Sentences with phrase «just make economic sense»

But jokes aside, Miliband's electoral strategy doesn't just make economic sense for a party as cash - strapped as Labour — it makes political sense too.
Improving your workplace culture doesn't just make economic sense for the company.
Or maybe super commuting just makes economic sense.

Not exact matches

Fortune: But even more than just the principle at stake, you would argue that it makes long term economic sense — even for a media entity that doesn't rely on subscription revenue like the New York Times?
Doing that just wouldn't make too much sense, in my opinion — though, to be sure, it's not the end - all be-all for Canada's economic health.
It's just that the industrial metals handily outperformed gold during this period, which makes sense considering the global economic and financial - market backdrop at the time.
It just doesn't make economic sense to begin accepting BTC as payment — it doesn't result in much higher sales, because there are aren't that many customers with bitcoin.
It does not make ethical or economic sense to send animals half way around the world — subjecting them to the unavoidable stress and suffering inherent to long distance transport — just so they can be killed for their meat in importing countries.
Although it will be incredibly difficult to ever match his contributions on the pitch, it's vitally important for a former club legend, like Henry, to publicly address his concerns regarding the direction of this club... regardless of those who still feel that Henry has some sort of agenda due to the backlash he received following earlier comments he made on air regarding Arsenal, he has an intimate understanding of the game, he knows the fans are being hosed and he feels some sense of obligation, both professionally and personally, to tell it like he sees it... much like I've continually expressed over the last couple months, this team isn't evolving under this current ownership / management team... instead we are currently experiencing a «stagnant» phase in our club's storied history... a fact that can't be hidden by simply changing the formation or bringing in one or two individuals... this team needs fundamental change in the way it conducts business both on and off the pitch or it will continue to slowly devolve into a second tier club... regardless of the euphoria surrounding our escape act on Friday evening, as it stands, this club is more likely to be fighting for a Europa League spot for the foreseeable future than a top 4 finish... we can't hope for the failures of others to secure our place in the top 4, we need to be the manufacturers of our own success by doing whatever is necessary to evolve as an organization... if Wenger, Gazidis and Kroenke can't take the necessary steps following the debacle they manufactured last season, their removal is imperative for our future success... unfortunately, I strongly believe that either they don't know how to proceed in the present economic climate or they are unwilling to do whatever it takes to turn this ship around... just look at the current state of our squad, none of our world class players are under contract beyond this season, we have a ridiculous wage bill considering the results, we can't sell our deadwood because we've mismanaged our personnel decisions and contractual obligations, we haven't properly cultivated our younger talent and we might have become one of the worst clubs ever when it comes to way we handle our transfer business, which under Dein was one of our greatest assets... it's time to get things right!!!
The economic policies just didn't make sense and left the Labour unable to attack the Tories economic record.
«It's not just about the environment, it's about making economic sense as well,» he said.
«The one is Ulster just didn't make it on the merits... We already decided two casinos in the Capital Region did not make economic sense.
It's not just the right thing to do, it makes economic sense
It just doesn't make economic sense.
March 28, 2014 • Christine Lagarde says giving women access to the job market isn't just about equal opportunity — it makes economic sense.
It just makes good economic and environmental sense.
For me to have to pass a multiple - choice test with questions on the economic systems of ancient Egypt and Greece just doesn't make sense
Expecting the curricula standards of, say, the early 20th century, to meet the intellectual challenges of this century just doesn't make sense; neither does expecting Common Core, which is geared toward helping kids gain the skills needed for this time, to meet the economic and social challenges of the next century.
Just doesn't make economic sense (in and of itself).
It was not only more eco-friendly, it just made better economic sense.
I've also got to figure if spending 30 bucks to make 50 makes economic sense (it doesn't, I don't think, especially when you factor in time spent reading + writing) or if I should just go about my business and find something else to write about.
There is a significant labor cost to cataloging even a fiction book, and many libraries find it makes more economic sense to just start with two copies.
Personal economic factors determine if it makes sense to combine your first mortgage and HELOC into a new loan, or just refinance the HELOC.
It just doesn't make sense to penalize REITs for an amount that exceeds (in the case of a CDO) their net economic investment in a specific transaction.
I recommend to always consider paying out of pocket for ultra short - haul flights, though, because sometimes it makes more economic sense to just shell out a little bit of cash on a budget airline than use your points.
Just as one example, in the recent McKinsey report on GHG abatement opportunities, McKinsey points out that a substantial number of reduction opportunities already make economic sense.
It also makes economic sense: All those reservoirs filling up with coal ash day after day are just problems waiting to happen, and if we're just waiting for catastrophes to happen before we do something, the true cost of burning coal isn't being internalized properly; local citizens and people downstream of those rivers end up paying for it with their health and by losing their local environment (what if your family house was buried in potentially toxic sludge?).
If per human overconsumption of scarce resources; unbridled economic globalization overspreading the surface of our planetary home; and the skyrocketing increase of absolute global human population numbers could be occurring synergistically in our time and could have something to do with the distinctly human - driven predicament which looms ominously before humanity, does it make sense to consider, just for a moment, what might to done to set limits on these overgrown human activities?
Utilities and energy companies are realizing that coal is an increasingly bad investment — that was definitely the case with Brayton Point, which had just been purchased by new owners who quickly determined that keeping the plant running didn't make economic sense.
They make no economic sense because they would seriously decrease US competitiveness, raise energy prices, and restrict US access to its very rich fossil fuel resources when just the opposite policies are needed.
Posted by Olive Heffernan on behalf of Paty Romero Lankao It does make sense to compare the per capita CO2 emissions of Mexico City and Los Angeles (see figure below) to illuminate the debate on shared but differentiated responsibilities on greenhouse gases emissions and show that just as urban centers register different levels and paths of economic development, cities do not contribute at the same level to global warming.
It does make sense to compare the per capita CO2 emissions of Mexico City and Los Angeles (see figure below) to illuminate the debate on shared but differentiated responsibilities on greenhouse gases emissions and show that just as urban centers register different levels and paths of economic development, cities do not contribute at the same level to global warming.
Reducing one of your largest monthly expenses makes perfect sense, but the benefits of solar aren't just economic.
Dirty fossil fuels just don't make economic sense — and some of the world's most powerful businesses know it.
Whether it's a sense of moral obligation to tackle the threat of climate change, the benefits of being perceived as «green», or just economic good sense, there's a strong argument to be made that clean energy is the right way to go.
Talk of avoiding catastrophic climate change just strengthens an energy transformation which already makes economic and social sense.
For instance, a 2017 World Economic Forum Global Shapers Survey showed millennials rank «a sense of purpose» as the second most important criteria when looking for a new job, after salary — so just giving them a pay rise won't necessarily make things better.
Canada is years behind other countries in its promotion and embracing of diversity, which is not just right but makes business sense, particularly in the global economic environment.
Certainly you don't have to keep all files permanently — this just doesn't make practical or economic sense.
«Given the flow on economic and social benefits of our model and services, it makes sense for governments to not just support existing services but to expand the Aboriginal Community Controlled Health model to deliver more services to more of our people in more geographical areas across the nation.
Besides, full - service hotels just make a lot of economic sense at the moment.
They just can't respond to every lead that comes there way because it doesn't make much economic sense.
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