Privatization
in sentence
465 examples of Privatization in a sentence
Others argue that Russia put
privatization
ahead of institutional reforms such as establishing a judicial system.
Russia (and the other countries of the region, including Poland) had to proceed much more decisively with state enterprise reform and
privatization.
Funding for these reforms comes from the
privatization
of state assets -- not from aid from abroad.
The Washington Consensus – with its emphasis on liberalization, deregulation, and
privatization
– does not forecast greater per capita income, nor does it eliminate poverty.
Gerashchenko blocked all bank reforms ranging from restructuring, liberalization and
privatization
to deposit insurance.
Price liberalization, stabilization, and
privatization
were pursued since 1992 with varying degrees of commitment.
During much of the 1980s and 1990s, the Bank oversaw structural adjustment programs in developing countries that focused on deregulation, privatization, and economic liberalization, especially trade opening, all of which helped to enable globalization.
North Korea now should follow the examples of Vietnam and China, pursuing reforms like deregulation, liberalization, privatization, and macroeconomic stabilization, while developing a new legal system and new institutions.
Some EU countries - particularly new members in Central and Eastern Europe - have committed themselves to use
privatization
receipts to finance pension reform.
Amazingly, President Viktor Yushchenko regularly vetoed decisions necessary for that stabilization, including every effort at
privatization.
Opening up China to a major joint enterprise, foreign direct investment, or
privatization
drive provides a one-time bonus to prosperity over and beyond the supply side effects.
Over the past two decades, advocates of
privatization
have promised greater efficiencies and lower energy prices, but the failure to accompany
privatization
with appropriate regulation and enforcement has left many countries with poorly governed and often deeply corrupt energy sectors.
While the government tells the troika that
privatization
of ports and municipal airports will continue, many cabinet members argue against it.
In Asia in the late 1990’s, measures aimed at the financial sector dominated IMF-imposed structural adjustment programs, but there were also programs that focused on tax and expenditure reforms, corporate governance, privatization, and business-debt restructuring.
Meanwhile, Aliyev's government neglects basic economic reforms like
privatization
and land sales.
Arab governments – and many Westerners – claimed that
privatization
and other economic reforms should be given priority over political change.
Instead, the benefits of
privatization
and other initiatives went largely to political and business elites.
They have looted public-sector resources through large-scale
privatization
schemes, and by securing public subsidies that rarely require them to deliver benefits to taxpayers.
In the real world, failures in
privatization
were related in part to problems of corporate governance, problems related to asymmetries of information between managers and owners.
This framework’s influences was reflected in the tremendous emphasis reformers placed on privatization, no matter how it was done, with speed taking precedence over everything else, including creating the institutional infrastructure needed to make a market economy work.
Consider
privatization
of the economy, formerly run on socialist lines.
Theoretically, funds from
privatization
in Kosovo should go to Serbia.
But
privatization
is brutal, because most of these bodies are ill-prepared to survive in a free market.
Growth is strong,
privatization
is coming on, owners of capital are enthusiastic.
The alternative is to create financial hype by aggressive privatization, overshadowing problems with foreign enthusiasm.
But
privatization
cannot substitute for delayed actions.
But other proposals carry bigger risks, notably the
privatization
of retirement pensions, which is talked about in many countries, and that some – including Great Britain, Chile, Sweden, and Mexico – have already put in place, at least partly.
In particular, the so-called Washington Consensus, which calls for unfettered liberalization and privatization, and macroeconomic policies that focus on inflation, rather than employment and growth, have attracted much criticism over the years.
Brazil is taking its sweet time to make it: fiscal reform is stalled, financial restructuring is overdue,
privatization
is slow.
Nonetheless, this
privatization
plan could be an important step toward reining in excessive state ownership in Russia, where the government controls the commanding heights of the economy in energy, mining, manufacturing, electricity generation, financial services, and transportation.
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