Police and former problematic consumers regale pupils with horror stories and issue warnings of what can happen if one uses drugs. |
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That means consumers can expect rebates and cut-rate financing deals to continue and both companies will have to slow down their assembly lines. |
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They aimed their products at mainstream consumers, and went head-to-head in quality with established supermarket brands. |
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The products are aimed at consumers and are meant for convenience use only. |
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A generation of consumers accustomed to ripe, sweeter fleshy wines from the new world will be astonished at the sheer opulence of these wines. |
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However for consumers, five minutes of waiting on hold, can undo years of advertising and brand exposure. |
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As consumers, we have the power to refuse pop music that lulls us into numb, apathetic sleep. |
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As stated above, it is expected that both service firms and those targeting consumers are more likely to localize their Web sites. |
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If consumers accept them at retail, these winemakers may be emboldened to put higher priced wines under the same seal. |
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Nowadays consumers even take out personal loans with banks and finance houses to pay for surgery. |
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Several digital receivers capable of HD Radio reception are available to consumers. |
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And price wars typically break out during recessions as vendors battle for consumers. |
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This is to ensure that consumers in the recipient country do not carry the burden of foreign tax. |
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Replacement of all old electric wires, poles and transformers to ensure a proper distribution of power to consumers had been ordered. |
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An increasing number of wise consumers are shunning the shop-rage experience for a simpler, calmer and efficient alternative. |
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Fisher emphasizes that consumers now can manipulate music, recombine different pieces, or even combine downloaded music with their own material. |
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If all supermarkets used recyclable bags, consumers would be able to help fight pollution. |
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The proposals have been given a mixed response by consumer groups as new research highlights how far UK consumers have fallen into the red. |
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They mix several flavors to bring consumers chocolate and pistachio ice creams with fudge-covered almonds and lightly roasted pistachios. |
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Many consumers are in the process of buying a new home or remodeling and redecorating their existing home. |
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The bad news comes at a time when banks have lent more money than ever to consumers with poor credit. |
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The argument is that it will save the consumers on the their weekly shopping bill, knocking about 500 off the total annual grocery bill. |
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On the USDA site, it says that, in so many words, this chart was tested to death on consumers for maximum comprehension. |
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Thomas says consumers are more knowledgeable about design now than in the past. |
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Municipal offices will open as usual throughout Buffalo City and consumers are encouraged to treat both strike days as normal working days. |
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And nowhere is simplicity more requisite than when selling technology to mainstream consumers. |
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She has managed to destroy past impressions of her as an iron-fisted hater of consumers and worshipper of monopoly. |
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Tom and I agree that the ultimate purpose of the antitrust laws is to help consumers. |
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One consequence is that consumers are more alert to influences than ever before. |
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The survey found that 47 per cent of consumers said they were suffering from above normal levels of stress. |
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His efforts have helped strengthen the art and framing industry by educating consumers on the value of custom framing. |
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The advertising watchdog has reprimanded a company for sending an offensive text message calling for consumers to upgrade their mobile phone. |
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But antitrust law focuses on the power of sellers and potential injury to consumers. |
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Gyft, which launched in September, announced a new service last week that allows consumers to regift unused gift cards without detection. |
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The Food Labelling Group recognised the concerns of consumers that there needed to be clearer information on labels in relation to allergens. |
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After all, the majority of the consumers apparently do not pay much attention to the information given on the label. |
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Few things make consumers happier than knowing that the labor market is healthy. |
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Thus, the authorities have decided to bring such consumers into record by regularising their connections. |
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The new era of mortgage regulation brings some important changes for consumers. |
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In fact, there have been cases where consumers have had to take anti-tetanus injections following such bleeding injury to their fingers. |
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Some consumers can handle one company's version but are allergic to another version. |
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The duty-free importation of considerable quantities of frozen meat constitutes an alleviative measure for the consumers. |
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My only intention is to expose the companies that are taking the consumers for a ride. |
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If the United States were to experience a deflation in housing prices, consumers would be forced to retrench. |
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The Federal Reserve can cut short-term interest rates down to zero, but that won't make consumers feel safer about flying. |
