Price
in sentence
4904 examples of Price in a sentence
The OECD concurs, and has frequently called on authorities to address “anti-competitive mergers, abuse of dominance, cartels and
price
fixing, vertical restraints, and exclusive practices” in the food sector.
Violations included a “vertical monopoly” in the Malawi sugar sector,
price
fixing in Kenya’s fertilizer industry, and a “buyer cartel” in the Zimbabwean cotton industry.
Consider wines: you can sort them by price, year, or region of origin, by red, white, or rosé, or by sparkling or still.
The answer is that countries should seek to do both: Lower the
price
paid to oil producers and raise the
price
paid by oil consumers, by cutting subsidies for oil and refined products or raising taxes on them.
If the retail
price
of fuel is low, domestic consumption will be high.
If gas taxes are high and consumption is low, as in Europe, fluctuations in the world
price
of oil have a smaller effect domestically.
Governments that act now can reduce energy subsidies or increase taxes while sparing consumers an increase in the retail
price
from one year to the next.
By this measure, there is no deflation: The GDP
price
index (called GDP deflator) in developed countries is increasing by 1-1.5%, on average.
In fact, nominal interest rates are at zero, while the broadest
price
indices are increasing, albeit gently.
Though the exact
price
remains secret, it appears that Russia offered major concessions, after nearly a decade of negotiations, to ensure the deal’s success.
Price
growth is well below targets and declining in many countries.
The recent
price
slide – to $50-60 per barrel, halving the value of Russia’s oil production – suggests that history is about to repeat itself.
A 40% fall in the value of the dollar – of which half passes through to increased dollar prices of imports – thus implies a 3.2% rise in the overall
price
level.
A Federal Reserve committed to effective
price
stability will likely raise interest rates rather than allow any year’s inflation rate to jump from 3% to 6%.
The government (the visible hand) sets the benchmark
price
for risk-free financial assets through monetary policy and control over fiscal deficits, while the market (the invisible hand) sets the risk premia of risky assets above the benchmark rate.
The former implements policy decisions, based on economic, social, and political considerations, while profit-maximizing behavior – anchored by the state-determined
price
and requiring a robust PRI – determines the latter.
Thus, the role of the market in
price
discovery is inextricable from that of the government.
Until recently, advanced-country markets predominated in setting risk premia, owing to their mature and well-functioning PRIs, which include clear rules and a high level of transparency in
price
formation.
Not only will those loans’
price
fall if only a few entities have the spare funds to buy them, but other distressed entities’ scramble to borrow also will make it hard for any institution without funds to obtain them.
While there is a
price
today that reflects those expectations, it is not a
price
at which distressed banks want to sell.
With the German government keeping inflation in check through extensive
price
and wage controls, there was much talk about an economic miracle.
The
price
of failure is a Europe thrown back on past divisions.
Singapore’s water
price
did not rise at all from 2000 to 2016, and Hong Kong’s water prices haven’t changed since 1996, even as the
price
of everything else has risen.
Because households would spend part of the windfall, a helicopter drop would boost both domestic demand and the
price
level.
So helicopter money, while consistent with the ECB’s
price
stability mandate, would indeed blur the distinction between monetary and fiscal policies.
Ironically, by far the main reason why euro adoption was originally so popular in Southern Europe was that back in the 1980s and 1990s, ordinary people longed for the
price
stability Germans enjoyed with their Deutsche Mark.
Far more important to the achievement of
price
stability has been the advent of the modern independent central bank, a device that has helped dramatically reduce inflation levels worldwide.
Yes, a few places, such as Venezuela, still have triple-digit
price
growth, but they are now rarities.
The Truth and Reconciliation process may or may not work to heal South Africa's wounds, but if corporations are to be provided with incentives to do the right thing, they must now pay the
price
for the profits that they reaped from that abhorrent system.
But the EU is not ready simply to allow the UK to drop whatever it doesn’t like, at least not without paying a
price.
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