Will they put human health and the environment above chemical industry profits? |
|
We want the government to set the price of goods and guarantee a minimum wage so as not to put profits above the needs of the people. |
|
All of these are political decisions to put the profits of big business above the lives of millions of ordinary people. |
|
If those companies believed there were profits to be made, they were right. |
|
To boost profits, it switched some carriers from dry bulk cargoes to coal, and raised freight rates for coal along the coastal region. |
|
Some chefs sell merchandise or match wines with their tasting menus to boost profits. |
|
Buoyed by high crude prices, Western oil majors are reporting outsize profits. |
|
This is likely to benefit consumers in the target market, but it will leave the original domestic firms with lower profits. |
|
They are driven by a blind process of competition in which firms vie to grab a larger share of markets and profits than their rivals. |
|
It has been widely reported that profits have tanked over the past two years for OEMs and large publicly traded parts suppliers. |
|
Industry takings rely on the sale of alcohol and the more they sell, the better their profits. |
|
But if entrepreneurs can discover new opportunities for higher profits, the decline does not happen, at least on the macro level. |
|
The fear is that corporate profits have been boosted by cost cutting, not increased sales and prices from a revival of the economy. |
|
If we believe that augmentation of their profits will increase their incentives to engage in socially beneficial innovation, that's good. |
|
If there is a subsequent decline in value, that decline may affect the attribution to pre-acquisition profits under the rest of the section. |
|
Behind the move is a scramble to cut costs and boost profits at the expense of workers everywhere. |
|
The company has suffered public attacks in the US and Western Europe and announced a down-turn in profits earlier in the year. |
|
Suddenly the profits of doom were left with egg on their face as the Blues relished life at the summit. |
|
There are no profits and no dividend, and the assets are valued at just 60p per share. |
|
New Harmony collapsed when one of Owen's American business partners ran off with all profits. |
|
|
Despite their lack of profits, many investors like loss-makers, especially if there is a likelihood of a turnaround in their bottom lines. |
|
In good years, profits from the second half more than cover losses from the first half. |
|
It has a reserve built up from past profits that has so far coped with losses. |
|
But yesterday he effectively pulled the rug from under them by introducing 19 per cent corporation tax levy on those profits. |
|
That's a lot of loot for a pair of companies that have yet to make a dime in profits. |
|
The plunge in profits and sudden sharp increase in the burden of debt are, of course, leading symptoms of a depression. |
|
Smartphone vendors these days tend to focus on short term profits instead of being in the game for the long haul. |
|
High production runs were the only thing that could increase profits and ultimately cause memory prices to fall. |
|
The arrival of the disease in the country would drastically reduce the profits of some of Brazil's largest meat exporters. |
|
The US is on the ropes because investment is collapsing, profits are imploding and share prices cascading. |
|
Changes in producers' profits are likely realized from the association of AGP use with mean live weight and weight variation. |
|
The caveat, of course, was that their new office was a business and therefore they had to keep the profits rolling in. |
|
Any value difference should generate arbitrage profits and the elimination of the divergence. |
|
More than that, Bonnie and Clyde took off like a rocket, generating enormous profits and fame for everyone involved. |
|
Investors long hoped the company might do the heavy restructuring needed to revive profits and compete with new rivals. |
|
Such a situation would guarantee unlimited and riskless profits for all those holding gold and silver. |
|
The mere possibility of unlimited and riskless profits suggests that there is an error in the calculation. |
|
Cable made the investment with no guarantee of profits from regulators and entirely with private risk capital. |
|
But manufacturers, eager for fourth-quarter sales growth at any cost, may swallow the difference even at risk to their profits. |
|
Meanwhile, health-care costs continued to rise, cutting into business profits. |
|
|
Bank profits are being channelled into shoring up their balance sheets, rather than new investments. |
|
Billions in profits are riding on the success or failure of such drugs, as are the hopes of millions of sufferers from various diseases. |
|
Many who live here preach bitterly of its negative impacts, while developers lick their chops in anticipation of windfall profits. |
|
What it's meant is handing over to them a license to print money so that they are awash with profits at the same time as being morally bankrupt. |
|
The world we live in is anti-life in its priority on profits and wage-slavery. |
|
