Invest
in sentence
1669 examples of Invest in a sentence
So it is possible that conservative American business executives will
invest
more not because the tax cut will improve the fundamentals of the US economy and increase demand for their products, but just because they believe it will.
The added benefit of this approach is that it would also strengthen incentives for businesses to
invest
and innovate.
Corporations have a great deal of liquidity, and do not depend on borrowing to
invest
more in plant and equipment.
But small and medium sized enterprises (SMEs) – the majority of firms in both Latin America and Europe – find it difficult to trade and
invest
at international level, in part because of high transaction and information costs.
With a huge potential global market to amortize the upfront fixed costs of design and testing, the incentives to
invest
are compelling.
Resident Indians can now maintain a foreign-currency account and
invest
in shares of foreign companies, while non-resident Indians can repatriate legacy/inheritance assets.
Limits on exporters' foreign-currency accounts will be removed, and banks may
invest
in overseas money and debt markets.
Yale lets Swensen
invest
for the very long term, and does not bother him about quarterly performance.
The Commonwealth’s leaders cannot afford to fail their countries’ young people by failing to
invest
in education.
Over the next 15 years, the world will need to
invest
some $90 trillion in infrastructure improvements.
The US is like an aging parent; it is no longer willing to
invest
much in the family business, but remains averse to ceding control to its increasingly mature children.
Some countries, like the US, Japan, Korea, Israel, and Sweden,
invest
heavily in research and development, and so achieve high rates of innovation.
Other countries, like Argentina and Brazil,
invest
less in research and development, and therefore achieve little in the way of new products and processes.
This seemingly contradictory fall in financing costs reflected an abundance of foreign capital seeking to
invest
in the US, including money fleeing from Europe.
Companies pay for men to study abroad, but will not
invest
in female employees.
If a potential financier is unsure of being repaid, he or she will not invest, firms will not grow, and economic development will stall.
Germany once prided itself on being the “photovoltaic world champion”, doling out generous subsidies – totaling more than $130 billion, according to research from Germany’s Ruhr University – to citizens to
invest
in solar energy.
Latin America’s economies are organized in a way that concentrates wealth in a few hands, but then leaves it untaxed, depriving governments of the resources needed to
invest
in their citizens’ human capital.
Sovereign wealth funds, pension funds, global investment banks, and hedge funds do not
invest
only in their own backyard.
One popular explanation lies in the fuzzy notion of “secular stagnation”: long-term depressed demand for goods and services is undermining incentives to
invest
and hire.
Companies
invest
and reinvest in their workers, because the latter can insist on it, possessing as they do a seat in the boardroom as a result of the 1951 Codetermination Law.
Few want to
invest
in a market where the government can change the rules of the game at any time, especially if they have had first-hand experience of being blocked from trading at a crucial moment.
This further contributes to the reluctance of foreign companies to
invest
in malaria-ridden regions, despite otherwise low labor costs.
Moreover, the CFTA will increase the need for connectivity, so there will be new opportunities to
invest
in infrastructure and sectors ranging from transportation and energy to information and communications technology (ICT) and water supplies.
South Africa, Egypt, and Nigeria are already becoming promising places to
invest
in these areas.
Crucially, confident and secure older people share, invest, and pass on more to their children, helping to secure the long-term stability of their country’s assets.
There was no way, of course, for anyone either to
invest
in or to bet against the success of any of the activities promoted by the social epidemics – no professional opinion or outlet for analysts’ reports on these activities.
Noting that developing countries
invest
much less on scientific research and produce fewer scientists, Annan warned that the resulting imbalance in the geographic distribution of scientific activity creates problems for both the scientific community in developing countries and for development itself.
Young people saw little reason to
invest
in their future, and their elders succumbed to suicide and substance abuse at alarming rates.
The irony is that, with insufficient aggregate demand the major source of global weakness today, there is an alternative:
invest
in our future, in ways that help us to address simultaneously the problems of global warming, global inequality and poverty, and the necessity of structural change.
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