Prices
in sentence
6195 examples of Prices in a sentence
Prices
were pushed to staggering lows, and pop!
This is an example of the anchoring effect, and it's often used in marketing and negotiations to raise the
prices
that people are willing to pay.
And in those places where we bring the price down but we don't see those earnings pop, we bring the
prices
back up.
Consumer taste and
prices
can also have harmful effects.
Think: Weimar Republic in 1930; Zimbabwe more recently, in 2008, when the
prices
of basic goods like bread are doubling every day.
If you need that money, the only effect that a drop in business is going have is to force you to lower your
prices
or offer more risky sexual services.
But we also have to be very aware that there are redistributive consequences, that importantly, low-skilled immigration can lead to a reduction in wages for the most impoverished in our societies and also put pressure on house
prices.
In an uncertain global environment, commodity
prices
have fallen.
Managing the economy while creating stability is vital, getting
prices
right, and policy consistency.
The market forces unleashed by this cultural momentum often include the seemingly unstoppable and inevitable cycle of rising taxes,
prices
and rents.
Now, after a great run as CEO, Howard stepped down in 2000, and Starbucks quickly overextended itself and stock
prices
fell.
You see products, prices, ratings and reviews.
Partly, they're pumping money in because commodity
prices
are high, but it's not just that.
I've looked to see what is the relationship between higher commodity
prices
of exports, and the growth of commodity-exporting countries.
That is not a forecast about how commodity
prices
go; it's a forecast of the consequences, the long-term consequences, for growth of an increase in
prices.
It's a small farm, they make great coffee, they're paid above fair-trade
prices
for it.
Nor can companies agree to do certain things, for example raise the
prices
of their unhealthy products, because that would violate competition law, as we've established.
While this would stimulate business, it would also encourage overconsumption, or hoarding commodities, like food and fuel, raising their
prices
and leading to consumer shortages and even more inflation.
By far the largest is that market
prices
fail to take social and environmental costs into account.
According to the US Treasury Department, the bottom 70 percent of Americans would receive more in dividends than they would pay in increased energy
prices.
In expensive cities like New York, it has the magical power of being able to multiply real estate values by allowing views, which is really the only commodity that developers have to offer to justify those surreal
prices.
Now, let's think about what impact that might have on some of the products, or the
prices
of the products, that we buy every day.
So if a 30 percent increase in duties were actually passed along, we would be looking at some pretty important increases in
prices.
So the real question is, does it make sense for us to drive up
prices
to the point where many of us can't afford the basic goods we use every day for the purpose of saving a job that might be eliminated in a couple of years anyway?
It allows us to get more out of the limited resources and expertise we have and at the same time benefit from lower
prices.
The 2050 narrative started to evolve shortly after global food
prices
hit all-time highs in 2008.
This means at this point supply can no longer keep up with demand despite exploding prices, unless we can commit to some type of structural change.
And data
prices
have been slashed so radically that half of urban India and even a part of rural India now have a smartphone with a data connection in their hands.
I figured, this was just one of the small
prices
that must be paid to make it.
And that means competition on the merits, that you compete on the quality of your products, the
prices
you can offer, the services, the innovation that you produce.
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