Sentences with phrase «same financial incentives»

Real estate investors may be able to benefit but they may not qualify for the same financial incentives that homeowners would.
Pelley noted his organization had to offer the same financial incentives as its US counterpart if it hoped to feature young golfers, who tend to make their bones in Europe and then take their promising games across the Atlantic.
Real estate investors may be able to benefit but they may not qualify for the same financial incentives that homeowners would.

Not exact matches

Work culture is so important to your business that it can actually make your employees more productive, even when financial incentives aren't enough to do the same.
Living Goods began, in 2008, as a partnership with BRAC to operate a network of CHPs in Uganda, and in 2009 launched a directly - managed network of CHPs using the same model.42 Living Goods has provided both technical and financial support, totaling over $ 2 million, to BRAC for the CHP program.43 BRAC has 128 branches with active CHPs in Uganda, but only 24 of these branches currently receive significant funding from Living Goods and have additional features, such as incentive payments for CHPs and a higher number of CHPs per branch.44
Although it's true that financial repression has traditionally been practiced using the stick of high mandatory reserve requirements, whereas the Fed has instead been employing carrots in the shape of ON - RRP and IOER interest incentives, the ultimate result — more credit for the government, and less for everyone else — is the same.
Inevitably, those same financial issues will pop up again, causing a vicious cycle, which the adult child has no incentive to remedy since the Bank of Mom and Dad is always there for a bailout.
In the same way that when airlines basic services decline, passengers are more likely to pay fees for better service and amenities, theme parks have a financial incentive to make the waits for rides and attractions — and the «regular» experience as a whole — more unbearable.
Other writers have described other causes: the lobbying for same - sex marriage, the feminists» push for liberation from marriage duties, their legislative victories in getting states to adopt unilateral divorce, the culture's glorification of single moms, and the financial incentives for illegitimacy and divorce that flow from the welfare, child support, and domestic violence bureaucracies.
They save taxpayers money, because the average voucher ends up costing less than educating the same student in public school and because the voucher curbs public - school financial incentives to inflate the special education rolls.
The thousand or so dollars that you put on your charge card quickly gets absorbed into the various Starbuck's and Clearview Cinema charges on your credit card so the financial incentive is not the same as it was years ago.
And while a new home will surely be more expensive than a used one with the same specifications, there are some financial incentives.
By basing the benefit on income and replacing up to a certain amount, disabled individuals do not suffer financial hardship, and at the same time maintain the incentive to return to work.
At the same time, it protects the borrower a bit too: It means he or she will not be burdened with ruinous repair bills from the start, and — as a fundamentally sound place to live — provides more incentive to make payments during difficult financial times to keep it.
Of course also well - meaning people can be caught in a system, be instrumentalised and follow the system's logic, but the same can be suspected of the opponents of GMOs, who may be caught in their respective ideological echo chambers, who are subject to peer pressure (see the reaction to Mark Lynas» change of heart), and also they have financial incentives to the extent that GMOs represent a rallying point to drum up support (funds, new members, etc.) Therefore perhaps one way forward could be to assume good intentions on both «sides» and look at the data in a neutral, unbiased way.
Klein, like many others, wonders whether Facebook has become too big to operate with the same structures and financial incentives as a normal company.
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