In effect, the bookies would face a levy on profits to help those who are damaged by betting. |
|
Brown also rejected calls to levy a windfall tax on the oil companies, which have announced significantly increased profits in the last month. |
|
The depression of prices, and above all profits, was the driving force behind the transformation of production processes in this period. |
|
The marketers must accept the fact that it will take years to build the business volume that will return profits. |
|
I have a research collaborator who believes that companies are so busy trying to return big profits that innovation has all but died. |
|
Banks and other lenders push payment insurance because it boosts their profits. |
|
In the past, distributors tried to maximise profits by imposing a number of restrictive practices on the cinema industry. |
|
Most of his profits were gained by restoring to their owners the goods stolen by his own minions. |
|
In the United States, when the corporate-owned media sense profits, they strain at the leash to sell the line better. |
|
Sudden leaps in profits led to large tax liabilities, and Uncle Sam reared his ugly head. |
|
Not surprisingly, many listed retailers saw profits shoot upwards as well, tripling in some cases. |
|
He bought cheap land and resold the properties for huge profits 12 months later. |
|
As one diplomat pointed out, that amounts to three weeks' oil profits for the government. |
|
The levy was revised in February 1999 and only imposed on profits made from portfolio investments that were repatriated within one year. |
|
A falling dollar makes US assets less attractive to foreigners because repatriated profits are worth less when changed to the home currency. |
|
|
The convertibility of currencies and regulations on foreign ownership or the repatriation of profits are also important. |
|
In Singapore, there are no restrictions on the amount of capital investment, nor on the repatriation of capital or remittance of profits. |
|
The cabinet ratified a new investment law that allows for full repatriation of profits. |
|
You can invest in anything, you don't need government approvals, you can remit your profits out, and there are no equity restrictions. |
|
The inequity of allowing windfall profits to be appropriated by private landholders can thus be demonstrated more clearly than in George's day. |
|
While the profits perceived to be made by big landholders are deplored, all citizens hope to profit from owning land. |
|
Adding to its weak image is a 10 per cent year-on-year drop in January and February operating profits. |
|
But the two big cash cows were comparatively steady, and Office-related profits actually fell year-on-year. |
|
That said, it's worth bearing in mind that annual profits of fund managers can be very sensitive to year-on-year performance of the stock market. |
|
One set of institutions monitored the compliance of the parties to their agreement to exchange wage moderation for the reinvestment of profits. |
|
Those making the shift to resource reinvestment are not just doing good, they are also reaping profits. |
|
Many companies and investors favor using spare corporate cash for stock buybacks or to reinvest profits instead of paying dividends. |
|
They may generate financial support by retaining profits and reinvesting them in organizational improvements. |
|
The family has made a concerted effort to reinvest profits in the hotel and has tried to introduce a new feature each year. |
|
I want to grow the business, but I can't unless we start reinvesting our profits. |
|
Personally, I am not too thrilled by either because I'd much rather a company reinvested its profits into more successful ventures. |
|
We reinvest the profits back into the company and that negates the need to seek further external funding. |
|
He did not always make appropriate deductions from anticipated profits to make allowance for these factors. |
|
Revenues had to be grown through adding costs and capital to businesses and then keeping a tight rein on costs while watching profits grow. |
|
I would argue that while profits remain the centerpiece of Capitalistic processes, financial and speculative profits today reign supreme. |
|
|
These profits are going to necessary public services such as rehiring doctors in local hospitals. |
|
Forget the market reaction to the interim banking profits so far, the industry is alive and well. |
|
There is also a dispute about how much of the petroleum profits would stay in the Kurdish provinces. |
|
But campaigners argue that such promises are easily broken when private companies try to wring more profits from such projects. |
|
The Cranberries have very worthily decided to give the profits from their next single to charity. |
|
Worryingly, Japanese investors would have to wait for close to fifty years to be completely sure of making inflation-beating profits. |
|
The plan also envisages the creation of a trading company which would covenant all profits back to the parent company. |
|
They are considering relocating to Shanghai because high labour costs in this labour intensive business have eaten into their profits in Taiwan. |
|
The country's attempts since the 1970s to build a diversified economy from the fat profits of higher oil process have failed miserably. |
