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Search results 3171 - 3180 of 5329 matching essays
- 3171: Ben and Jerry's
- ... public in 1995 to raise additional capital to finance growth. (Most people thought it wouldn’t be profitable). The ability to set itself apart from the rest of the industry by producing ice cream with big chucks and lots of add-ins. Publicity surrounding social events to broadened consumer awareness of the company’s product and to give the company a certain mystique. 2. Ability to interest buyer’s by offering ...
- 3172: The Bank of Montreal
- ... and significant presence in the United States and the world markets. (http://www.bmo.com) "Matthew Barrett, the chairman of the Bank of Montreal intends not only to move his bank a head of other Big Five, but to show that Canada’s financial service industries can be globally competitive and become one of the country’s strategic assets in world trade." (Maclean’s,Vol.109, No.44, October, 1997. p ...
- 3173: Bonds and The Bond Market
- ... and the introduction of fees for different privileges. Failure to pay either the interest or the principal amount of a municipal bond may be followed by legal action against the issuer of the bond. A big advantage of purchasing municipal bonds is that the interest one earns is tax-free, and can therefore provide you with a tax-sheltered means of income. As well, municipal bonds are more stable than other ...
- 3174: Genetech
- ... When the company first started, there were not as many investors willing to take the risk of investing in such a new and unpredictable field. There were few willing to take chance, but not a big one. The last thing I have to say about Genentech’s financial situation is that it can only get better. Genentech’s stock information can be interpreted as generally steady (refer to Stock Graph). The ...
- 3175: Monopolization And Its Implication On A World Scale
- ... the hands of an oligarchy is an apparently unacknowledged destruction of the economy. In the imperialist nations (USA, Canada, Germany, Japan) a whole leferature has sprung up in support of what is proudly called the "big business." The job of the economists, publishing this garbage, is not to shed light on the debilitating methods of imperialism but to turn it into an act of skill and wit (which it uncontestably is ...
- 3176: The Asian Financial Crisis
- ... caused the Pentagon to give the planes to the Marine Corps, which mean they will be paid for by taxpayers. The crisis has caused the developing world’s biggest arms buyers to delay or cancel big weapons purchases from the US (the world’s #1 arms exporter) and Asian Airlines have canceled jet orders. This will hurt companies like Lockheed Martin, Raytheon Systems and Boeing. The US trade deficit surged to ...
- 3177: Looking Ahead: The Future Of Post Keynesian Economics
- ... are the fruits of risk, uncertainty, and ignorance. It is because particular individuals, fortunate in situation or in abilities, are able to take advantage of uncertainty and ignorance, and also because for the same reason big business is often a lottery, that great inequalities of wealth come about; and these same factors are also the cause of the Unemployment of Labour, or the disappointment of reasonable business expectations, and of the ...
- 3178: Falstaff Beer
- ... own malt and sold malt to other brewers. Alvin Griesedieck died in 1961, leaving his son, Joseph II in charge.About this time Falstaff opened a animal feed operation, the feed operation was never a big sucess. In 1965 Falstaff bought the Narragantt Brewing Co. of Cranston, RI. this was a diaster. The state of Rhode Island sued Falstaff for anti trust violations and it went all the way to the ...
- 3179: Corporate Welfare
- Corporate Welfare Welfare is a big part of tadays society and economy. The question of whether there is too much welfare or whether there is too little. For example President Clinton had pledged to end welfare as we know it while ...
- 3180: The Economic Growth of Asia
- ... of agricultural products where 60% of its food is imported. (Rich 192). If counted based on efficiency however, per unit of land, Japan is the most efficient in the world. Greater prosperity lead to a big demand for consumer goods. Western style clothing became very common and wheat products, meat and vegetables took the place of rice in many Japanese dishes. Scotch whiskey was now drunk in place of the traditional ...
Search results 3171 - 3180 of 5329 matching essays
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