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If the latter, then we have to wonder if consumers will be willing to lay out good money to see something they've already bought fixed properly. |
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There is also fresh evidence of the widespread rejection of GM foods by consumers. |
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But as soon as consumers demand the repeal or relaxation of these restrictions, the farmers rise in their defense. |
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Reinforced by the echo chamber of a million always-on consumers, brands have seen their power expand and grow. |
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The consumers could exchange the pet label for a ticket at appointed centres across the city. |
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For young consumers intent on immediately customizing their new rides, that extra money might turn into the most powerful incentive of all. |
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Paul say consumers should beware of these ratings because they are based on lab tests, not road tests. |
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The time allowed for a pizza to bake is diminishing, as consumers expect their 'za to appear in shorter time increments than ever. |
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With this powerful knowledge, we now look at consumers as individuals, not huge amorphous groups of potential buyers. |
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The Alliance promises to oppose all legislation that might put Uncle Sam in a position to choose anti-piracy schemes for consumers. |
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With companies retrenching and investment falling, the U.S. is relying on the high-spending habits of consumers to keep recession at bay. |
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Thanks to its faster processor, consumers can retouch photos, talk with friends, and surf the Internet at the same time. |
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The report offered a vision of street advertising that used retinal scanning to produce customised messages for passing consumers. |
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They advertised free software, which it claimed would allow consumers to anonymously engage in peer-to-peer file sharing. |
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Marketers could use positive Arien traits, for example, to promote a product to those consumers who aspire to be like Ariens. |
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They fail to understand why simply sending out a legalistic privacy brochure isn't enough to satisfy most consumers. |
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The then commonplace conclusion was that taxes on retail sales would be passed on to consumers. |
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While some consumers remain stringently brand loyal, private label products account for 50 percent of retail butter sales. |
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They feel consumers who have lawfully obtained these files are being negatively affected by these anti-piracy measures. |
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But the increased costs of maintaining health and safety at abattoirs means consumers are unlikely to benefit. |
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Many consumers just preferred the SUV image and fun over the minivan and increasingly didn't even explore wagons. |
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When consumers waive subrogation rights, insurance companies may refuse to pay for that particular incident. |
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If cable companies wall consumers up in a walled garden and just allow them to order a pizza, they won't get very far. |
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Other safety-related technologies like anti-lock brakes fell short when consumers were asked to pay for it as an option. |
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The federation represents the group that traditionally has been one of the worst abusers of ordinary consumers. |
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Surely we have to crack down on corruption and abuse, and eliminate idiocies like the direct advertising of prescription drugs to consumers. |
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The question is not whether consumers will draw in their horns, but how they will do so? |
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If you stop consumers spending by limiting their credit then recession is inevitable. |
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Instead, the accent is on improving business attitudes, leaving consumers with the impression that once again profit is being put before safety. |
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These will be used by consumers to store favourite special garments, footwear and accessories. |
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This type of wallpaper is ideal for consumers looking for a great degree of washability, scrubbability and durability. |
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Thus, some consumers pay their electricity bills and telephone accounts in cash. |
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Some consumers will continue to want quick fixes, whether it's exercise in a can or a pill to curb their appetite. |
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Several car manufacturers are expected to pass on the excise reliefs to the consumers by way of reduced prices. |
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Packed with the same computing power as some laptops, wearables are still too expensive for average consumers. |
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This man, whatever his reason, is defying the signalled wishes of the consumers, his fellows in society. |
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With the price of gasoline going up more each day, we consumers need to take action. |
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In particular, consumers are up and running again, although perhaps at more of a jog than a sprint. |
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All of this is apt to tame the animal spirits of both consumers and businessmen. |
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Making educational opportunities responsive to personal needs may help consumers to more quickly gain needed skills. |
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Adding insult to injury, the banks have the gall to say that consumers are to blame. |
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Considerations are now in progress to allocate a budget to drill 401 bore water wells for consumers and farmers. |
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Free market society needs not only consumers but also responsible individuals, capable of hard work and creative action. |
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In the future, because of wariness by consumers, farmers may not find a market for their GM crops. |
