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subsidise
- Right now we subsidise many items, for example refrigerators and televisions, by allowing them to be imported at the official rate of exchange.
- What is truly frightening is that despite our knowledge we continue to subsidise activities without regard to their devastating environmental - and economic - impacts,' said Mr George Miller, the committee's chairman.
- A more direct way would be for the government to subsidise their training. But the notion that state childcare should be used to encourage women back to work to offset an impending 'labour shortage' is absurd.
- But this would also mean eventually phasing out the Kohlpfennig, a levy paid by western German customers to the electricity companies to subsidise the coal industry.
- This means, of course, that those who choose modestly priced food and drink tap water subsidise those who have more expensive tastes and drink alcohol.
- The most inefficient industries should be allowed to close; but instead they receive the lion's share of subsidies from the Treuhand. Rather than paying people to do nothing, government should instead subsidise employment in the private sector.
- But as the recession deepens in Europe, the pressure on governments to subsidise ailing industries is increasing.
- France and Spain each offered tied aid credits worth about Dollars 400m. The US this year has a Dollars 150m 'war chest' with which to subsidise loans.
- 'We made so much money in Switzerland we could subsidise our companies abroad,' says Mr Caflisch. 'There is now much more urgency to repatriate profits.
- One result is that Ericsson has had to subsidise some of the loans itself. 'So far we have been able to handle this but we see it as one of the major challenges for next year,' says Mr Zervens.
- This may justify efforts to subsidise information.
- Instead I had to subsidise it two weeks.' Like all the shops at Canary Wharf, his rent is based upon a percentage of turnover.
- A better option may be to subsidise employment, so closing the gap between what the illegal economy offers young people and what the market will pay.
- The classic error of Brazilian agriculture in the past was to subsidise the intention to produce'.
- Telephone call charges are too high because most European countries have only one telephone company, while profits from international calls have traditionally been used to subsidise local calls. The Commission paper sets out four options.
- Meanwhile, protection forces what are often relatively poor consumers to subsidise bad jobs at the cost of better ones. At this stage in the negotiations, such propaganda, though valuable, cannot be decisive.
- Neither would be keen to allow that, at least while their high business tariffs subsidise domestic users.
- He says this would allow independent experts to challenge the assumptions on which Oftel bases its conclusions. Competitors are being forced to subsidise BT's inefficiency.
- The problem is that such attempts at self-help will not return the industry to good health so long as aircraft manufacturers continue to subsidise financing and Chapter 11 protects airlines from bankruptcy.
- The papers advise Moscow to impose export quotas and/or tax oil exports and use the proceeds to subsidise domestic consumption. The reports say introducing price liberalisation and competition is of utmost importance, So is encouraging entrepreneurship.
- Both congressional houses may begin to move legislation, introduced last year, which would levy fines on ships entering US harbours if they are registered in, owned or controlled by countries which subsidise shipbuilding.
- Nobody can be relied upon to make the counter-arguments against proposals, for example, to subsidise particular 'strategic' sectors.
- Thirdly, the requirement that domestic support funds - that is, government funds which are used to subsidise farm production and incomes - be cut by a fifth should also help to address the problem of overproduction.
- Trade unions will support such schemes provided they are voluntary and can be shown to raise employment levels rather than subsidise jobs that would have been created anyway.
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