|
Because the affordable homes remain owned or part-owned by whichever housing association is involved, they cannot be sold on for fat profits. |
|
In the past couple of years, profits at many companies have taken a severe knock. |
|
This is the first time the company has been in the red, after previously churning out profits in its operations. |
|
Analyzing how the cash flow statement reconciles profits with actual cash flows is also critical. |
|
A profits warning wiped a fifth off the value of the company in one day's trading. |
|
The company also likes to remind its customers that independent restaurants are more likely to recirculate profits in the local community. |
|
Traditional bookmakers now pay tax on gross profits rather than punters paying tax on their winnings. |
|
A growing number of states are in deficit as declining business profits reduce tax receipts and other revenues. |
|
The main reason behind the rebound in employment is the rebound in corporate profits. |
|
Economists say businesses will want profits to improve and want to feel secure about the economic rebound before they go on a hiring spree. |
|
In so doing, they will reap windfall profits from a property redevelopment scheme. |
|
|
Corporate banking was also very strongly ahead with profits rising by 44 per cent. |
|
The so-called Keynesian era seemed to prove that was good for profits was good for everyone. |
|
It is better to bring the polluters into the light than to allow them to reap profits at the expense of our air, land, and water. |
|
Mr Li said the low profits that farmers had realised from the sale of their produce mainly maize last year had been the main contributing factor. |
|
Markets will continue to be cleared in this way and profits realised, so long as sufficient surplus value is extracted from the working class. |
|
His arm of the bank has realised profits from some of its investments, through early refinancing of the deals. |
|
The question is therefore for how long will these traders wait to realize profits. |
|
In this way, newly-built and joint-venture multiplex cinemas might realize the biggest profits from the regulation. |
|
This immediately indicates that demand for our goods remain stable, and that we have to adjust the input side, to realise bigger profits. |
|
These companies have either accumulated a current year's profits that are represented by cash or other readily realisable assets. |
|
Principles are not an afterthought to be considered only so long as they do not affect profits. |
|
They have always been told that insurance companies kept back some profits from the good years to compensate for the bad ones. |
|
The group said that despite higher volumes, the Republic of Ireland's trading profits were broadly flat in a pretty buoyant market. |
|
But rather than keeping all the profits to himself, he has been sharing them with his fans. |
|
More important, it gives him a chance to quickly ratchet up profits by merging the back office and cutting the workforce. |
|
They were thrilled to proceed with merger mania and ratchet up already-humongous profits. |
|
The profits made from aerated water are quite as large as those from beer and spirits. |
|
Instead of spurning these rapacious advances, local authorities were demanding a permanent share of the profits. |
|
As firms gain advantage through the various sources of competitiveness, relative market share and profits increase. |
|
The potential for a share to advance usually attracts investors, who are looking for quick profits. |
|
|
The company says its profits fell by 21 percent and blames it on the strength of the South African rand against the U.S. dollar. |
|
In order to maximize profits from their government contracts, food suppliers delivered partial shipments and rancid provisions. |
|
The uplift in the figures came from international lending, which saw a 68 per cent jump in profits. |
|
The 68 per cent jump in profits is based on strong revenue growth and the introduction of new routes. |
|
And profits were defended by courts, so they were not subject to the larcenous whims of the local sheikh or rajah. |
|
Economic theory tells us that if it weren't so, there would be tons of new entrants into the market, attracted by juicy profits. |
|
The truth is that if companies do well and grow their profits over time, their shares will increase in value. |
|
The first phase has sold well, and profits from this will be realised in the second half. |
|
It has been a big year with record profits, record sales and while a win in the ratings and a lift in profit margins. |
|
The rally in oil prices should lift profits at the oil company's exploration and production division. |
|
That's how you become more competitive, sell more products, increase profits, and ultimately improve job security. |
|
However, even at 16 times 2005 profits, the valuation still looks too expensive by half, especially for a mature telecom business. |
|
Overall, the company is cutting costs and making profits, weathering the difficult economic conditions very well. |
|
They are paid in order to acquire assets whose use is a source of profits over and above the payments which must be made. |
|
