Sentences with phrase «paying academic market»

Not exact matches

Traditionally, many of these aspiring researchers have come to understand their true job prospects in the glutted academic labor market only after years of low - paid toil.
Controversial deals that delay generic versions of drugs coming onto the market can lead to consumers paying significantly more for some treatments, according to new research by an academic from the University of East Anglia.
While people in industry are familiar with the market, they are mostly isolated from cutting - edge research; conversely, academics pay too much attention to research and not enough to understanding the market.
Marketing director Shreshth Dugar explained how DateMySchool is able to thrive in the overcrowded world of online dating; «DateMySchool has all the people you don't know but automatically trust, because they went to the same school, paid the same tuition, and have the same academic goals as you.
Another result of academic research on investing that tells us that we shouldn't pay much attention to financial news is the Efficient Market Hypothesis (EMH).
Academics agree there is a liquidity premium in the equity markets: you pay extra for the privilege of owning an asset that is easy to sell.
Academic studies and raw market data have shown that dividend - paying stocks are less sensitive to market changes and outperform the general market even more when stock prices come down.
Martin Birchall, managing director of High Fliers Research, concluded the report saying: ``... in a highly competitive graduate job market, new graduates who have not had any work experience at all during their time at university have little hope of landing a well - paid job with a leading employer, irrespective of the academic results they achieve or the university they've attended.»
However, he added: «Today's report includes the stark warning to the class of 2012 that, in a highly competitive graduate job market, new graduates who have not had any work experience at all during their time at university have little hope of landing a well - paid job with a leading employer, irrespective of the academic results they achieve or the university they've attended.»
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