Sentences with phrase «less scrutiny of»

Another response was that the Financial Conduct Authority (FCA) has focused too heavily on the largest firms, with less scrutiny of smaller ones.
Less scrutiny of management performance due to the lack of outside investors in the corporation.
Labour knew full well that the logs were a source of many news stories, and that failing to publish them would lead to less scrutiny of their actions.

Not exact matches

While less than 1 percent of individual taxpayers are audited, certain aspects of your tax return can spark scrutiny from the IRS.
The «value - add» of going private isn't so much less disclosure as it is less short - term scrutiny by bank analysts and hedge fund managers,
Credit Suisse Chief Executive Tidjane Thiam earned slightly less in 2017 during his third year on the job, as shareholder scrutiny during the final stages of a major overhaul dampened executive pay.
Galloway said companies like Uber — with a valuation of $ 70 billion according to recent company press releases — would likely be worth much less if subjected to the scrutiny of the public market.
Crowdfunding will be part of the roughly $ 100 - billion exempt market, which has historically been subject to less regulatory scrutiny because it does not require companies to file expensive and detailed prospectus documents before selling securities to investors.
Whether it saves money this year or not is less important than avoiding consequences from having your finances entangled in a tax return which might not hold up to the scrutiny of an audit.
If an investor or fellow entrepreneur tells you that you will save legal fees by doing your seed round with notes instead of stock, what she really means is that the kind of investment that can be done with a note or notes will be less formal, will involve less scrutiny and due diligence, than a round that is priced.
In fact, some law enforcement officials suggested to The New York Times that increased scrutiny of police departments have «made officers less aggressive and emboldened criminals.»
Needless to say, terms like «religious identity» or «subjective experience» are no less open to critical scrutiny for their suggestions of a fixed referential meaning than the split between public and private realms of experience that they come to signify.
And even if it were the case that in the past we spent less time defending and discussing specific dogmas, there seems to me to be a much more plausible explanation than «no one really used to care about dogma», which is this: it's not that we didn't care about dogma, but rather that the truths of faith have come under unprecedented scrutiny and attack in the modern period, not least fromdissenters within the Church, so it has become essential that we do talk about what we actually believe.
The same kind of scrutiny has been given to St. Francis and St. Clare, though for much less reason.
All food manufacturers have a duty of care to their consumers and must ensure their products are free from foreign bodies, but luxury goods must stand up to the heightened scrutiny of the discerning elite, for whom nothing less than perfection is acceptable.
And while the stakes will be higher and the scrutiny closer, and while those watching will be less inclined to offer the benefit of the doubt, he should get time, too.
A number of Chelsea's first team stars have come in for some serious scrutiny recently for their less than impressive start to the campaign, with Hazard and Costa being the chief culprits.
The Italian regista has come under scrutiny from both Antonio Conte and Juve fans over the last few weeks, and his place in the side seems less valuable given the emergence of Paul Pogba as a key player in Conte's side.
I'm guessing it would be mostly women who would do that; women seek divorce much more than men do, fewer women don't have custody (2.4 million out of 8.6 million single moms, but that's approaching the number of single dads, 2.6 million) and they seem to face less public scrutiny or at least less outrage than cheating men do.
That value may dwindle to nothing or less if the Brexit process is badly mishandled or if the economic consequences become severe and the government takes the blame but those are risks that May presumably feels she has to run — and which are in any case no more than the risks of a soft (or «fake») Brexit given the intense scrutiny many Tory MPs will give the choices made.
Is there any evidence then that the election of Select Committee chairs has brought in a different kind of parliamentarian — younger, less biddable, more rebellious, representing parliament rather than government, and focused on scrutiny rather than climbing the ministerial ladder?
More generally, our previous research has also found little evidence that the 2010 reforms had increased parliamentarians» engagement with the committee system in terms of attendance or turnover, nor that they had encouraged a new breed of parliamentarian (e.g. younger, less biddable, more rebellious, representing Parliament rather than government, and focused on scrutiny rather than climbing the ministerial ladder (see here, here and here)-RRB-.
Since 2011, we've made a conscious effort to do more with less and placed increased scrutiny on all of our expenditures,» Senate Republican Leader Dean Skelos said.
It's unusual for campaign finance reports to get this level of scrutiny and even less common for them to end with criminal charges.
Yet Parliamentary scrutiny of delegated legislation is less intensive and arguably less effective than its scrutiny of primary legislation.
When a Government chooses to insert into primary legislation powers to make statutory instruments, one of the consequences of that choice — whether or not it is the reason for the choice — is that those matters that will thereby fall to be dealt with in secondary legislation will receive far less scrutiny than those matters that are addressed on the face of the Bill.
