Price
in sentence
4904 examples of Price in a sentence
The film, also, has little reason to ever be released to DVD; however, inevitably when it is, a
price
of more than $1.05 is too expensive.
Think of the 'The
Price
is Right' hostesses.
The shootouts were Fantastic with blood and Gore I love violence more than anything If you see this one buy it immediately Whatever the
price
mine cost $14.95
Price
is a con-man with a dream.
One girl stopped her father from trying to get a lower rental
price
for the mansion she wanted for her party.
That is the
price
of their freedom.
Antonio Sobato Jrs' (very underused) body is worth the
price
of admission.
Worth the matinee admission
price.
I found the VHS version a few years ago but you could only purchase two episodes at a time and considering the
price
I didn't think it was worth the cost.
thinking back it really fun to elicit the red faces from our friends - still makes me chuckle even after all these years - thanks for the opportunity of sharing this information with those who haven't seen it - its worth much more than the
price
of admission.
This film alone was worth the
price
of the DVD it shares with "Plan 9 from outer space."
BOTTOM LINE if you want to be entertained and don't mind a some violence see it it is worth the
price
of admission.
Some days I think that, in the future, central bankers must also recognize that it is imprudent to lower interest rates in pursuit of full employment when doing so risks causing an asset
price
bubble.
Increased transparency has made the airline business more “efficient,” but now airplane seats are hard to sell on any basis other than
price.
The logic is simple: merchants are encouraged to use the deals to attract new customers, who in theory will return at full
price.
But targeting the consumer
price
index precludes this, because depreciation would raise the
price
of imported oil, food, and other tradable commodities.
Indeed, if the shock is an increase in the dollar
price
of oil, an inflation target in theory dictates tightening monetary policy enough that the currency appreciates.
In practice, an inflation-targeting central bank usually abandons the target for
price
stability in such a case.
In the wake of sharp
price
increases in the 1970s, central banks wanted to commit credibly to monetary discipline in order to facilitate disinflation.
Thus, deficit countries have to control
price
and wage growth to improve competitiveness, while surplus countries may have to accept some inflation.
First, there is no close relationship between external positions and competitiveness trends – not with some of the
price
and cost competitiveness that the EU Commission and the ECB examine, and not with output-based competitiveness (export growth and change in export market shares).
That indicator is often used by the EU Commission and the ECB as a proxy for the divergence in competitiveness trends within the eurozone but in fact it does not measure
price
and cost competitiveness as such; instead, it captures the
price
effects of changes in aggregate demand.
To the extent that German products compete on quality rather than price, the surplus might persist even if domestic prices in Germany rise.
Finally, internal
price
and cost developments would have no impact on trade with non-eurozone members.
In that case, policymakers should focus on improving productivity, rather than on
price
reductions alone.
Still, if competitiveness underpins the sustainability of trade deficits, there is in principle no good economic reason to impose short-run measures –
price
and cost adjustments – for the purpose of achieving a long-term objective, unless the purpose of
price
and cost adjustment is indeed to dampen demand.
In the future, China will have to rely more heavily on interest rates to manage monetary policy, using the
price
of capital, not political considerations, to influence how firms make investment decisions.
But at this early stage in the US-Iran confrontation, another, even more important, economic question is worth considering: What will the US sanctions do to the
price
of oil?
At first sight, the answer seems too obvious to bother discussing: The oil
price
will surely rise as sanctions curb Iran’s output and exports, while traders brace themselves for a possible war.
This
price
had never risen above $70 since 2014, when the upsurge in US shale production caused oil prices to collapse.
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