Tourism has been seriously hit and tourism is a major employer and has huge purchasing power. |
|
In short, these certificates acquired purchasing power on account of the fact that these certificates were seen as representative of gold. |
|
Whether the goody-goody Gibson girl or the dancing flapper, the single woman finally had purchasing power. |
|
Nonetheless, the issuance of financial claims that creates purchasing power augments system liquidity. |
|
Gold also may be helpful during periods of hyperinflation as it can hold its purchasing power much better than paper money during these periods. |
|
Second, changes in the purchasing power of monetary units were not taken into consideration by current accounting rules. |
|
People seek more balanced diets even as hunger lurks for lack of purchasing power and distributive shortcomings. |
|
We could help to maintain decent moral standards in advertising, by using our own purchasing power ethically. |
|
Well, purchasing power is up for sure and nobody blinks at a thousand rupees for a ticket anymore. |
|
Neither do monetary policy measures publicized under the heading of stabilization imply a constancy of purchasing power. |
|
The euro's recent strengthening on the foreign exchanges would serve to dampen inflationary pressures and boost purchasing power, he continued. |
|
Increased peasant purchasing power would then fuel the growth of industry as it responded to increased demand. |
|
However, increased supply and a slowing international environment will reduce purchasing power and dampen demand as the year goes on. |
|
Or, said another way, does the depositor maintain a financial asset that functions as money, securing purchasing power? |
|
Be aware of your purchasing power and remind the lender that other competitors are keen for your business. |
|
He points to experience, purchasing power and brand awareness as the pillars of a successful franchising operation. |
|
It confuses a shift in purchasing power with a net increase of it, wage rates with wage payments. |
|
This constraint can be generalized to include not only an individual's purchasing power but also a time budget. |
|
Businesses with an eye to the future must recognise the needs and the purchasing power of disabled and elderly customers. |
|
It works efficiently to create and diffuse purchasing power throughout the economy and disseminate liquidity throughout the financial system. |
|
|
I came to the conclusion that all the food available in the village was of inferior quality and meant for consumption by the poor with low purchasing power. |
|
The Company is now leveraging its greater purchasing power to negotiate the best possible price for directory paper. |
|
The intricate intarsia of the studiolo also illustrates how innovative art of the period required the purchasing power and political authority of influential patronage. |
|
Old people with a pension fund, widows, and the wardens of orphans must invest their money into the financial markets, lest its purchasing power evaporate under their noses. |
|
For example, the private monies would be far more stable in their purchasing power, would be harder to counterfeit, and would be available in more convenient denominations. |
|
Reductions in social programmes and services would compound the problem for those who are experiencing an erosion in their purchasing power. |
|
Apart from the over indebtment, the reduction of purchasing power of the popular class is the main responsible for the fall in the demand. |
|
It is this which can mobilise the world's huge need for food and convert it into a level of demand with great purchasing power. |
|
The exemption of overtime from income tax had a positive effect on net pay and on employees' purchasing power. |
|
Ultimately, this policy also destabilizes the food industries and, at a time when purchasing power needs to be defended, penalizes consumers. |
|
In this context, the CPI is a good indicator of changes in our purchasing power. |
|
Studies show that people practising naturism have a higher purchasing power than the average. |
|
That means a loss of prosperity, a loss of real wages, a loss of purchasing power. |
|
The eroded purchasing power of middle-class shoppers has put a damper on consumer demand, so that retailers now face serious problems. |
|
Public authorities can not only set an example, with their considerable purchasing power, but they also undoubtedly influence the marketplace. |
|
In terms of purchasing power, the average worker just keeps falling behind. |
|
While lack of purchasing power forces some groups to save, others can still afford to splash out. |
|
This power play resulted in a reduction in purchasing power for close to 500,000 people and their families. |
|
Generally speaking, when the purchasing power of our national colleagues goes up, our annual adjustment is above inflation. |
|
Higher inflation has dented the purchasing power of households and has, as a result, put a brake on private consumption growth. |
|
|
We need efforts to bolster, rather than restrain, the purchasing power of working Canadians. |
|
In some countries, this led to an erosion of consumer purchasing power and some weakening in consumption expenditure. |
|
You also know that the purchasing power of all these consumers has dropped exponentially. |