Cleaner, greener jet fuels made from formulas that contain part soybean oil could clean up the air and give added profits to soybean growers. |
|
In the U.S., auto companies have been enjoying record profits and have accumulated huge cash hoards. |
|
The Firm was said to have accumulated huge profits over years of illegal activity. |
|
The profits of a trader for tax purposes are computed using the ordinary principles of commercial accounting. |
|
The money accounted for three-quarters of the profits made by Kilmarnock Prison Services Ltd over the past two years. |
|
It started to contribute to the profits of the Irish group in the fourth quarter of the last financial year. |
|
|
Real economic profits nowadays play an abysmally insignificant role toward dictating economic expansion. |
|
The thing about being independent is that all the profits are quadruple, quintuple what someone on a major label would make. |
|
Shareholder requirements for dividends made it necessary to define an accounting period, close the books and calculate profits. |
|
They then liquidate the business and, hopefully, share out the profits. |
|
When she crunched the numbers, she found that the business's profits were actually much lower than the company had said. |
|
Falling sales and a consequent loss of profits forced the company to lay off more workers. |
|
He goes beyond Haass to focus on the immense profits that accrued to American contractors in Iraq and Afghanistan. |
|
The possibilities for commercial success would even have Rita Repulsa angling for a stake in the profits. |
|
Then Mubarak and his family and their allies would see benefits in return, presumably some kickback or a share of the profits. |
|
But they were not making enough profits, as the rate of growth had slowed as Brazil invested in the welfare of its own people. |
|
Now, access to the consumer is where profits are made, and artistry is getting commoditized. |
|
With profits down over 90 percent and a spate of corporate in-fighting, Best Buy is battening down the hatches. |
|
Caterpillar notched record profits in 2012 and then in early 2013 bludgeoned its unions into accepting a six-year wage freeze. |
|
Corporations are bolstering profits by underpaying workers at the very bottom. |
|
That is to say, the market has boomed so much in large measure because corporate profits have boomed so much. |
|
In these days of corporate austerity, economic gloom and wafer-thin margins, it is brave to post substantially increased profits and claim there is still more to come. |
|
Although this is time-consuming, the business gets a full deduction when computing its profits, and everything is above-board if a Revenue audit takes place. |
|
While they are buying well-known brand names and waiting for prestige and fat profits to result, they tend to forget the major difference between home and abroad. |
|
All of corporate America was complicit in this fraud, from the accounting firm that accepted their figures to a Wall Street that was happy to share in their profits. |
|
Promoters, in their efforts to accumulate huge profits, are planning larger and larger events and it is time to put some serious controls on what is going on. |
|
|
With parallel highways being paved, jitneys were inroading into profits. |
|
It is perfectly true that an individual firm, or even several firms, can increase profits by monopolizing their product markets and lifting the price. |
|
The industry is consolidating, concentrating power and profits into the hands of fewer players. |
|
In 1720 the Scottish adventurer John Law had attempted to set up a state bank on the promise of overseas trading profits, and had paid the king's debts in banknotes. |
|
Schwend apparently retained one-third of the profits derived from the sale of the counterfeit money. |
|
Business leaders know that fair but stable and competitive after-tax profits go hand in hand with job creation, investment and increased productivity. |
|
The figures are wide open to abuse and manipulation through the use of financial engineering techniques including reinsurance, future profits and contingent loans. |
|
First of all he relied upon there having been a realisation of profits. |
|
However, to realize their profits, capitalists need to sell the products that their workers produce to consumers who are willing and able to buy them. |
|
At the end of fiscal 2002, when banks had reaped a bumper harvest through treasury profits, it was widely seen as a one-time affair and not expected to be repeated this year. |
|
The rich will not be able to continue to reap the profits of their investment in globalization if they do not seriously address the issues of poverty on a world scale. |
|
With reasonable prices and fine quality, his company's egg products sold well in American and European markets which bought him substantial profits. |
|
Marine services provider James Fisher and Sons is surging ahead after unveiling an 11 per cent rise in pre-tax profits for the first half of the year. |
|
Forced to lay on more cash-back rebates, cheap financing deals, and other costly incentives to try to empty dealer lots, they've seen profits squeezed. |
|
Capitalism is all about maximization of profits and if that requires appealing to the lowest instincts and the darkest recesses of human nature, so be it. |
