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 subsidy ['sʌbsədɪ]   添加此单词到默认生词本
n. 补助金, 津贴

[经] 补助金, 津贴, 补贴




    subsidy
    [ noun ]
    a grant paid by a government to an enterprise that benefits the public
    <noun.possession>
    a subsidy for research in artificial intelligence


    Subsidy \Sub"si*dy\, n.; pl. {Subsidies}. [L. subsidium the
    troops stationed in reserve in the third line of battlem
    reserve, support, help, fr. subsidere to sit down, lie in
    wait: cf. F. subside. See {Subside}.]
    1. Support; aid; co["o]peration; esp., extraordinary aid in
    money rendered to the sovereign or to a friendly power.

    They advised the king to send speedy aids, and with
    much alacrity granted a great rate of subsidy.
    --Bacon.

    Note: Subsidies were taxes, not immediately on on property,
    but on persons in respect of their reputed estates,
    after the nominal rate of 4s. the pound for lands, and
    2s. 8d. for goods. --Blackstone.

    2. Specifically: A sum of money paid by one sovereign or
    nation to another to purchase the co["o]peration or the
    neutrality of such sovereign or nation in war.

    3. A grant from the government, from a municipal corporation,
    or the like, to a private person or company to assist the
    establishment or support of an enterprise deemed
    advantageous to the public; a subvention; as, a subsidy to
    the owners of a line of ocean steamships.

    Syn: Tribute; grant.

    Usage: {Subsidy}, {Tribute}. A subsidy is voluntary; a
    tribute is exacted.

    1. To hire these people, employers are offered a subsidy amounting to Pounds 2,340 per year, which falls far short of the Pounds 8,000 that the average unemployed person costs the taxpayer.
    2. We have significantly good ensembles, quite apart from LCDT or Rambert Dance: Lloyd Newson's DV8; Phoenix Dance; Kim Brandstrup's Arc Dance (with no subsidy), Laurie Booth and Russell Maliphant, Yolande Snaith, all produce fine work.
    3. It is accepted that generous subsidy was for too long not matched by scrutiny.
    4. With the Treasury strapped for cash, the subsidy will have to come from consumers. Since public opposition forced the coal review, the government may be tempted to make the costs as obvious as possible through a direct levy.
    5. Because two-thirds of the uninsured are employed, this tax amounts to a subsidy for workers whose companies don't provide health coverage.
    6. "However, at this point the subsidy reduction will affect only large farms, which account for about 10 percent of total Saudi wheat production," the department's Foreign Agricultural Service reported Wednesday.
    7. But Poland has 65 state theatres, with inadequate subsidy and inadequate audiences.
    8. Farm subsidy payments were down $2.3 billion thanks to higher commodity prices triggered by the summer drought.
    9. Some organisations - the Glyndebourne festival is the classic example - depend totally on business and private supporters, and their box office, to exist. Not that the absence of a government subsidy worries Glyndebourne.
    10. One possible compromise would be for the EC to approve the subsidy, but to insist on cutting back the amount.
    11. The $200 billion subsidy war has contributed to surplus production and slumping prices, but the allies rebuffed Reagan's call for totally scrapping subsidies.
    12. Leahy and the committee's ranking Republican, Sen. Richard Lugar of Indiana, said budget negotiations would lead to cuts in farm subsidy spending.
    13. ZTV is strapped for cash and depends on commercials, license fees and a hefty government subsidy.
    14. Other features range from repeal of the 1980 windfall profits tax on oil industry earnings to substantial agricultural subsidy programs.
    15. The subsidy would cost taxpayers about $75 million at today's prices, the Post said.
    16. In Western Europe, hourly wages for direct labor, all fringes included, average $14; in Israel they are $6, or $4.80 per hour after the recently introduced subsidy.
    17. The unexpected spending reduction came as part of overall cuts in government expenditures aimed at reducing the budget deficit, even though the Postal Service no longer receives a taxpayer subsidy.
    18. Marketing loans represent a form of subsidy that provides producers with the U.S. price while selling the commodities abroad at world prices.
    19. In his testimony Wednesday, Wood said the Alert security subsidy was set up six months before the disaster.
    20. Compared with state and city subsidy for equivalent institutions in Paris, Milan, and other European cities, Covent Garden is grossly under-funded.
    21. For example, subsidy programs often include requirements that certain acreage be set aside for conservation or supply management.
    22. "The Department of Education's inadequate oversight could be costing the federal government millions of dollars each year in interest subsidy overpayments to lenders in the guaranteed student loan program," the GAO said.
    23. Mr. Estanislao would like to abolish a costly gasoline-price subsidy, but this is a politically sensitive issue and appears unlikely this year.
    24. The Senate approved Friday and sent President Reagan a $46.6 billion agriculture money bill that limits a three-year-old export subsidy that has spurred overseas sales of U.S. grain.
    25. State aid to the mine now consists of a guaranteed loan of 220 million rand, including a provision for an interest subsidy on the bulk of the loan, with the remainder being interest-free.
    26. In the Common Market, subsidy costs are so high they threaten the financial stability of the 12-nation compact.
    27. As in June and July, personal income in August was held back by declines in subsidy payments to farmers.
    28. ADM received a $29.2 million subsidy for its gasohol operation last year alone; in the past, Mr. Andreas has lobbied such congressional friends as Senate Minority leader Robert Dole to impose draconian restrictions on alcohol fuel imports.
    29. Next, the housing department ordered businesses in the city to add a subsidy of 23.5 percent of each worker's salary to his paycheck to make up for the rent increase.
    30. In fact, there is growing nervousness among Soviet officials about the political repercussions of the planned subsidy cuts.
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