Sentences with phrase «often pays the price»

Between 2008 to 2015, services were expanded and it was suggested that a money - losing Vatican enterprise turned a profit with children often paying the price.
Women have often paid a price for becoming mothers: being viewed as less committed, less promotable and even less competent (Correll, Bernard and Paik, 2007).
Our modern lifestyles may be more convenient but our health is often paying the price.
But the talented, low - income child often pays the price, depending as she does on whatever supports her neighborhood school has to offer.
And our kids too often paid the price.
Still, art so determined to be welcoming often pays a price.

Not exact matches

If you rent, then paying for renters insurance, which tends to be very low cost (prices often start at around $ 100 a year, depending on location and other factors), is a must - have.
Square is often cited as an example of the latter, with the theory being that it wanted to get out the door before the IPO environment got any worse, and management knew a hit on valuation was the price it would pay.
In periods of rising volatility, pharma companies are often especially vulnerable because of investors are paying big prices today for therapies expected to pay off over a long horizon.
Often it turns out that the price increases by Valeant and Turing that have provoked the most criticism have been on drugs that are off - patent — meaning generic competitors are free to enter the market, typically bringing the price that most people pay for the drugs way down.
In case you missed it, here's the quick and dirty: TIFF requires people to pay inflated prices to wait in long lines to see movies in venues that often aren't built to show them.
Often, we even pay a premium price.
The question is often asked by critics, isn't this just hurting American consumers who want to go out and buy washing machines or solar panels, that they're going to pay a higher price at the store when they go to do that?
The VA often pays the lowest prices for drugs in the nation, being able to negotiate what it pays for medications, often at a steep discount compared to other government agencies and Medicare.
The illusion is growth in revenues, EBITDA, or non-GAAP metrics that overlook the price paid for the acquiree, which, more often than not, is so high that the real cash flows of the deal are highly negative and dilutive to shareholder value.
Borrowing to complete an undergraduate, graduate, or professional degree program is often the only means to pay for the cost of higher education, as the price tag continues to increase at public and private institutions alike.
But thanks to the subsidy they get from Canada, refineries in Cushing often enjoy refinery margins, or crack spreads as they're known in the industry, that have been as much as five times what refineries on the Gulf Coast, which have to pay full world oil prices for their feedstock, operate with.
A high FCF yield often represents a good investment opportunity, because investors would be paying a reasonable price for healthy cash earnings.
However, when house prices began to decline, lenders were unwilling to refinance, and as a consequence, borrowers were often unable to pay the higher interest rates, which prompted defaults.
Often well educated, but with less money at their disposal, millennials don't enjoy paying full price for retail but still enjoy the hunt of shopping.
As a result, these sellers are often less concerned with the price to be paid for the paid - in capital (i.e. discount to net asset value).
The second element of the failure framework, the observation that technologies can progress faster than market demand... means that in their efforts to provide better products than their competitors and earn higher prices and margins, suppliers often «overshoot» their market: They give customers more than they need or ultimately are willing to pay for.
For example, more time may be needed to execute large trades, or different tiers of clients might have to pay different prices for trades - two trends that often come up in discussions with market participants.
That's because there's a margin of safety, or a buffer, that's often built right in when you buy a dividend growth stock that's undervalued, as that favorable gap between price and value also means there's less of a possibility that the stock becomes worth less than you paid through some kind of negative event (corporate malfeasance, investor mistake, etc.).
I've often called it the Iron Law of Valuation: the higher the price you pay today for a given stream of future cash flows, the lower your rate of return over the life of the investment.
Don't be disappointed in lagging a bull market, it's often the price to pay for admission to long - term market - beating results.
It's not very often that a lender will pay 2 % of your purchase price for you, but that's exactly what this program does.
Warren Buffett is often quoted as saying «investors pay a high price for certainty.»
He looks to buy these businesses at low prices of course, but often times he pays a price that leave many value investors scratching their heads (i.e. paying over 20 times earnings for Heinz, and 20 % more than the stock's all time high).
The most vulnerable often end up paying the highest prices, which is troubling when you consider that 15 million Americans have food allergies.
The downside is that you'll often pay above market prices, and it can also be riskier than other options.
It's often the victims — in this case, their family members — who pay the price when this happens, he said.
Even if they are not acquired, such companies often are hurt, by being forced to pay «greenmail» - to buy - back their own stock at inflated prices from the raider in return for dropping the threat.
As Eiseley says so well, the quest for wisdom often is a lonely quest in which one must pay a very personal price.
Pastors who did not often paid a heavy price.
And that at the cross He has forgiven us and paid the price for all of our complicity in this often chaotic world.
Let's consider something: if in the atheist existential case we can admit that in order to achieve outcomes which we desire we often have to pay a steep price for the sake of achieving what we intend to achieve, why must this be ruled out in the case of God?
From this little boy, often so full of mischief, I received an unexpected sign of grace from God, a reminder of the ways in which my life has been blessed, as well as the price that has been paid for those blessings.
Every doctor knows what that means: you can tell your patient to stop smoking, eat less, get more exercise and deal with stress, but all too often the patient just is not willing to pay the price in upsetting an established lifestyle, and chooses instead to continue in self - destructive habits.
They can and often do get out of hand — superstition is the price that religion pays to be vital and popular, as Newman puts it.
It is often argued, for example, that if we satisfy our desire for a clean and healthful environment, we must pay a price in terms of fewer goods and more unemployment.
They work on much smaller margins and the price the consumer pays is in line with the added premiums provided to the farmer (often for quality in addition to organic certification), their own costs involved with organic certification, and the value added by actually roasting high quality beans that taste better.
Also the milk price received by many dairy farmers is not as high as winter when peak milk prices are often paid to drive winter production.
These expenses, combined with lower yields and increased labor costs, are often not sufficiently offset by the price premiums paid for organic coffee, which are typically around 20 to 25 percent.
Yes... when you buy some of the highest price players and you buy them as often as most people change their underwear and you pay them lots of money...... you can get a good team eventually.
Willing To Go It Alone Women are often forced to pay a painful price for demanding equality at their country clubs
It has been made well aware that he has a knack for not turning up for the big games and often being a man on the sidelines, despite the big price tag the Gunners paid for him.
Arsenal also met their # 65 asking price but offerrd only # 35 upfrontand the rest in installments.Monaco wanted all the # 65 upfront which quite frankly doesn't often happen.Teams don't pay the full money upfront though there are some exceptions.You'll hear a team signs a player for so so and so but only a part of the money is paid upfront.This is what many people don't know.Arsenal actually tried hard to sign Lemar but failed.
It is irrelevant that I sometimes disagree with your comments (but often I agree too) I also wish Wenger had gone in for Mahrez, when there was a chance to land him at prices we would pay, which has now long gone, esp with attacking players we have just bought.
We were turning the ball over far too much in our often patient build - up — which left us vulnerable to a quick transition in which we paid the price for too many times.
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