|
But in reality, companies just leave their profits in overseas tax havens, deferring taxes indefinitely. |
|
A company making big league profits and paying fat dividends to shareholders should be ashamed of its insulting pay offer to the people who actually do the work. |
|
Mrs Dobson said the task of the trust has become more difficult over the years as property prices escalated and they had to compete with developers hoping to make fat profits. |
|
As the economy has unraveled over the past three years, managers desperate to prop up profits have been beating the bushes for new ways to cut costs. |
|
Chaoda's net profits for the year to June 30 rose 37 per cent to 996.7 million yuan, or 0.46 yuan a share, including a one-off write-back of a 93 million yuan tax provision. |
|
|
It was forced to disgorge profits and pay a fine to the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission. |
|
They are potentially liable to the artist for the artist's losses, for an allocable portion the profits they earned, attorneys fees and treble damages. |
|
People are expecting profits to reinflate, but I think we've still got a long haul before earnings have deflated to reasonable levels that will allow for decent future growth. |
|
If a company is paying the majority of its earnings out in dividends, smaller amounts of profits are able to be reinvested to make higher profits. |
|
As these assets generate profits, and as the profits are reinvested in additional assets, you see a return in the form of increased share value as stock prices rise. |
|
The Treasury said it would take into account these sorts of concerns, suggesting it would reward companies who reinvested their profits into their businesses. |
|
If a trader, therefore, has alternative or multiple income streams, they may be better off to incorporate their business as a company and reinvest the profits back into it. |
|
A rise in the yen against the dollar reduces the value of exporters' profits when repatriated into Japanese currency, which contributes to deflation. |
|
They had to find a way to return to the profits they were used to. |
|
This type of risk is arising from a decision of a foreign government to restrict capital movements, which would make it difficult to repatriate profits, dividends or capital. |
|
Direct foreign investment flows into India were further liberalised in 1996 and firms have been permitted to repatriate any profits earned back overseas. |
|
The soaring profits had the financial press in a lather of excitement. |
|
He also included money laundering operations, business scams and illegal undertakings involving foreign operated businesses that result in profits sent out of country. |
|
Despite booming trading profits posted by some of the larger banks, the bad loan portfolios of zombie banks weigh like a nightmare upon the living. |
|
The first thing to remember is that profits are residual income. |
|
As businesses seek to restock inventory as well as meet new demand, factory production will speed up, creating new jobs, more profits, and bigger wage and salary increases. |
|
This has led to concerns that labor retention and labor productivity are not at optimum levels, resulting in high turnover, depressed profits, and low farm wages. |
|
But there is actually something more irksome than exploiting cancer for profits. |
|
Instead, he surprised the crowd by praising his five billionaire witnesses, extolling their virtues and their profits. |
|
It's their profits they are weeping over, not the animals' lives. |
|
|
However, before one appends a signature on the memorandum of understanding, one ought to know how to absorb those shocks in the interim before profits start flowing. |
|
So far, the lion's share of new income has been going to profits. |
|
Known as the breadbasket of Scotland, on account of its fertile arable land, East Lothian is also yielding impressive profits for those lucky enough to own property there. |
|
An increase in Chinese interest rates will attract more hot money in search of arbitrage profits, and that would increase the domestic money supply. |
|
Making profits for shareholders ought to be the main objective for a listed company and, as such, investors tend to pay most attention to reported profits. |
|
Were any of the profits derived from other than the sale of listed shares? |
|
Similarly, the Economic Minister of Lithuania has been negotiating with a Russian oil company to exchange Lithuanian oil profits for Russian crude oil. |
|
Because if you can deduct interest on a loan, invest the money, and earn tax-free profits, you essentially get a government subsidy for investing. |
|
If the bank is not going to dip into 2002 profits to deal with the problem, then shareholders need to know what other routes it might take to deal with it. |
|
Producers pay royalties and severance taxes from oil and gas they take out, corporate income tax on profits, and property taxes on production and transmission line lands. |
|
I know from working in the retail supermarket environment that owners of all large firms at this time of year rub their hands together and think of profits. |
|