Viewed thus, the Strathclyde model amounts to a triple - whammy: it would permit the Government, just as it can at present, to shield parts of it legislative proposals from the full scrutiny that primary legislation attracts; it would substantially undermine the already lesser scrutiny to which statutory instruments are subject; and it would incentivise greater reliance upon statutory instruments as distinct from primary legislation in order to exploit the significantly weaker scrutiny regime applicable to the former.
Secondary legislation does not necessarily warrant less rigorous scrutiny than primary legislation, particularly given the tendency of Government to insert into Bills very broad regulation - making powers.
The evidence comes in the form of tiny glassy spheres, less than one - hundredth the width of a human hair, discovered at the Great Plains of Oklahoma after a rainstorm and put under scrutiny by scientists at several U.S. Department of Energy facilities.
Boxing and American football are under scrutiny because of head injuries causing long - term damage to the brain, but the situation is much less clear for football where heading is extremely common, but head injuries are less so.
During the last two years, WIPP has received little scrutiny from Congress or the news media, and it has received less than one percent of the waste that it is projected to dispose during its 35 - year operational lifetime.
Products sold in stores can also have problems (we have uncovered many), but this is less likely, probably because there is an extra layer of scrutiny by stores when deciding what they will carry, and the consequences of selling a bad product may be greater, for example, for a national retail chain, than a small web business.
Given what we know about clinical nutrition, that sometimes a startling mix of foods can be used to help people in certain disease states — more ice cream and gravy for someone undergoing cancer treatment, less protein and fewer vegetables for someone with kidney disease — and since dividing your risk among a wide variety of different foods can help hedge your health bets, the idea that there are universally good or bad foods doesn't hold up well under scrutiny.
The franchise's directorial choices tend to come under a little less scrutiny, but with the recent departure of Sam Mendes — who helmed the...
All of the trademarks of his work are evident in this very first screenplay — witty banter laced with profanity, reversals, reveals, a loopy plot that doesn't make much sense if you hold it up to any kind of scrutiny but it's so fun you never will, a Christmas - time setting — less tightly controlled and mannered in his later scripts, but still there.
However, a research facility at a major university is always under such constant scrutiny, lofty personal goals are even less likely to be achieved at all because it isn't a setting conducive to such reckless, singular behavior — especially in an environment where major acts of terrorism against that very kind of research is running rampant in the world.
It also should suffer far less scrutiny than a theatrical release would demand, as what would be too manipulative and predictable to justify spending money for on the big screen seems like a well - acted and somewhat touching romance when looking at it on the small screen, provided you're into that sort of thing.
This level of review is no greater nor less than the technical scrutiny the Department of Education requires of all state tests designed to meet the requirements of federal accountability.
These tax credit programs, sometimes referred to as «neovouchers» or back - door vouchers, have received less public scrutiny than vouchers, even as they currently comprise the largest private school choice programs in numbers of students.
Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg was grilled by Congress last week over privacy issues, but one of his other initiatives has gotten far less scrutiny: Zuckerberg's massive investment in an educational approach called personalized learning.
The lists have come under scrutiny recently for under - representing authors of color (see the Book Riot «s «LibraryReads So White, or Why Librarians Need to Do Better»), for featuring established authors over less - known (see Becky Spratford's RA for All post), and large publishing houses over indie presses.
Skippy Dies was in some ways also a novel of institutions — the Church and the school both come under scrutiny as do, perhaps less directly, the management consultants.
But, be prepared, since employment histories of less than two years will draw additional scrutiny, which is because the VA likely won't guarantee a loan if they feel a potential borrower's income is unreliable.
Many of the volume puppy producers have abandoned AKC — meaning less revenue for AKC and also removing them from any scrutiny by AKC.
Unfortunately, with that heightened scrutiny many of those millers have simply crossed the border into New York where they are able to buy up farmland and resume business in a less public manner.
The Switch is likely to draw less scrutiny and ire if it's not looking to reshape the way we play games and instead humbly presenting the very best of what Nintendo has to offer, in the living room and on the go.
While the game invites scrutiny, Ragnarok Odyssey feels less like a complete ripoff of a pre-existing franchise and more like a caring homage.
While some of these are familiar — there is necessarily a section on «degenerate art» — others, such as art venerated by the Nazis, are less so, and expose the Nationalgalerie's collection to scrutiny.
I also suspect that those contrarians involved in their own branches of research might protest a little less loudly if they realised that it is quite within the bounds of possibility that demands be made for all THEIR original data and analysis software to come under public scrutiny.
And careful scrutiny of ALL of the available data shows the connection to global warming is less than tenuous.»
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