|
A voluntary organization, we use the bulk purchasing power of union members to obtain money saving benefits for them and their families. |
|
As a result, seniors face a dramatic erosion in the purchasing power of tax-deferred savings in their later years. |
|
Also, your purchasing power will be at risk for inflation unless the annuity has inflation adjustments. |
|
Domestic demand is influenced by wage and employment levels as well as purchasing power. |
|
Developing countries must also implement programs to support the poor who lose purchasing power due to high prices. |
|
These properties are benefiting from the increase in purchasing power of the rapidly growing Brazilian middle class. |
|
First, in periods of sustained inflation, the bargaining power of workers is weakened because they attempt to maintain their purchasing power. |
|
What matters is that the internal purchasing power of the euro is very stable, as used to be the case with the Deutschmark. |
|
It gives students equal access to knowledge and supports the purchasing power of families. |
|
As we noted, most welfare rates in the country have declined over the last twenty years in terms of real purchasing power. |
|
However, the loss of purchasing power has a particularly negative impact on the costs of salaries, which have increased substantially. |
|
The third period, 1730-60, was linked to the growth of American and West Indian populations, production, and purchasing power, but also continued the advance of re-exports. |
|
Unemployment was on the rise and purchasing power had slumped. |
|
They have such awesome purchasing power that they write their own ticket. |
|
In the Keynesian model, higher taxes are inherently anti-inflationary because they reduce purchasing power. |
|
Just using the official exchange rate is no option and purchasing power parity also results in undesired influences of import prices on the outcomes. |
|
The fact that rigidity in the monetary unit's purchasing power is unthinkable and unrealizable does not impair the methods of economic calculation. |
|
|
Such monetary flows have necessitated redistribution of purchasing power, favoring consumers and speculators at the expense of domestic producers. |
|
Their overwhelming priority is to protect the purchasing power of incumbent creditors. |
|
In theory, this will boost Chinese purchasing power and thus bilateral trade. |
|
Mr Murphy said that all widows and widowers who were overtaxed should be repaid this money with interest to compensate them for the loss of purchasing power. |
|
Well-paid jobs are not easy to find in the Western Isles and the purchasing power of the individuals and their families is very welcome. |
|
The comparative price levels are measured as the ratio between the purchasing power parities and the market exchange rates for each country. |
|
Asia has the second largest nominal GDP of all continents, after Europe, but the largest when measured in purchasing power parity. |
|
Moreover, when the cost of living goes up but your income does not, your purchasing power declines and the longer you live off your retirement income, the more inflation will deplete the size of your savings. |
|
The purchasing power should only be considered a factor that distorts competition if it is exercised by a single purchaser capable of strangling suppliers whose survival substantially depends on him. |
|
Our method of adjusting pay and pensions rests on the principle of parallelism with the weighted evolution of civil servants' purchasing power in Member States. |
|
This process is only remedied if the purchasing power of the metal is equal to its production costs. |
|
Seeing their gains in purchasing power being whittled away, employees, who are also customers, therefore push for even lower sales prices from companies. |
|
Others argue for maintaining purchasing power and aggregate demand. |
|
Lower inflation is boosting consumers' purchasing power. |
|
First, high prices hinder shoppers' purchasing power. |
|
The EU's increasing income inequality misallocates the purchasing power that its economy desperately needs for growth and employment. |
|
The purchasing power of holders of nominal debt must not be put at risk. |
|
By using their purchasing power to opt for goods and services that also respect the environment, they can make an important contribution towards sustainable development. |
|
It is an encouraging sign that consumers are interested in using their purchasing power to obtain products that are manufactured in situations where adequate working conditions are guaranteed. |
|
Educated Malaysians are fleeing the country, as is their purchasing power. |
|
|
If the prices of nontradables rise, the purchasing power of any given currency will fall in that country. |
|
If purchasing power parity held exactly, then the real exchange rate would always equal one. |
|
But critics say the elderly's purchasing power will be eroded over time. |
|
The Minister of Economic and General Affairs, Nizar Baraka said that the government has adopted a series of juridical and institutional measures to enforce price control and protect citizens' purchasing power. |
|
Even though the nominal amount due on maturity is known in advance, the purchasing power of that amount at such time is uncertain and may be more or less than the purchasing power of the original principal. |
