Property
in sentence
1809 examples of Property in a sentence
Property
values in London will cool.
These include the protection of
property
rights, effective contract enforcement, eradication of corruption, enhanced transparency and financial information, sound corporate governance, monetary and fiscal stability, debt sustainability, market-determined exchange rates, high-quality financial regulation, and prudential supervision.
Because of this property, superconductors have unique features that can be exploited in many ways.
For the US, the biggest concern seems to be so-called forced technology transfer – that is, the requirement that foreign companies share their intellectual
property
with a domestic “partner” in order to gain access to the Chinese market.
A country’s
property
rights in foreign oil assets are likely to diminish as the oil price rises.
The combination of an Asian market with strong Chinese connections and a system of English law and
property
rights continues to provide a powerful competitive advantage.
If these countries imposed tit-for-tat measures on US imports, the US companies that export those components would suffer, as would companies that collect royalties on intellectual
property
used abroad.
Institutions are torn down,
property
rights are called into question, and a random and ever more corrupt redistribution effort is underway.
Meanwhile, independent trade unions have been all but crushed, and oligarchs now declare themselves willing to render their
property
to the state as needed.
Obvious economic problems include Europe’s weak banks, China’s distorted
property
market, political uncertainty in the West, historically high private and public debt – 225% of GDP, according to the International Monetary Fund – and the reluctance of heavily indebted Greece and Portugal to comply with IMF programs.
Last week, China finally enshrined private
property
by passing the long-awaited
property
rights law, in what the government called “significant progress in promoting rule of law in the country.”
The new
property
rights law undoubtedly offers stronger protection to Chinese citizens, in particular homeowners, by equalizing the legal status of private and state
property.
Greater predictability and clarity in the
property
system is likely to bring economic benefits, reassure international investors, and signal the leadership’s determination to pursue further economic reforms.
What the new law will not do, however, is address the most serious
property
rights disputes: land seizures and forced evictions for urban redevelopment.
The new
property
law won’t be the breakthrough for rights protection that the government claims it is until it is matched by increased access to justice for ordinary citizens.
Let the government simply enforce
property
rights and contracts, and – presto!
After four years of a presidency supposedly devoted to forging a "dictatorship of law," the rule of law in Russia remains weak and
property
rights ill defined.
Many members of this group honor the institution of private property, and Ahmadinejad’s talk of redistributing wealth is not to their liking.
That would hardly look good given all the bashing China takes for not enforcing intellectual
property
rights more vigorously.
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.
He understands the worldview of the ex-KGB men in the Kremlin very well and is unlikely to approve of revisiting how
property
and wealth are divided in Russia.
And in the typical European city, where land and affordable housing are in short supply, lower interest rates have been driving
property
prices higher rather than stimulating construction.
These “displaced persons,” as they were called at the time, were forced to flee their homes because of violence, forced relocation, persecution, and destruction of
property
and infrastructure.
Intellectual
property
has become one of the most contentious issues in the TPP negotiations, and it is not hard to see why.
Furthermore, uneven protection of
property
rights – crony capitalism – means that a small number of businessmen are politically favored.
Because the state uses its apparatus to deter competition – both informally, through arbitrary enforcement of
property
rights, and formally, through trade restrictions – crony capitalism is not only unjust, but also inefficient.
Since early 2010, in order to contain inflation and
property
bubbles, the Chinese government has tightened monetary policy.
Turkey should also provide reparations for Armenians, whose plundered
property
has enriched the modern Turkish state.
One of them, Paul Chan Mo-po, was tasked with managing Hong Kong’s land-supply policy, despite a history of corruption in his personal
property
transactions.
In just over a year, Trump went from reality-television host and showboating
property
magnate to leader of the world’s most powerful country, leaving the Republican Party establishment with whiplash.
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