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Third-party professional advice could help consumers invest their funds judiciously. |
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The consumers are stretched thin, and most of the companies are highly leveraged. |
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The licence-permit raj created passive consumers willing to buy any rubbish available. |
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When the first CD writers made the jump from 1x to 2x, consumers rejoiced with the increased speed. |
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More detailed labelling on products for consumers would also result if the report is adopted by the minister. |
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This product is fiendishly difficult for consumers to understand and value, so dealers charge top whack for it! |
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After all, if they do well, farmers, ranchers and consumers will do well, right? |
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The press is chosen by and responsible to its readership, at any moment its consumers can choose it or toss it away. |
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The idea is to provide an opportunity to the manufacturers to explain the salient features of their products to the consumers. |
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He says the proof of advergaming's success over other forms of online advertising is in its ability to start a dialogue with consumers. |
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Now the industry is offering consumers a good-tasting roast that is mircowaveable in seven minutes and has potatoes and carrots with it, he said. |
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But these young folk in the suburbs are in general more consumers than critics when it comes to American capitalism. |
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Most hybrid striped bass that consumers purchase are a cross between female white bass and male striped bass. |
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Oddly enough, the advertisers deny they are specifically targeting gay consumers, one of society's most affluent groups. |
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Here in Australia, retail sales are already flat, apparently because consumers are avoiding using their cars and staying at home. |
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At least, flat prices or the absence of inflation is a darn good thing for consumers. |
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But since DEET can damage plastics, rayon, spandex, and leather, some consumers look for alternative insect repellents. |
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Monthly subscription models via wired Internet will need to reflect such added value offered to consumers. |
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In just 30 seconds, a commercial can create an indelible impression in the minds of consumers. |
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However, these markets will be highly competitive, and consumers will demand keen prices. |
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Early on, the company had generated some ideas that resonated with consumers. |
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But if all or many consumers start trying to save more, the economy will be in deep doo-doo. |
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Businesses know U.S. consumers can shoulder a rise in energy prices and that domestic demand should keep increasing this year. |
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The welfare losses by this small group of consumers can be large enough that, in aggregate, there is a total welfare loss to consumers. |
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Conversely, consumers were more likely to shop at supermarkets when purchasing roasts than other meat products. |
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Wouldn't the demand from worldwide consumers transform its historic small-scale village production into technology-based corporate agribusiness? |
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They must then market these programs so that producers, agribusinesses, consumers, and politicians will appreciate and support future endeavors. |
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Other labor and social justice activists leafleted at major retailers, educating consumers and criticizing executive indifference. |
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It's a shame that these companies don't realise that, at the end of the day, consumers just want quality products at reasonable prices. |
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Second, consumers seem to be using their tax rebates to improve their balance sheets. |
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As fashion designers create the wardrobes for films as well as for domestic consumers and for trade promotions abroad, the lines are getting blurred. |
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The Internet helps consumers save money by buying products directly from companies and eliminating the middleman. |
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I believe that both companies will suffer when consumers are eventually forced to draw in their horns, which is why I'll be giving their shares a miss. |
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Plans call for a series of events in recognition and appreciation of the company's community, employees, retail partners and consumers around the world. |
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Dairy processors were on the warpath, seeking to reclaim their share of stomach by giving consumers not only what they need, but also what they want. |
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The IPPA certificate guarantees consumers that the retailer is independently audited and sells fresh Irish chicken with no added water or additives of any kind. |
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Nonetheless, US consumers who buy hybrids will receive tax credits, regardless of whether their car has the same fuel efficiency as a regular car. |
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If there are anti-competitive practices in the professions which are hurting consumers and damaging our economy then we must identify them and root them out. |
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Murphy agrees, adding that soy beverages might also help consumers become acclimated to extended shelf life products, an initiative considered key to milk's future. |
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This theory holds even more truth today because with the amount of mixed and confusing messages regarding health and fitness, most consumers are confused. |
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The price of bread and the wages of labour were regulated by the local justices of the peace in order to protect consumers and workers from exploitation. |
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Legal argy-bargy between the different memory companies is also likely to have a serious effect on the entire PC industry, and eventually on consumers too. |