|
In addition to providing both better and cheaper services to citizens, public authorities can use their purchasing power to aggregate demand and provide a crucial pull for new networks. |
|
There can be marked differences between purchasing power adjusted incomes and those converted via market exchange rates. |
|
In 2015, the Indian economy was the world's seventh largest by nominal GDP and third largest by purchasing power parity. |
|
An increase in the general level of prices implies a decrease in the purchasing power of the currency. |
|
Also, individuals or institutions with cash assets will experience a decline in the purchasing power of the cash. |
|
Uncertainty about the future purchasing power of money discourages investment and saving. |
|
Consequently, the Commission has come to the conclusion that the purchasing power of the customers with regard to ACAS, which is bought by the airlines, would not outweigh the position of the new entity. |
|
There is a chance that such a radical step would negligibly reduce consumption, reduce potential budget revenue, reduce consumers' purchasing power, empower smuggling and illegal activities, and increase inflation. |
|
Its interpretation must remain cautious insomuch as its value may result from a thought-out choice of agricultural practices, as well as it may result from a low purchasing power of the population. |
|
To achieve this, policies, prices and purchasing power everywhere must encourage the rich to use and waste much fewer material goods and allow the poor to be able to have smaller families. |
|
At those meetings, the discussion and refection process was fostered by asking questions like: How does cooperation give purchasing power back to the people? |
|
The resulting low inflation and political continuity of the past few years have also fostered successful privatizations and boosted mass purchasing power. |
|
This redistribution of purchasing power will also occur between international trading partners. |
|
The Economist's Big Mac Index compares the purchasing power parity of countries in terms of the cost of a Big Mac hamburger. |
|
Other factors such as the relative easiness of market entry and the significant purchasing power in this market also prevented any potential anticompetitive effect. |
|
|
This observation is especially more alarming as projections for world consumption in 2015 and 2030 still portend increased export from developed countries and China whose purchasing power is increasing. |
|
It encouraged unions that would raise wages, to increase the purchasing power of the working class. |
|
The relatively steady increase in nominal wages, reflecting in part previously concluded multiannual agreements, has also allowed for a rather steady increase in real wages and supported household purchasing power. |
|
In order to achieve an increase in real wages in the private sector, which the labour market had failed to generate, a gradual increase in the purchasing power of wage earners was promoted through the wage councils. |
|
In a situation characterised by reduced purchasing power, the spectacle of governments releasing huge sums over the space of a few days to rescue the banking sector could result in a widespread sense of bafflement. |
|
In 2009, Dublin was listed as the fourth richest city in the world by purchasing power and 10th richest by personal income. |
|
We read and hear news of the economic crisis' impact and consequences almost daily: businesses go abroad, more and more people face unemployment, and purchasing power is diminishing. |
|
And the economic filter ensures that only people with high purchasing power can apply. |
|
Mexico has the fifteenth largest nominal GDP and the eleventh largest by purchasing power parity. |
|
Mexico has the 15th largest nominal GDP and the 11th largest by purchasing power parity. |
|
This study fails to take account of any factors which could work against a growth in demand, such as a decline in purchasing power or any other change in consumer behaviour. |
|
Cur assumption of constant prices or no change in the purchasing power of money over the period considered may also not be realistic for certain countries. |
|
The purchasing power parity exchange rate serves two main functions. |
|
These measures were deflationary and merely reduced purchasing power in the economy, worsening the situation, and by the end of 1931 unemployment had reached nearly 3 million. |
|
The Government has said the current level is the second highest in the European Union in absolute terms and sixth highest when expressed in purchasing power. |
|
By one estimate, it has the fourth highest gross national income at purchasing power parity in Africa, giving it a standard of living around that of Mexico. |
|
It should have constant intrinsic value and stable purchasing power. |
|
Aten uses the term spatial price indexes to label these estimates, which can be seen as the regional equivalent of purchasing power parities for consumption. |
|
It is a middle power and a major developed country with the world's fourteenth largest economy by nominal GDP and sixteenth largest by purchasing power parity. |
|
Nevertheless, domestic purchasing power is one of the best in the world. |
|