The plight of the reinsurers will have a knock-on effect on insurance markets everywhere. |
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The lenders' reluctance could have a knock-on effect throughout the economy. |
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The knock-on effect of the return of the archaeologists will be a more secure environment for these antiquities. |
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The possible knock-on effect of this is a new breed of more aggressive and competitive women. |
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Suggesting that Irish inflation may have a knock-on effect on the eurozone is fatuous and absurd. |
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Elements of this scenario were dramatised in the film, The Day After Tomorrow, with a knock-on effect that affected the global climate. |
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In the US and Canada, millers fortify grain, which has a knock-on effect on many products in the food chain. |
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Also, if devaluation acts as a stimulus for growth in America this could have a positive knock-on effect in the rest of the world. |
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Negative images have had a damaging knock-on effect, especially on student intake at the university, according to the report. |
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Building land has also increased in value which has the obvious knock-on effect of pushing up the cost of the finished properties. |
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Diversity on screen is one thing, but does it have any knock-on effect off screen? |
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These environmental problems have a knock-on effect beyond coastal regions to inland regions. |
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The activity carried out by Ficoba last year can also be measured in relation to the knock-on effect generated. |
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Decentralising powers and its knock-on effect in the energy domain is therefore clearly a factor for success. |
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The knock-on effect of this was a forex market with less volatility than usual. |
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The knock-on effect is that the services and commerce set up in these regions suffer and have no means of guarding against this type of risk. |
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Of course, the knock-on effect of export slowdown is not included in these estimates. |
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A key knock-on effect of the relative success of the project is a greater self-confidence and hope among the women. |
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This trend has hit the US market particularly hard but the knock-on effect has also been felt in Europe. |
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Regrettably, the knock-on effect was to deprive the market of badly needed finance for a concerted, long-term promotion of renewables. |
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The knock-on effect from being hit by an uninsured driver, unidentifiable or not, should not be taken lightly. |
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However, the knock-on effect was to catapult her into the front rank of America's punditocracy, where she has remained ever since. |
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Many employees have seen a big drop in remuneration packages during the downturn which has had a knock-on effect on house prices. |
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The proposals for the museum of transport will have a knock-on effect, necessitating a review of several of Glasgow's other venues. |
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Although European flights are still operating, the knock-on effect of the cancellations will mean delays for all passengers. |
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And as motorists faced tailbacks of up to seven miles, retailers warned of the knock-on effect for businesses in the city. |
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The knock-on effect is a considerable increase of flood and subsidence risk, reduction in wildlife numbers and loss of trees. |
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Mr Fitzpatrick said if private practice was jeopardised, the knock-on effect on public hospitals would be huge. |
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The knock-on effect is that liquidators will not take on jobs where there is no money in the failed company to cover their fees. |
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On the home front, this new-found comfort has had the knock-on effect of finding me regularly scampering around the flat starkers. |
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It has a knock-on effect in other areas, especially where there are shared coastlines. |
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He said at the time he knew the company was taking remedial measures and realised the reduction of the fleet would have a knock-on effect for passengers. |
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But the knock-on effect is that a large chunk of its traditional listenership, at the older end of the age spectrum, have been left with nowhere to go. |
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This sub-area will also benefit in the long term from the knock-on effect of the extension of the port at Le Havre, one of Europe's leading ports. |
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The knock-on effect of increased fuel prices may eventually trickle down to everything from the price of milk and a loaf of bread to the clothes we wear. |
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This is complicated somewhat by the impact of externality taxes in reducing consumption of the taxed goods, and the knock-on effect that this has on the demand for labour. |
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Its success has had a very positive knock-on effect on sales of the entire range of Varilux progressive lenses, allowing Essilor to further expand its market share. |
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If a coach arrives late, it has a knock-on effect on the entire coach station. |
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It's the loss of reputation, and thus the knock-on effect on bidding for government work in future, that matters. |
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In 2008 Ficoba generated a knock-on effect of 5 million euros. |
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Price agreements in one of these relationships can have a knock-on effect on the other relationships and thus have consequences for the use of the payment system itself. |
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In the economic conditions of the past few years, companies, their customers and suppliers have been in a riskier situation where the failure of one party can result in a knock-on effect. |
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And that, of course, would have had a knock-on effect in the private sector. |
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If the report stops teachers feeling demoralised and allows them to focus on their work there will be a knock-on effect for pupils, and that's good. |
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Chivas Regal seeks to appeal to the new emerging middle classes in China, Mexico, India, Australia and the wider Southeast Asia region, where there is an especially strong knock-on effect in Travel Retail. |
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The knock-on effect is that the streets are sewers of foul-smelling rubbish and discarded flyers, with which the council seems woefully unequipped and disinclined to deal. |
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This is motivational, promoting well-being among the men and women working in the company and producing a positive knock-on effect for the entire company, as well as for its customers. |
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And the knock-on effect is thoroughly shaking the Digg offices. |
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The power surge has also had a knock-on effect on local businesses who struggled to operate throughout Tuesday without an electricity supply. |
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As there exists a close relation between exports and fixed investment, the latter will also be affected and this knock-on effect has been incorporated in the Spring Forecasts. |
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The slump has had a dramatic knock-on effect throughout the entire sector, including chicken feed suppliers and take-away roast chicken outlets in the towns. |
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This means making allowance for the association resuming in-house discussions on particular issues from time to time, which obviously has a knock-on effect on the pace of the debates and meetings and decision making. |
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Hypopituitarism affects Dylan's pituitary gland and has a knock-on effect on his other glands. |
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However, the focus is on the knock-on effect of war rather than being in the thick of it, says Cathy Rentzenbrink, fiction previewer for trade magazine The Bookseller. |
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