Turnover
in sentence
102 examples of Turnover in a sentence
Bilateral trade
turnover
reached $50 billion in 2003, and Taiwanese took almost four million trips to the mainland.
China is North Korea's most important trading partner, with
turnover
exceeding $700 million in 2002, up 30% from 2001.
On the revenue front, Brazil should replace the current state-level value-added tax (VAT), which is riddled with major distortions, and the federal cascading
turnover
taxes with a modern dual (federal and state) consumption-type VAT, with a common base and a very small number of rates.
Now, 40 years later, the European Commission has proposed – and French President Nicolas Sarkozy and German Chancellor Angela Merkel have endorsed – a
turnover
tax on all financial transactions, varying from 0.1% on stocks to 0.01% on financial derivatives like futures and credit-default swaps.
There is considerable evidence that strong employment protection laws do reduce job
turnover
– the number of hires and fires.
Higher oil prices and lower trade
turnover
aggravate the problem.
The second group comprises listed companies whose depressed
turnover
jeopardizes their already diminished share value and their standing with banks, suppliers, and potential customers (all of which are reluctant to sign long-term contracts with an underperforming company).
One widespread practice involves two such firms, say, Micro (a small family firm facing a large advance tax payment) and Macro (a publicly traded limited liability company that needs to demonstrate higher
turnover
than it has).
This way, at a cost of €4,600, Micro reduces its taxable revenue by €24,600, while Macro boosts its
turnover
figure by €20,000.
The state collects additional VAT from Micro (at a loss of corporate taxes that Micro cannot pay anyway);Macro enjoys the benefits of seemingly higher turnover; and the gas-station owner reduces his losses from converting FE into BE.
The best option available to Moria’s refugee children are cramped informal education centers, where high teacher
turnover
is a serious problem.
The EU is India’s second-largest trading partner, with
turnover
reaching €68 billion ($93.5 billion) in 2010, accounting for 20% of India’s global trade.
Bilateral annual trade
turnover
exceeds $3 billion, with oil constituting more than 96% of Indian imports from Nigeria.
As of next year, every merchant will face a 26%
turnover
tax from the first euro they earn – while being required to pre-pay in 2016 a full 75% of their 2017 taxes.
Nonetheless, establishing commitments for governments that extend beyond electoral cycles can imbue legislative agendas with a longer-term perspective, as they reduce partisan policy
turnover.
This results in high
turnover
owing to overwork, and an increased need for foreign health-care workers to fill sorely needed positions.
As a result, growth in intra-regional trade has outpaced overall trade growth, with intra-Asian trade now accounting for more than half of the continent’s total trade
turnover.
In fact, older people have better accident and attendance records, and are more loyal, reducing employee
turnover
and replacement costs.
Late last month, the French insurance giant AXA announced that it will no longer provide underwriting services to companies that generate more than 50% of their
turnover
from coal.
This has led to excessive workforce externalization, high rates of CEO turnover, takeover bids, and restructurings of all kinds – all which have far-reaching consequences.
Nowadays, India accounts for less than 5% of Pakistan’s total trade
turnover.
The US has annual trade
turnover
of more than $2 trillion, despite a flexible exchange rate that has seen sharp ups and downs in recent decades.
Worse, these are often informal jobs characterized by high turnover, which impedes long-run human-capital accumulation.
From the early 1990’s on, many analysts viewed America’s weak unionization, at-will employment, limited legal job protection, and high job
turnover
as major factors in achieving a lower unemployment rate than most EU countries.
It operates in Western Sahara through its subsidiary Phosboucraa, which represents about 6% of OCP’s business
turnover
and approximately 1.6% of its phosphate reserves.
In yet another shrewd move, he pursued the
turnover
of senior officials at the Vatican gradually, rather than in one fell swoop.
Beyond the questions inherent in the process of generational turnover, there has been a dramatic shift in China’s dominant policy framework under Xi.
These practices can have a positive impact on profits through increased productivity, lower staff turnover, greater amenability to change, more innovation, and better, more reliable output.
Employees who have a direct stake in a company’s profitability are likely to be more motivated and engaged, and
turnover
is likely to be lower.
It started on tax reform: a 'flat' income tax, a single regressive social tax, a ban on the
turnover
tax, etc.
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