Ownership
in sentence
752 examples of Ownership in a sentence
A big step would be to increase women’s control over land
ownership
and farming decisions, along with access to agricultural credits and subsidies designed to encourage domestic food production through home gardening and cattle and poultry husbandry.
Out of this ferment, Morocco has not only revised its Family Law, but also fundamental laws governing nationality, media ownership, and political organizations.
At this stage, there is no consensus on such basic issues as personal-data ownership, infrastructure security, and new disruptive businesses’ rights and responsibilities.
Ownership
of dogs and cats in China, for example, was estimated at 100 million in 2015, and rising.
Equity portfolio investment may involve price volatility as
ownership
positions change, but at least it implies a permanent commitment of capital to a business enterprise.
They also include areas not traditionally considered equality-enhancing – such as facilitating asset-building through small-business and home
ownership
and combating corruption – but that are just as important as education or redistribution for improving living standards.
Liberals and social democrats supported a private-ownership economy, markets, European integration, and increased trade, tempered by substantially redistributive taxes and transfers, a strong social safety net, and some public
ownership
in areas such as infrastructure and finance.
Thus, Arab countries grow water-hungry grain in the desert, and China acquires part
ownership
of oil companies in Sudan.
Let’s start with
ownership
of foreign resources.
The key point is that fundamental economic decisions should not be affected by the
ownership
of additional foreign oil assets.
If such a situation were to occur,
ownership
of oil assets abroad would most likely become worthless, as each country would only get to use oil produced within its political borders (or within nearby borders that could be invaded).
We must rethink our ideas about economic and social development, value creation, privacy and ownership, and even individual identity.
His goal is to establish new “state corporations,” even as the state
ownership
in the economy already well exceeds 60%.
For example, the recent concept of “European reinforcement of African capabilities in prevention, crisis response and conflict resolution” (which is known as ‘Recamp’) openly calls for African
ownership
of this process.
Likewise, China’s property law was debated for years, as conservative forces, with the support of various media outlets, resisted marketization and privatization in defense of older citizens whose livelihoods continued to depend on the “iron rice bowl” of state
ownership.
In 1990-2010, self-employment rates fell across the OECD countries, with business
ownership
in the US, for example, having declined rapidly since 2002.
In the Netherlands, however, business
ownership
has grown steadily since 1992, reaching 12% of the labor force in 2012.
To be sure, rates of business
ownership
and self-employment are also high in low-income countries like Mexico.
International equity funds stepped in, providing companies with urgently needed liquidity while disentangling the traditional
ownership
network.
Or should the new states be delineated according to local ethnic identities, giving minority groups a sense of
ownership
of at least part of the country?
One would think that a country like the US, with a current account deficit of roughly $800 billion a year, would realize that such a yawning external gap is inevitably financed only by selling off assets, which means that foreigners with money acquire
ownership
and control of US-based businesses.
At the start of the process, China will have small and indirect
ownership
stakes in a great many US enterprises, and the odds are that the usual objections will be absent.
Although he was an architect of core components of social democratic policy – particularly its emphasis on maintaining full employment – he did not subscribe to other key social democratic objectives, such as public
ownership
or massive expansion of the welfare state.
Their policies were directed at depriving capitalists of the
ownership
of the means of production.
In short, Keynes aimed to achieve a key social democratic objective without changing the
ownership
of industry.
Many countries continue to limit foreign investment and
ownership
in specific sectors, restrict their pension funds’ foreign-investment positions, and limit foreign investors’ access to local stock markets.
The same year, following criminal prosecutions for telephone hacking which led to the closure of Murdoch’s News of the World, then-Prime Minister David Cameron appointed Lord Justice Brian Leveson to head an inquiry into “the culture, practices and ethics of the press; their relationship with the police; the failure of the current system of regulation; the contacts made, and discussions had, between national newspapers and politicians; why previous warnings about press misconduct were not heeded; and the issue of cross-media ownership.”
Crony capitalism can be understood as a system, which, though based on some market relations and private ownership, fails to respect such important rules as the enforce-ability of law, free and fair competition, equality of opportunity, protection of ownership, transparency, and public control.
But he also believes that private-property rights come second to the needs of the Russian “security state,” which means that
ownership
is always conditional.
As befits a former KGB officer, Putin also believes that the Russian state has “ultimate
ownership
rights” to its citizens’ private assets not just in Russia, but also abroad.
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