Sentences with phrase «policy factors beyond our control»

I'm used to working in an environment that, like the real estate industry, is rapidly changing, often by economic, demographic, and public policy factors beyond our control.

Not exact matches

These factors — many of which are beyond our control and the effects of which can be difficult to predict — include: credit, market, liquidity and funding, insurance, operational, regulatory compliance, strategic, reputation, legal and regulatory environment, competitive and systemic risks and other risks discussed in the risk sections of our 2017 Annual Report; including global uncertainty and volatility, elevated Canadian housing prices and household indebtedness, information technology and cyber risk, regulatory change, technological innovation and new entrants, global environmental policy and climate change, changes in consumer behavior, the end of quantitative easing, the business and economic conditions in the geographic regions in which we operate, the effects of changes in government fiscal, monetary and other policies, tax risk and transparency and environmental and social risk.
It «s hard to adopt a policy of «rotation «there are so many factors on a weekly basis that are often beyond a managers control but it is necessary to overcome fatigue.
This absurd, unfair and ignorant policy is state law despite the fact that every academic study has shown that standardized test scores are driven primarily by poverty, language barriers and the impact of students with special education challenges... all factors for beyond the control of Connecticut's classroom teachers.
You might feel frustrated that many of the factors that determine your auto insurance policy rate are beyond your control (you can't — or shouldn't — get married just to save a few dollars on your auto insurance, for example).
Also, many factors beyond the consumer's control — such as a company's return on investment, its cost of doing business and the actuarial assumptions used for its mortality rates — affect prices of policies.
Average costs of policies seem to rise steadily year after year due to a number of factors beyond our control as consumers.
The recognition that individual removals were truly the implementation of general assimilation policies, based on factors totally beyond the control or responsibility of the children or their families, cast individual experiences into a new light.
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