenses in the whole of the CIS.
If
entrepreneurs
dare to stand up against arbitrary local authorities, they are more likely to stand up against criminals.
For poorer rural areas, this means creating a fertile environment for
entrepreneurs
and small power producers to develop mini-grids – generally powered by solar, small hydro, or solar-diesel hybrids – that can bring electricity to communities that would otherwise wait for years for grid connections.
Because so many businesses make money from the rents created by the rationing of foreign exchange, rather than by creating value, it is easy to believe that markets do not work, that
entrepreneurs
are speculators, and that governments need to control them and impose “fair” prices.
Starting almost from an economic “point zero,” Latvian
entrepreneurs
have built a new and modern economy, based on new and efficient technologies.
This has underpinned tremendous economic mobility among Turkey’s rural labor force, small entrepreneurs, and lower-income workers, taking masses of people from the margins of society to the mainstream.
Market competition in China created both winners and losers, with the winners in the southeast taking entrepreneurs, talent, and other resources from the losers in the northeast.
Since 1989, the Chinese Communist Party (CCP) has been pursuing a two-pronged strategy: selective repression that targets organized political opposition and co-optation of new social elites (the intelligentsia, professionals, and private entrepreneurs).
The urban intelligentsia and professionals have been pampered with material perks and political recognition, while new private
entrepreneurs
have been allowed to join the Party.
To the extent that China’s authoritarian regime is by nature exclusionary (it can only incorporate a limited number of elites), the co-optation strategy will soon run up against its limits, and the Party will no longer have the resources to buy off the intelligentsia or keep private
entrepreneurs
happy.
Underground railways were once the creation of private
entrepreneurs.
They can do so by adopting international rules to manage openness and interdependency; establishing stronger social safety nets; investing in innovation, education and skills-training, and infrastructure; and creating a more conducive regulatory environment for businesses and
entrepreneurs
to foster stronger and more inclusive growth.
Western
entrepreneurs
and investors have increasingly come to view Europe’s east as a part of a (now broader) domestic market and have behaved with a longer-term view.
Most consequentially, an emerging cohort of technology
entrepreneurs
understand the power of online/social media innovation to disrupt components of traditional finance, and are now leading efforts that include behavioral scientists and finance experts.
Examples of this dynamic include the startups and multinationals that have joined the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation to help find a cure for Ebola and
entrepreneurs
using solar panels to provide off-grid electricity to remote villages in Africa.
At the end of a successful apprenticeship, a start-up subsidy should be available for aspiring
entrepreneurs
with good ideas and proven potential as business owners.
With bank accounts, budding
entrepreneurs
can establish their creditworthiness and tap responsible, formal lenders.
This project has received wide acclaim from officials, economists, and entrepreneurs, reflecting a widespread belief that boosting growth and competitiveness starts at the grass roots level.
There were also influential
entrepreneurs
and business organizations that were actively involved in the decision-making process.
Around the world, clever scientists, engineers, and
entrepreneurs
are working to realize the remainder of the space exploration dream.
Ingenious entrepreneurs, access to abundant natural resources, and the country's growth oriented economic policies contributed to creating a number of successful corporations that are among the world's largest multinationals: Volvo, Ericsson, SKF, Alfa Laval, SAAB, Scania, AGA, Electrolux.
Young, aspiring populations, whose criticism of the old regime was at least as much economic as political, need their tourist industry back on its feet, their business
entrepreneurs
feeling confident, and eager foreign investors.
While Say’s law – the view that supply creates its own demand – is false in theory, it is true enough in practice that
entrepreneurs
and enterprises can and do depend on it.
For 62 years, from 1945-2007, with some sharp but temporary and regionalized interruptions,
entrepreneurs
and enterprisers could bet that the demand would be there if they created the supply.
To this end, local governments are also helping
entrepreneurs
gain access to global production chains.
Nurturing an abundance of imaginative innovators and vibrant
entrepreneurs
requires embracing a vision of venturesome lives of creativity and discovery.
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