Entrepreneurs
in sentence
795 examples of Entrepreneurs in a sentence
And Botswana’s success in reducing business start-up costs since 2010 has given
entrepreneurs
the confidence to borrow money, hire more employees, and take calculated risks on their way to success.
It is this thicket of red tape that hampers business and deters
entrepreneurs.
And, after six decades of meddling, EU policymakers should step back and consider which restrictions have become harmful or irrelevant, and how better to support the
entrepreneurs
and industries of the future.
Economists, bankers, and
entrepreneurs
as well as of technology or communication experts are common.
Opponents of estate taxes offer three reasons why they could dampen economic growth:
entrepreneurs
will be reluctant to expand their companies if they cannot leave their wealth to their children; small firms will risk collapse when their owners die if their heirs cannot pay the taxes; and companies will flee to lower-tax jurisdictions or engage in costly and unproductive tax avoidance.
Similarly, Costa Rica’s Banco Nacional has promoted dozens of women into managerial roles; the bank is now a leading regional provider of financing to female
entrepreneurs.
It is also crucial that they continue to improve their systems to create an enabling environment for dynamic rural growth to transform subsistence farmers into
entrepreneurs.
The program’s other measures are a series of tax cuts for the middle class, entrepreneurs, and the wealthy, which, though expensive, constitute a similarly welcome break with France’s tradition of punitive taxation.
So, although some firms do extremely well - say, Toyota and Canon - there is little space for new ventures and
entrepreneurs.
Just as they confronted problems in the past, our scientists and
entrepreneurs
have brought us solutions by way of the Green Revolution, new vaccines, communications technology, and cleaner energy.
There is an entire sub-industry of nonprofits like Defy Ventures working to help former inmates build new careers and even become
entrepreneurs.
This contrast can also point us to the ways Europe’s governments should amend their rules, encouraging
entrepreneurs
to develop cutting-edge business models at home rather than being forced to accept innovations only after they have become best practices abroad.
In the same way, Europe’s restrictions in the car-service market are preventing the continent’s
entrepreneurs
from developing services like Uber.
But Japan’s wealthiest people, such as entrepreneurs, medical doctors, and lawyers, are nowadays less willing or financially able to continue patronizing the sport, particularly since the collapse of Japan’s asset bubble in the early 1990’s.
Our little group – made up of philanthropists, a few entrepreneurs, venture capitalists, and “angel” investors – concentrated on start-up companies, the source of so much commercial energy and of so many jobs.
When I get e-mails from would-be entrepreneurs, I can dismiss them easily if they spell my name wrong – or, indeed, if they spell anything wrong.
They could also encourage their employees to donate their time to a local entrepreneurs’ club.
Like entrepreneurs, they may want to solve problems and have an impact (but without doing so full-time).
As for the
entrepreneurs
and the people they hire to launch their start-ups, people need jobs, but they also create start-ups to solve a problem that bothers them or to pursue an opportunity that inspires them.
But, given that many IT
entrepreneurs
were young at the start of their careers, with limited ownership of stocks, a more refined explanation is needed.
If Hollande’s tax hikes – on income (including a temporary 75% tax rate for the country’s wealthiest households), dividends, capital gains, and capital assets – are not enough to deter entrepreneurs, the cost of hiring workers and the difficulty of firing them remain powerful disincentives.
After all, if the economy is to grow again, banks need borrowers, but the recession has led
entrepreneurs
to cut their investments.
And it draws on the experience of many types of leaders – including former heads of state, legislators, successful
entrepreneurs
and businesspeople, artists, and academics – from around the world.
Everywhere there are startups, innovations, and young
entrepreneurs
hungry for profits.
Africa’s
entrepreneurs
and local officials have already demonstrated their determination to do this; what they need now are bold global leaders who will join them.
Education-sector social
entrepreneurs
now have more financing tools at their disposal than ever before – from venture capital to targeted-investment funds and other new asset classes – and they can play an important role in bringing the Middle East’s classrooms into the twenty-first century.
The results of many projects in these countries are encouraging, with the current focus on training key groups, such as entrepreneurs, teachers, and young and unemployed people.
Poverty in the developing world seemed ineradicable until micro-lenders saw millions of low-income, destitute women as potential
entrepreneurs.
But it is not a model for job creation and inclusive growth that policymakers and
entrepreneurs
elsewhere can emulate – at least not without making some fundamental adjustments.
To some extent, this is already happening, with visionary
entrepreneurs
in cities like Nashville, Cincinnati, New Orleans, Wichita, and Salt Lake City adapting Silicon Valley’s recipe for success to local conditions and opportunities – and creating much-needed middle-class jobs in the process.
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