Rigid
in sentence
423 examples of Rigid in a sentence
If immigration countries suffer from chronic unemployment because wages are overly generous and rigid, as seems the case in most West European countries, migrants who find work will simply displace nationals from their jobs.
But it remains to be seen if the lessons have been fully internalized, and whether we will have a kinder, gentler IMF in lieu of a rigid, doctrinaire one.
Add, finally, the gendered appeal of the strong authority figure and
rigid
hierarchy, which attracts some women as much as some men, if in different psychodynamic ways.
A second explanation is that Japan’s economic structure became
rigid
because vested interests, especially in construction and services, prevented structural changes.
Moreover, to reduce even further the potential for conflict, employee-owned firms often adopt costly strategies, such as the
rigid
seniority-based profit-sharing schemes found in many law firms or the firm-wide job rotation that typifies US plywood cooperatives.
McKinsey consultants have even forecast that the upper middle-class will number 520 million by 2025 – the sort of projection that the communist mandarins welcome as a tribute to their strange hybrid of a market economy and
rigid
state control.
Cubans are in the end consigned to hold fast to
rigid
and impossible schemes.
The assertion that money wages are downwardly
rigid
is not, in my view, a credible explanation of persistent unemployment.
Nor was it a credible explanation for Keynes, who asserted that his theory did not rely on the assumption of
rigid
wages.
Such a combination would force the ECB to be even more
rigid
in an economy where the employed and their representatives (trade unions) are preoccupied exclusively with protecting existing jobs and excluding outsiders, i.e. the unemployed.
But it is more likely that the regime is too
rigid
and too blinkered to act.
As the government attempted to direct these gains toward wealth redistribution, public expenditure rose and the social-benefits system – underpinned by so-called “acquired rights” – became increasingly
rigid.
Such legislation must also have
rigid
compliance standards that are reviewed and enforced by the state’s electoral authorities and courts.
First,
rigid
rules that wipe out shareholders and penalize long-term creditors are a clear deterrent from bankers’ point of view.
Customary law is not
rigid
in that it is made to fit round the demands of global economy.
And
rigid
financial controls, which lend bureaucrats inordinate discretionary power over capital transfers, amount to a fatal flaw.
Such examples complicate the notion of a Syria defined by
rigid
sectarian divisions, and experiences from modern Syrian history further blur sectarian lines.
At bottom, the coincidence of unemployment and booming exports can be explained by the high and
rigid
wages from which Germany still suffers.
Indeed, while corruption is generally harmful to economic growth, there is a case to be made that in the years since China launched its transition to a market economy in the late 1970s, it was a necessary evil because of the country’s unique initial circumstances:
rigid
state control and limited international trade.
At the same time,
rigid
rules limiting deficit spending by regional governments could place the UK in the same fiscal straitjacket as the eurozone, where member states are prevented from borrowing in recessions.
The Middle East’s Feminist RevolutionOXFORD – Among the most prevalent Western stereotypes about Muslim countries are those concerning Muslim women: doe-eyed, veiled, and submissive, exotically silent, gauzy inhabitants of imagined harems, closeted behind
rigid
gender roles.
The problem, however, is that prices have generally proved much more rigid, declining only in Ireland.
As always, much will depend on America’s readiness to move away from military solutions and
rigid
ideological imperatives and instead embrace the pragmatic culture of conflict resolution.
The Poverty TrapsLONDON: Few debates are more rote -- and more ideologically
rigid
-- than those concerning economic growth and economic justice.
An analysis of their influence, inclinations, and biases indicates that the Nobel committee kept up an appearance of fairness through a
rigid
balance between right and left, formalists and empiricists, Chicago School and Keynesian.
Still, SOEs and SWFs have limited experience in the tech sector, and their corporate culture is rather
rigid
compared to the companies they are targeting.
High tax rates on labor – together with
rigid
regulation of hiring and firing – make employers extremely reluctant to recruit workers.
Perhaps he felt that the minister needed reminding of his place in the
rigid
Kremlin hierarchy.
History, though not the
rigid
construct of Marx, does follow a type of logic.
The European Commission, the European Central Bank, and the German government have erred in insisting on
rigid
enforcement of the EU Stability and Growth Pact, particularly the 3%-of-GDP cap on fiscal deficits.
Back
Next
Related words
Their
Which
Would
Rules
Labor
System
There
Countries
Could
About
Markets
Growth
Government
Really
Often
Other
Economy
Control
While
Wages