There is little in today's credit availability environment that would lead me to believe retrenchment is imminent. |
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If there were not enough volunteers for retrenchment packages, Telkom would go ahead with retrenching workers. |
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He argued against such policies as central bank autonomy, tight money, fiscal austerity, and social retrenchment. |
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Their production control struggles were a powerful response to economic retrenchment. |
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The finance ministers had managed to limit the impact of fiscal retrenchment somewhat by an expansive monetary policy. |
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The combination of adverse weather and declining sales led to retrenchment by many cooperatives. |
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The abandonment of the Neronian legionary fortress at Usk in South Wales in favour of a reoccupation at Gloucester symbolizes the retrenchment. |
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The retrenchment of gas imports has assailed the country's northern mining district. |
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The tangled scalar geographies of welfare retrenchment and workfarist institution building cannot be collapsed into a single scalar narrative. |
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Financial difficulties tell only part of the story of the retrenchment of the Guggenheim empire. |
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The thousands of supernumeraries in the Eastern Cape who cost the province R1 billion a year are not facing retrenchment in the immediate future. |
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He oversaw the retrenchment of the national army during an unstable period. |
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The most recent annual figures show evidence of a retrenchment by the non-local developers. |
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When our flight was in its fourth month, we heard rumours about retrenchment of the programme. |
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It has also codified a number of issues such as retrenchment and dismissal which were previously major strike triggers. |
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Almost daily, we hear of further retrenchment and more job cuts in an effort to lower inventory levels. |
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The retrenchment of social programmes has been accomplished by the politics of stealth and the politics of strength. |
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They say the manner in which the retrenchment was done is unfair and unconstitutional. |
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The directors defended the retrenchment of two expatriate general managers. |
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This unfortunate situation brought about the retrenchment of numerous employees and the closure of some lodges along the river. |
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In case of retrenchment or disability due to accident, the premium is waived. |
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Lack of fuel and replacement parts has led to the reintroduction of animal traction for agriculture in a retrenchment to a preindustrial past. |
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These disputes of right involve matters relating to retrenchment, discrimination, and unlawful strikes. |
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Once things slowed down, retrenchment became a serious business just as health care and education expenses began to shoot upwards. |
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The salient point here is that the retrenchment was plainly not forced by tight money or credit. |
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Even in the midst of retrenchment, he recommends that companies forge ahead. |
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The pittance paid out in compensation for retrenchment has provided barely a few months subsistence, with former employees being thrown into abject poverty. |
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Call for a retrenchment of top executive wages so that profits can be dispersed as higher wages to the lower level workers. |
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These winds are whipped up, though, not by any want of retrenchment but by an unbending adhesion to the austerity dogma. |
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The most significant retrenchment programs on a per capita basis have been those of Greece. |
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The new government that took office on 9 December 2008 adopted a programme of significant fiscal retrenchment. |
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The programme update does not include measures for fiscal retrenchment in the years after the downturn. |
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Businesses that are poorly run or badly managed are regularly assessed by the market as part of a cycle of growth and retrenchment. |
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The majority of Latin American currencies depreciated sharply against the dollar, reflecting waning confidence and retrenchment from the region. |
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Currently, high government expenditures are filling the void left by the retrenchment of private sector activity in oil-producing states. |
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Absent a dramatic retrenchment in global capital mobility, it appears inevitable that the floating system will reassert its primacy. |
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Peace fostered the seeds of retrenchment for the victors in old ways and doctrines. |
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The Washington Post, after a difficult four-year retrenchment, has tapped Boston Globe Editor Marty Baron to run the newsroom. |
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Rep. Chris Van Hollen, the committee chairman, quickly denied that any sort of retrenchment was under way. |
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Modest initial growth was seriously undermined in 1994 by the 50 percent devaluation of the CFA franc, while privatization led to the retrenchment of 10,000 public workers. |
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The delayering thrust in organizations is said to occur due to technological change, increased global competition, and retrenchment during recessions. |
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You talked about excesses and imbalances and the need for retrenchment. |
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Indeed, it appears a major period of retrenchment is already in progress. |
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The stipend is equivalent to a dancer's monthly salary paid to board members to attend one-off meetings to discuss the dancers' possible retrenchment. |
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Where it is not a question of outright retrenchment, natural attrition is allowed to follow its relentless course and vacant positions are simply not being filled. |
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Municipality administrators who allow councillors to block the suspension of municipal services of defaulters can face legal action and retrenchment. |
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They argue that this will most likely lead to a retrenchment of orthodoxy. |
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A particularly salient feature is a territorial retrenchment of the north. |
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I think you're going to see a retrenchment of US embassies in Africa. |
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On some issues, such as Afghanistan, the retrenchment Republicans sound like the left wing of the Democratic Party. |
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Republican presidential candidates will have to decide which way to lean, toward muscular foreign policy or retrenchment. |
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This will especially be the case if they form part of a comprehensive reform strategy combining spending retrenchment with tax reductions and fiscal consolidation. |
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After a couple of years of retrenchment, the new airline schedules that start next weekend provide the globetrotter with more options than ever before. |
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It also suggested that the trends in child custody law reform are related to broader trends towards privatization of economic responsibility, including retrenchment of the welfare state. |
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In most cases staff retrenchment is an incomplete part of railways reform. |
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The belief here is that, unlike with other cuts, no pragmatic justification is required: a hard-grafting majority are angry with a workshy minority, and want retrenchment on principle. |
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Downturns are times of retrenchment, but they are also times of opportunity. |
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That, too, has resulted in a major retrenchment of unskilled labour. |
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Worried about the steady rate of retrenchment, it announced that employers who wish to downsize their workforce should lay off foreign workers first before they retrench locals. |
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The other reason is what I've already described as general retrenchment, on the part of the federal government in the last two decades, in being willing to get engaged in some of these issues. |
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The various Republican presidential candidates who have moved from Iowa to my home state of New Hampshire for this week's primary have collectively argued for European-style retrenchment – which simply hasn't worked. |
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These concerns spread to a much wider class of short-term financial instruments, leading to a slump in residential investment, tighter credit standards, a retrenchment in private consumption spending and slower job creation. |
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This shows how adaptable public services have been so far, and, the fact that, in historic terms, that when retrenchment began they were relatively fully funded. |
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In the present model, price-level targeting means that the central bank responds more sluggishly to fiscal retrenchment than it does when the inflation rate is targeted. |
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Sestanovich, describes foreign policy and diplomacy in a continuum cycling between periods of maximalism and retrenchment. |
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He knew that its abolition depended on a considerable retrenchment in government expenditure. |
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Private sector deleveraging must, therefore, be met with public sector releveraging in an attempt to cushion the negative growth impact of the private sector demand retrenchment. |
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The search for new forms of funding for education and training is set in a context where, even though they occupy a major position in public spending, there has been a certain retrenchment over the past few years. |
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Financial retrenchment can encourage us to reconsider established practices, and to reassess what we really value and what we really want to achieve. |
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Credit constraints, falling asset values and consumer retrenchment have triggered the broadest economic recession in the countries of the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development in more than half a century. |
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There must, however, be further retrenchment efforts in pension payments, which is underlined by the fact that the burden of levies in Germany has reached a relatively high level. |
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Since the retrenchment of a large number of crews due to inoperation of a large number of trawlers there has been the onslaught on the juvenile shrimps. |
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Historians can make a credible case that periods of maximalist over-commitment have done more damage to America's place in the world than periods of retrenchment. |
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