The company is shedding 5,400 of its 63,500 employees and taking a number of charges that will halve its quarterly profits. |
|
The three major banks all reported record profits this year. |
|
Big companies can hoard their money and sport big profits, but ultimately they have to sell to consumers and small firms. |
|
After years of Venezuelans smuggling cheap gas into Colombia for generous profits, Venezuela closes the whole border each night. |
|
At the slightest hint of profitability, carriers begin bulking up and adding routes, which quickly undercuts profits and exacerbates huge losses when travel drops off. |
|
Spices were imported in bulk and brought huge profits due to the efforts and risks involved and seemingly insatiable demand. |
|
In the case of businesses, their creditworthiness depends on their future profits. |
|
Development rights were nationalised while the government attempted to take all development profits for the state. |
|
By 1936, Farben regretted making the deal, as the excess profits by then being generated had to be given to the government. |
|
|
Furthermore, the natural resource abundance provoked a decline in entrepreneurship as profits from resource extraction are less risky. |
|
They would also have a limited power of obtaining, by combination, an increase of general wages at the expense of profits. |
|
Once again, half the profits from conversion would go to the Crown until the arable land was restored. |
|
Free trade is often opposed by domestic industries that would have their profits and market share reduced by lower prices for imported goods. |
|
Although moral arguments did play a secondary role, they usually had major resonance when used as a strategy to undercut competitors' profits. |
|
In 1524 he formed a partnership with priest Hernando de Luque and soldier Diego de Almagro to explore the south, agreeing to divide the profits. |
|
Rodney contended that the profits from slavery were used to fund economic growth and technological advancement in Europe and the Americas. |
|
Important overseas colonies, a vast merchant marine, powerful navy and large profits made the Dutch the main challengers to an ambitious England. |
|
All experience proves that capital invariably secures the lion's share of the products and profits of hardhanded industry. |
|
Despite the vast profits of slavery, the ordinary sailors on slave ships were badly paid and subject to harsh discipline. |
|
Afterward, when company profits had ventured a bit too far southward, the CFO began to get nervous. |
|
Each company was guaranteed a 5 per cent return on its capital outlay and, in addition, a share of half the profits. |
|
In total, over 20,000 head of livestock, sheep, and goats were driven off and sold at Fort Augustus, where the soldiers split the profits. |
|
Metoo brands sold at a heavy discount will not deliver profits to retailers. |
|
This is also true for shopping centers that, to reap the most profits, must be able to attract customers to its vicinity. |
|
For another example, for companies wishing to make the most profits, they must ensure they open their stores in the correct location. |
|
The club's focus on commercial and sporting success brought significant profits in an industry often characterised by chronic losses. |
|
British tennis is subsidised by the profits of the Wimbledon Championships, which are in the tens of millions of pounds each year. |
|
The smaller teams have complained that the profits are unevenly shared, favouring established top teams. |
|
With the demise of the printed book, profits will evaporate. |
|
|
There have been controversies with the way profits are shared amongst the teams. |
|
Large multinationals have become financialized, that is, they are regularly active in financial markets and draw financial profits. |
|
I'll do the hard work, you organise the team, and we'll split profits fifty-fifty. |
|
Though a number of Keaton's early talkies made impressive profits, they were artistically dismal. |
|
For 2010, the Big Three domestic automakers have reported significant profits indicating the beginning of rebound. |
|
United States, the courts attacked large companies for strategizing with others or within their own companies to maximize profits. |
|
European merchants, backed by state controls, subsidies, and monopolies, made most of their profits by buying and selling goods. |
|
Theoretically in free and competitive markets, maximising profits ensures that resources are not wasted. |
|
The majority of criticisms against the profit motive centre on the idea that profits should not supersede the needs of people. |
|
Michael Moore's film Sicko, for example, attacks the healthcare industry for its alleged emphasis on profits at the expense of patients. |
|
Critics of the profit motive contend that companies disregard morals or public safety in the pursuit of profits. |
|
One point of view in the 1880s was that vertically integrating the weaving sheds into new mills would reduce costs and lead to greater profits. |
|
Despite the social and economic impact of his invention, Whitney lost many profits in legal battles over patent infringement for the cotton gin. |
|
Competition from canals eventually cut into his profits and he retired in 1792 to live with a daughter and her husband at Spofforth in Yorkshire. |
