Invest
in sentence
1669 examples of Invest in a sentence
The main problem seems to be the paucity of entrepreneurship and low propensity to
invest
in plant and equipment – what Keynes called “low animal spirits” – especially to raise output of products that can be traded on world markets.
In fact, capital inflows can make things worse, because they tend to appreciate the domestic currency and make production in export activities less profitable, further weakening the incentive to
invest.
But it is essential that we all
invest
in the future.
Not only do they need to make the fight against malnutrition a policy priority; they also must
invest.
Anticipating such an outcome, the new shareholders might try to hide revenues, rather than
invest
in the company, further impeding efficiency gains and creating a vicious cycle of public distrust in private ownership.
The evidence is clear; countries that
invest
in these areas have better results than countries that move more slowly.
In 2014 and beyond, CEOs and their boards will need to establish new priorities,
invest
wisely, and be willing to support experimentation.
Reducing the budget deficit – by limiting government spending and combating a culture of tax avoidance – will increase total domestic savings available to
invest.
The expectation that girls will grow up to do little other than serve their husbands reduces parents’ incentives to
invest
in their daughters’ education.
It is imperative that India
invest
in its agriculture, not only for economic reasons, but also because it is central to the country’s culture.
Business decides for itself where to
invest
and grow.
It seems to me that after all the good and bad experiences America has had in the 20th century, it should understand that the most effective, most ethical, and in the end, the least expensive way of dealing with these challenges is to
invest
all its intellectual potential and a significant share of its material strength into what I call "security prevention".
Such openness encourages additional foreign companies to
invest
in Hungary, because they can rely on the support of banks familiar to them.
The remaining $20 billion will go toward a joint investment fund with the United Arab Emirates and Qatar to
invest
in traditional energy, infrastructure development, and high-end manufacturing industries in the region.
Likewise, women are much more likely than men to
invest
surplus income in ways that improve the lives of their children.
But to do that, donors, development partners, governments, and the private sector must
invest
in more and better data that are sorted by age and sex.
But, given such investors' long-term liabilities (claims and benefits), their mandate is to
invest
mostly in bonds, which are less risky than stocks or other volatile assets.
Controversial “sovereign wealth funds,” which
invest
funds for governments in the Middle East, Asia, Russia, and elsewhere, are just one manifestation of the search for alternatives to low-yielding, rapidly depreciating, dollar bonds.
Lacking in saving and wanting to invest, consume, and grow, they have no choice but to borrow surplus saving from others, which gives rise to current-account and trade deficits with the rest of the world.
Most high-income countries – the US, most of Europe, and Japan – are failing to
invest
adequately or wisely toward future best uses.
There are two ways to
invest
– domestically or internationally – and the world is falling short on both.
Governments are cutting back public investment in the name of budget balance, and private investors cannot
invest
robustly and securely in alternative energy when publicly regulated power grids, liability rules, pricing formulas, and national energy policies are uncertain and heavily disputed.
Private electricity producers, for example, will not
invest
in large-scale renewable energy generation if the government does not have long-term climate and energy policies or plans for spurring construction of long-distance transmission lines to carry new low-carbon energy sources to population centers.
To be smart today, Europe should
invest
more in its hard-power resources, and America should pay more attention to its soft power.
Policymakers now need a new approach that resists excessive concentration, which may create efficiency gains, but also allows firms to hoard profits and
invest
less.
Once women gain access to the financial system, they can create and
invest
in small businesses, while feeling more secure about dipping into savings when confronted with emergencies.
With a formal claim to the land they are farming, women are also more likely to
invest
in the fertility of the soil, contributing to more productive and sustainable land-use patterns.
So, as international agencies
invest
in computers for developing countries they must identify the obstacles erected by governments to the diffusion of ICTs, as well as the costs for overcoming these obstacles.
Finally, an early request for OMT intervention would not only reduce the Italian and Spanish governments’ borrowing costs (and thus their fiscal deficits), but would also lower the cost of capital for local firms, which currently find it difficult to borrow and
invest.
First, they claim that it is not regulators’ job to determine where financial institutions
invest.
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