Sentences with phrase «sector with public money»

The reforms that were made were not very powerful, and there are efforts every day to lift those restrictions and allow people to go on gambling in the financial sector with public money.

Not exact matches

Public sector banks are likely to be more hesitant to lend money to these borrowers because chances of a turnaround for companies with high levels of debt seem unlikely, at least in the near term, according to Awtani.
I've done thought experiments where the central bank stops injecting base money through bond purchases, and begins paying public sector salaries with new base money (cash).
The ASIC commissioner reiterated past comments by the organization that the crypto industry needed a «more secure sector» which could sustain public confidence and that he was committed the current collaboration with other domestic and international regulators to combat money laundering and clarify a framework for cryptocurrencies.
First, over the next year, each Labour spending team will prepare a report on Public Service Reform and Re-Design setting out how we deliver better public services with less money, involving employees, charities, and the voluntary sector in our deliberations, as well as business and public provPublic Service Reform and Re-Design setting out how we deliver better public services with less money, involving employees, charities, and the voluntary sector in our deliberations, as well as business and public provpublic services with less money, involving employees, charities, and the voluntary sector in our deliberations, as well as business and public provpublic providers.
There is no money to build new public sector housing whatever the need — we'll all have to get used to living with our parents or in - laws.
Now the 2015 election is just over a year away, we know the political context in which it can be deployed: the «good society» breaks the economic deadlock by opening up a way to spend money better, and fits in with Miliband's broader «One Nation» dialogue about helping the little people deal with the faceless monolithic institutions of the private — and now, the publicsectors.
«My office's partnership with the Comptroller is designed to combat corruption in the public sector, and we will continue to work tirelessly to protect every penny of taxpayer money
Relief from burdensome rules like being prevented from partnering with the private sector would save taxpayers money and keep us competitive with other state systems and public research universities.»
They show that most public parents, 52 percent, would be interested in going private if money were not a problem, compared with 43 percent who say they would stay in the public sector.
On the flip side we're also seeing a rise in cyber attacks in the education and public sectors with the Distributed Denial of Service (DDoS) attacks on the NHS making national headlines last year and more recently hoax bomb phishing emails demanding money from schools.
Writing in Public Money & Management, researchers familiar with the true private - sector track record offered a word of caution: «There is a risk that politicians, government officials, and others, newly enamored of the language of failure and turnaround and inadequately informed of the empirical evidence and practical experience in the for - profit sector... will have unrealistic expectations of the transformative power of the turnaround process.»
Now California, in fairness, is listed as a state with «mixed results», but why would the governor promote the growth of this sector in his state while the traditional public schools are in such dire financial straits were it not for the huge sums of money dangled before him?
For education, technology and charter school companies and the Wall Streeters who back them, it lets them cite troubled public schools to argue that the current public education system is flawed, and to then argue that education can be improved if taxpayer money is funneled away from the public school system's priorities (hiring teachers, training teachers, reducing class size, etc.) and into the private sector (replacing teachers with computers, replacing public schools with privately run charter schools, etc.).
As founder of Bloomberg LLC, he's a numbers guy, and the numbers can't be beat: over three terms his office has spent $ 2.8 billion on improving arts infrastructure across the city; his nonstop boosterism for the arts has paid off, with the cultural sector generating $ 21 million per year (Christo and Jeanne - Claude's The Gates, which he brought to Central Park with the Public Art Fund and art advisor Linda Silverman in 2005, yielded $ 254 million alone); and he's given over $ 200 million of his own money to the arts and other causes.
Meanwhile, as opposed to the public weal, the portion of the private sector concerned with this «debate» is exclusively focused on «Money, Power and Influence».
(it may seem hypocritical or illogical to suggest the government shouldn't protect the private sector (PS glossing over whatever public money went into this, as I'm not familiar with those specifics, it's not really important to the point I'm making) from government actions, but if a government action is sensible and justified, the private sector really should just deal with it.
I felt that public sector lawyers had it too easy: The fact that they were supplied with both guaranteed work and money without having to search for them bred complacency and poor client service.
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