This government is devaluing civil servants and rubbing salt into the wounds. |
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Before the euro, Italy kept its boutique manufacturing base competitive by devaluing the lira as often as necessary. |
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We're heading toward government devaluing its currency to devaluate its debt in order to survive. |
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He stabilized France politically through the construction of the Fifth Republic and financially by devaluing the franc. |
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There's an overused word in pop music, devaluing the achievements of those whose invention and daring did, and still does, make a difference. |
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Logging companies can reduce their payments by devaluing the wood they log through a practice known as grade setting. |
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Many are likely to resist by devaluing their own currencies or erecting new barriers against U.S. goods. |
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And devaluing the peso could boost inflation, as imported goods will become much more expensive. |
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They are simply devaluing further the already debased coin of Irish politics. |
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Now, many fear we are chipping away at what it means to be an American, devaluing the citizenship those millions worked so hard to attain. |
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But Keating's devaluing of Anglo-Australia and of the links with Britain rankled with sections of the British-descended majority. |
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By delinking the dollar from the gold standard and effectively devaluing it, the Nixon Administration hoped to steal a march on its rivals. |
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This is partly a reflection of currency crises devaluing sales, but mostly a result of consumer abandonment of non-essentials when consumer confidence dips. |
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Whatever rationalisations we give ourselves, we may justify our role as Instrument of Betrayal by devaluing the importance of the already existing bond. |
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Does he think the government is devaluing Canadian communities that have nuclear facilities where there could be an incident? |
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Emphasize what RBC has found as the best way to do business without devaluing someone else's traditions and experiences. |
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In the past Italian governments got out of this kind of fix by devaluing the lira to stimulate exports and growth, but this option is closed by membership of the euro. |
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It may well be that the system itself leads inevitably to the devaluing of human rights and legal compliance. |
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Such social gaps are under girded by the dominance of patriarchal structures that persist in devaluing women in relation to men. |
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One of the consequences is that the countries no longer have the possibility of devaluing their own currency in order to remain competitive. |
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The commoditization of the news and devaluing of the truth are just part of our way of life now. |
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George Zimmerman pulled the trigger, but a larger ethos of devaluing life and the stereotypes of criminality loaded the gun. |
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I used humor to distance myself from pain, while never forgetting the pain or diminishing or devaluing it. |
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Are we devaluing the currency in applying this term too liberally? |
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For this purpose, you cannot in particular use the photographs of Olivier Tuffé within a framework which could appear political, immoral, abusive, diffamatoire, illicit, devaluing, pornographic or xenophobe. |
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It can lead to a revolving door phenomenon among youth participants and employees alike, and the result is a devaluing of young people who were involved in pilot projects over the long term. |
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Marx argued that the capitalist economy leads to the fetishization of goods and services, and the devaluing of the worth of a good or service, and focusing on its price in the market. |
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Currency risk is because interest on the bonds may be paid in a weak or devaluing currency and therefore the payment will be worth less which makes the yield worth less than an investor might have expected. |
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Our commitment is to ensuring that the greatest value is attached to work, by creating more high-quality jobs with rights and not to instability and the devaluing of workers. |
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That is what is inherent in the concern of devaluing marriage. |
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In so doing, multinationals have gone as far as to blackmail the workers, by, inter alia, devaluing wages, by making working hours more flexible, and by making working conditions more precarious. |
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Cubans rushed to convert their savings. See articleArgentina's Supreme Court backed the government's 2002 decision to convert dollars in bank accounts to pesos at one to two after devaluing the peso. |
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This is not the most important issue, the experts note, as skilful management of currency risks can facilitate the effective trade with devaluing rouble, yuan, or rupee. |
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Once governments realized that fiscal crises could be overcome by devaluing their own coins, the currency became an ever more useful tool of statesmanship. |
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When nearly half of those drawing their pension have the labour market early has contributed to the devaluing of left work before retirement age on the grounds of 'invalidity', ageing workers on the labour market. |
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Furthermore, the yields are extremely low and many Japanese investors are opting to buy higher yielding assets oversees while selling the Yen, therefore devaluing the Japanese currency further. |
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To be fair, the Nordic nations had a significant advantage: their tiny size made it easy for them to earn large current account surpluses after devaluing their currencies. |
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He demonstrates how continuing adherence to our outdated economic models will promote even greater environmental degradation, a collapse of social welfare, and the further devaluing of families. |
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Purchase of Dollar-denominated debt can have a negative affect on the value of the currency since the Fed pays for these purchases by printing more money and therefore devaluing the currency. |
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