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Soon the cheerleading press arrives, followed by global consumers hungry for a piece of the action. |
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In December 2012, American consumers bought 43,690 hybrids, 7,669 plug-in electric vehicles and 235 cars that run on cng. |
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It will help the consumers identify the race car with the production car. |
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For more straightforward cash rewards, consumers will have to read the small print of product literature to ensure they have the card that best suits their spending needs. |
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Those receive their 11,000 volt current underground and then transform it to a voltage suitable for the domestic consumers in just one or two roads or streets. |
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The company is scaling back physical locations as more consumers turn to e-retailers when they stock up on pens, toner cartridges and Liquid Paper. |
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At that point, the Library of Congress can once again decide to prohibit consumers from unlocking their cell phones. |
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Supermarkets will color code aisles according to genetic type so that DNA-savvy consumers can easily identify the right foods and supplements for themselves. |
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In truth, there is little incentive for consumers to behave responsibly. |
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What discount rate do consumers use to weigh higher purchase cost now vs. fuel cost savings in the future? |
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That fear stems from moves by four of the world's largest drug makers to begin choking off supplies to Canadian pharmacies which reimport drugs to American consumers. |
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A brand is a well-differentiated concept for providing consumers with a benefit that will arouse motivating, exclusive and incomparable anticipations. |
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Spirit companies need to tell their PR agencies to stop trying to push them, and consumers should scoff at them. |
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The financial system is awash with money, yet the Federal Reserve accuses both consumers and institutions of hoarding it. |
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Yet the sheer size of the Asian juggernauts and the prospect of them indiscriminately swallowing global resources scare economic planners and consumers alike. |
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For people who have had experience with the system, the FTC report simply helps to quantify the frustration many consumers feel. |
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Menu trends often highlight roasted garlic, and the fiery food trend that has swept the nation has caused hot peppers to become well known to many consumers. |
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But if the sellers treat their products with such disdain and disrespect, why should consumers do otherwise? |
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The recent mad cow crisis is only the latest in a series of food scares that have driven consumers to demand more precise food labeling regulations. |
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In these promotions, the state rewarded consumers with material things and consumers aided the state through consumption of items produced or retailed by state enterprises. |
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Returning to retailing, we should remind ourselves that a retailer is simply an organization that buys products for the purpose of reselling them to consumers. |
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Accordingly, the arrangement gives extraordinary protections to investors but leaves labor, the environment, and consumers to the mercies of the deregulated markets. |
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When companies faced competition, Klein knew, consumers would have options. |
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If those consumers get their hands on some money, they'll move upmarket to Crate and Barrel and banana republic. |
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We receive numerous testimonials every day, both here at Nelsonbach and in our homeopathic pharmacy, from consumers who have been delighted with the results arnica offers. |
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Where there is differential pricing, e-tailers and consumers can arbitrage the difference to their advantage, by importing goods from the cheaper country. |
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At she Twiggy is standing up for older consumers by backing a drive to persuade companies to tailor their advertising and products to this wealthy group. |
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Yet it rankles consumers, who perceive differential pricing as unfair. |
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Today consumers react by cutting the cord and switching to cheaper alternatives. |
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We also look at a new National Packaging Covenant between industry, local councils and consumers, that should reduce the litter and waste to landfill created by packaging. |
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The disquieting voices of the few people who doubted that complete abstention was achievable for most problematic consumers were drowned out in a sea of treatment optimism. |
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Sharman said the entertainment companies are behind the times and don't realize that consumers need not buy CDs, DVDs or videotapes to enjoy music or films. |
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You wanted to be upstream with the artists, not downstream with the consumers. |
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One of them is to appoint a non-executive Director to represent consumers, and I suspect the appointment will be heavily influenced by the Government. |
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Apart from any physiological effects on chickens themselves or consumers, feed additives introduce tons of organic arsenic into the environment every year, says Stolz. |
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By contrast, North Americans are ravenous consumers of energy. |
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Its products have consumers reaching for water bottles like ravers, but it's likely that you won't have any choice but to drink one at some point. |
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Similarly, in 1995, many firms in the Australian clothing industry gambled on a season of clothing in shades of apple green, which consumers never adopted. |
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Even the drinks are opening up as an area where flavours are being added to give consumers a ready-mixed alcoholic beverage, said a spokesman for Kerry. |
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Depending on the species, whales are either major consumers of plankton or krill or they are major predators, feeding on seals, fish, and penguins. |