|
This collapsed when one of his business partners ran off with all the profits. |
|
Cooperatives frequently have social goals which they aim to accomplish by investing a proportion of trading profits back into their communities. |
|
They will keep that factory running just as long as there are profits coming in. |
|
The profits from sale of the paint allowed him to pursue his other inventions. |
|
Individual companies simply take the price determined by the market and produce that quantity of output that maximizes the company's profits. |
|
This pricing scheme eliminates any positive economic profits since price equals average cost. |
|
|
Local businesses are more likely to respend their profits in the community. |
|
Plays could run longer and still draw in the audiences, leading to better profits and improved production values. |
|
In 1925 coal owners attempted to reduce wages and impose longer working hours in an attempt to maintain profits. |
|
Some merchants made huge profits from trade and shipping during the war, resulting in an increased division between the classes. |
|
He scantly filled the bag, increasing his profits but getting dissatisified customers. |
|
That be 'cause she don't care for ye singsters, an' no dancin' girl'll stay where the profits be so lean. |
|
The next question is where the winfall is going. Partly to profits at various levels, e.g. higher wages for the miners, partly to sloppery. |
|
The proposal was approved and the site was purchased with some of the profits from the Exhibition. |
|
Mobil was extracting as much as a quarter of its profits from aceh. |
|
This trifocused project will reduce expenses, improve customer satisfaction, and increase our profits. |
|
By keeping the profits undistributed in the partnership they remained free of UK tax. |
|
On Tuesday, the reforms Pope Francis worked to be instituted at the scandal-plagued bank created a massive drop in its 2013 profits. |
|
When profits rise or wages fall, the rate of profits increases, which in turn increases the rate of capital accumulation. |
|
However, profit also depends on the cost of labour, and the rate of profit is the ratio of profits to wages. |
|
Since saving depends on the net produce of the industry, it grows with profits and rent which go into making the net produce. |
|
Journals rarely make profits and are typically run by university departments. |
|
The GDP report profits the broadest barometer of economic performance. |
|
This revenue included the profits from the sale of pilgrim badges depicting Becket, his martyrdom, or his shrine. |
|
These may include the lost profits that the claimant could have been expected to make in the period whilst the factory was closed and rebuilt. |
|
The trustee may be compensated and have expenses reimbursed, but otherwise must turn over all profits from the trust properties. |
|
|
So the first colonists were actually tenants and much of the profits of their labour returned to Courten and his company. |
|
Attempts to make profits from the park in the late 18th century included leasing it for grazing, growing wheat, and keeping sheep. |
|
As a result, productivity grew, which led to increased profits and enabled employers to pay higher wages. |
|
That is, indigenous elites inside West and Central Africa made large and growing profits from slavery, thus increasing their wealth and power. |
|
There is a common misconception that publishing houses make large profits and that authors are the lowest paid in the publishing chain. |
|
The high profits from the slave trade, he said, helped finance the Industrial Revolution. |
|
If profits were based on product purity, Gale and Molly Morris would be zillionaires. |
|
Overall, Great Britain did very well in terms of profits from India, but not from most of the rest of its empire. |
|
The profit of privateerings is some small compensation to the merchants of Bourdeaux for the deficiency in the regular profits of commerce. |
|
The military outlays that the VOC needed to make to enhance its monopoly were not justified by the increased profits of this declining trade. |
|
Some fleets were lost, but most were successful, with some voyages producing high profits. |
|
As the number start to rise slightly the packages increased to regain the lost profits. |
|
The VOC enjoyed huge profits from its spice monopoly through most of the 17th century. |
|
Investors have already started buying back shares they had sold last year in an effort to increase their profits. |
|
The books were thoroughly gone through and checked, and a reckoning of profits would be made. |
|
This treaty covered taxes, residence, tax jurisdictions, capital gains, business profits, interest, dividends, royalties and other areas. |
|
Interest was allowed to be charged, and profits generated from holding other people's money. |
|
For such a venture, the Polo family probably invested profits from trading, and even many gemstones they brought from the East. |
|
Arbitrage is a term used to explain the possible profits that can be gained from the exploitation of price discrepancies across markets. |
|
It did some damage to Pope's reputation for a time, but not to his profits. |
|