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On Time was designed to help consumers keep payment schedules, and if they don't, it won't replace the repo man, just make it harder to run from him. |
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The result of such legislation, the insurance lobby declared, would be increased costs that would be passed on to consumers in the form of higher premiums. |
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Often dismissed as wrinklies and fogeys, dodderers and ditherers, it turns out that Saga's target audience are, in fact, among the biggest consumers in the country. |
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It is about selling wearable, keenly priced clothes to sophisticated, discerning consumers who want something they'll still be wearing in years to come. |
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Regulation involves consumers and producers as well as official licensers. |
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The claim that consumers and business investors are paralyzed by the state of public finances has never been empirically proved. |
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Large numbers of consumers and small businesses swap software, and they're not about to stump up the readies to convert their current unlicensed software to full product. |
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Mr O'Sullivan believes that if the EU gives the go-ahead for the new scheme the entry premium loading could slip in unnoticed by many consumers by the end of June. |
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Art and custom framing are not staple items that consumers need. |
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While reflation does resuscitate the economy to an extent and lift consumer spending, consumers have a relentless tendency to take on even more debt in different forms. |
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This is about brand-name birth control drugs and other devices that some consumers swear off because they are too expensive. |
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The only way to slow up the wide boys in the industry is to educate consumers, starting at school and continuing with government funded education programs for adults. |
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However, to realize their profits, capitalists need to sell the products that their workers produce to consumers who are willing and able to buy them. |
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Mr Bowa said both the participating outlets and consumers stood to benefit from the scheme in terms of the resultant increases in sales and affordability of the products. |
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And let's do it without the brinksmanship that stresses consumers and scares off investors. |
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Besides changes in light bulbs, many consumers are showing increased interest in dimming and lighting controls. |
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The company is cutting jobs and closing plants to save money as demand ebbs for its china dinner services, glassware and crystal because consumers are spending less. |
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Joanna Angel, owner of Burning Angel, knows that consumers need to be enticed. |
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Kudzu stands as a trusted resource for consumers to share their experiences with others. |
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The legislature has passed a measure aimed at protecting consumers. |
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Those consumers who object to the acerbic taste of garlic can purchase de-odorized garlic or allicin extract. |
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Imports are an economic good but exports an economic bad. Exports must be produced but are enjoyed by foreign consumers. |
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The sky now belonged to the Soviets, and the befinned automobiles that promised to take consumers there seemed silly and indulgent. |
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It's become impossible to keep abreast of all the best-ofs, as labels keep foisting greatest-hits albums on overwhelmed consumers. |
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Relative to clickwrap, browsewrap is easily ignored by consumers, leaving them more vulnerable to exploitation. |
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This class of bottled water dominates the U.S. market and consumers seem to prefer the cachet of spring water to processed municipal waters. |
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Many experts now advise consumers to use a prepaid calling card to save money on long distance calls while staying in a hotel. |
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Instead of the power of monopoly, consumers lose to the power of confusopoly. |
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Such kinds of defensives are really rather protecting the local companies than the consumers. |
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This classification suggests that consumers see only the tip of the iceberg of the e-conomy. |
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As such they are an important way of understanding both how texts are engendered and how they engender their consumers. |
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Cultural competence requires an attitude of respect for the evaluand and its diverse consumers, providers, and other stakeholders. |
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He credits GamerGaters with organizing a revolt against a deeply unsatisfying marketplace by loyal consumers who deserve better. |
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Healthcare patients or consumers often need help in addressing these seven problems. |
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The potato remains however a fundamental feature of this cuisine and the Irish remain the highest per capita consumers of potatoes in Europe. |
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The influx of food into the Celtic region, however, was far from keeping pace with the influx of consumers. |
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Strong sales in Europe and Asia are helping Tiffany keep its head above water at a time when US consumers are holding onto their wallets. |
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The tertiary sector of industry involves the provision of services to other businesses as well as final consumers. |
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Consumers enjoy a vast array of products from all member states and businesses have unrestricted access to more consumers. |
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The packers and consumers object to the short, thick animals because of their excess lardiness and to the rangy ones because of their large cuts. |
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It examines the banks' balance sheets and behaviour and policies toward consumers. |
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There is usually some degree of restriction of the availability of certain therapeutic goods depending on their risk to consumers. |
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This began the practice we now know as branding today, where the consumers buy the brand instead of the product. |
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Thus, brand recall is a confirmation that previous branding touchpoints have successfully fermented in the minds of its consumers. |
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Brand identity is what the owner wants to communicate to its potential consumers. |
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When brand parity operates, quality is often not a major concern because consumers believe that only minor quality differences exist. |
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There is a risk that too many uses for one brand name can oversaturate the market resulting in a blurred and weak brand for consumers. |
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Demand theory describes individual consumers as rationally choosing the most preferred quantity of each good, given income, prices, tastes, etc. |
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For a given quantity of a consumer good, the point on the demand curve indicates the value, or marginal utility, to consumers for that unit. |
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Tax cuts allow consumers to increase their spending, which boosts aggregate demand. |
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This allows youth to choose what music they identify with, which gives them power as consumers to control the market of popular music. |
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In the video, she encouraged chefs to remove foie gras from their menus and asked consumers to boycott restaurants that serve it. |
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Today, Denmark is part of the European Union's internal market, which represents more than 508 million consumers. |
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After 1791, the British islands produced the most sugar, and the British people quickly became the largest consumers. |
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However, the loss to consumers is greater than the gains by producers and the government. |
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The economic theory of David Ricardo holds that consumers would necessarily gain more than producers would lose. |
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Germany is part of the European single market which represents more than 508 million consumers. |
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The institute's pamphlets proposed less government, lower taxes, and more freedom for business and consumers. |
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The inaccurate representation of packaged fish is a potential safety hazard to consumers. |
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Trading globally gives consumers and countries the opportunity to be exposed to new markets and products. |
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As the relative value of the coins becomes lower, consumers would need to give more coins in exchange for the same goods and services as before. |
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Using resources, skill, ingenuity, and experience, service providers benefit service consumers. |
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Icelanders are avid consumers of literature, with the highest number of bookstores per capita in the world. |
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As large consumers of fossil fuels, First World countries drew attention to environmental pollution. |
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Decorative arts for luxury consumers included fine pottery, silver and bronze vessels and implements, and glassware. |
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The Lower Churchill Project will develop the remaining potential of the river and supply it to provincial consumers. |
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A primary advantage is that the citizen consumers have a much larger variety of goods and services from which to choose. |
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Additionally, consumers have an opportunity to invest their savings outside of the country. |
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Another, more recent variant is participatory economics, wherein the economy is planned by decentralised councils of workers and consumers. |
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It held the economy produced more than it consumed, because the consumers did not have enough income. |
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It works by being charged on the sale price of new goods and services, whether purchased by intermediate or final consumers. |
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The international fair trade label was introduced in 2002 to improve visibility for consumers. |
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A key part of the Fair Trade initiative is to inform consumers through innovative marketing. |
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Pickles have been available to the consumers publicly since many centuries. |
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For example, although most dinoflagellates are either photosynthetic producers or heterotrophic consumers, many species perform both roles. |
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Swedes are among the greatest consumers of newspapers in the world, and nearly every town is served by a local paper. |
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This enables consumers to play a part in reversing the decline of fish stocks. |
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Depuration of oysters is a common industry practice and widely researched in the scientific community but is not commonly known by end consumers. |
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The main objective of seafood depuration is to remove fecal contamination in seafood before being sold to end consumers. |
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In order to assist in detecting leaks, an odorizer is added to the otherwise colorless and almost odorless gas used by consumers. |
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They can be dedicated to wholesale trade between fishermen and fish merchants, or to the sale of seafood to individual consumers, or to both. |
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Iceland, Japan, and Portugal are the greatest consumers of seafood per capita in the world. |
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Japan, China and Korea are some of the greatest consumers of fish, and have some disputes over Exclusive Economic Zone. |
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The whole fruit including the skin is suitable for human consumption except for the seeds, which may affect some consumers. |
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This new approach has created a shortcut to getting a Taxi for consumers, with the push of a button. |
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The Adidas Confirmed app allows consumers to get access to and reserve the brand's limited edition sneakers by using geo targeting technology. |
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The study found consumers did not exhibit unduly high loyalty towards such brands. |
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Adidas also has a website dedicated to the Indian audience that markets and sells products to its consumers in India. |
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There are many influences on the creation of agricultural policy, including consumers, agribusiness, trade lobbies and other groups. |
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Anthropologists such as Daniel Miller and Mary Douglas have used ethnographic data to answer academic questions about consumers and consumption. |
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By 1905, an estimated 25 percent of the male population were regular consumers of the drug. |
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The FDA does not have to approve or review cosmetics, or what goes in them, before they are sold to the consumers. |
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The medical tourism sector caters to thousands of European, Latin American, Canadian, and American consumers every year. |
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In the UK, too, consumers happily tuck in to 400,000 tons of preprepared meals a year. |
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The European age of discovery opened up new trading routes and gave European consumers access to a much broader range of goods. |
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For Roman consumers, the purchase of goods from the East was a symbol of social prestige. |
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Resellers and direct sellers increased the number of sellers, thus increasing competition, to the benefit of consumers. |
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Tasmanians are also consumers of seafood, such as crayfish, orange roughy, salmon and oysters, both farmed and wild. |
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Refineries, often located nearer to consumers in North America, Europe, and Japan, then produce refined white sugar, which is 99 percent sucrose. |
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In theory, high unemployment should temper inflation, as consumers pull the reins in on spending and prices come down. |
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Punk zines wanted to make readers into music makers, zine publishers, and protesters rather than passive consumers. |
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He said that national advertisers also undermined the traditional relationship between consumers and local businesses. |
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It also concerns other stakeholders, such as creditors, consumers, the environment and the community at large. |
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The most important rules for companies, mostly closing contracts with consumers, are listed in Art. |
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Many farmers concealed actual output from purchasing agencies to sell it illicitly to urban consumers. |
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Most of these products serve to manufacture other items, although a smaller number go directly to consumers. |
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Solvents, pesticides, lye, washing soda, and portland cement provide a few examples of product used by consumers. |
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As of all potential voters are also consumers, consumer protection takes on a clear political significance. |
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The markets themselves are driven by the needs and wants of consumers and those of society as a whole. |
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The market demand curve is obtained by summing the quantities demanded by all consumers at each potential price. |
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In other words, the prices of all substitutes and complements, as well as income levels of consumers are constant. |
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Other research found that China's entry to the WTO benefitted US consumers, as the price of Chinese goods were substantially reduced. |
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Convenience goods are mostly sold by wholesalers or retailers, so as to make them available to the consumers in good or large volume. |
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This use is waning as domestic consumers are increasingly switching to compact or liquid detergents that do not include sodium sulfate. |
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With more money in the household budget, consumers added more meat and dairy products to their diets. |
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The world's largest consumers of potash are China, the United States, Brazil, and India. |
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Members often have a close association with the enterprise as producers or consumers of its products or services, or as its employees. |
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The overall effect was that Edison's system required power stations to be within a mile of the consumers. |
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Competitors disliked the company's business practices, but consumers liked the lower prices. |
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There is a single price schedule for all consumers but the prices vary depending on the quantity of the good bought. |
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Each group of consumers effectively becomes a separate market with its own demand curve and marginal revenue curve. |
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Successful price discrimination requires that companies separate consumers according to their willingness to buy. |
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In a free market, monopolies can be ended at any time by new competition, breakaway businesses, or consumers seeking alternatives. |
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We learned that 47 percent of consumers believe the robot revolution is here now and growing. |
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More than half of consumers think it would be wonderfully romantic if their significant other booked tickets for a surprise international trip. |
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And sometimes, the bugs themselves are the predators, the killers and consumers of elk. |
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Statutes of repose are a compromise of the interests of consumers on the one hand and of manufacturers and sellers on the other. |
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She said the tiremaker would continue to provide replacements and service to consumers who already had the tires. |
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Fighting fat, a top-of-mind concern among consumers today, is the subject of new marketing campaigns. |
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