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308 Sentences With "be borne"

How to use be borne in a sentence? Find typical usage patterns (collocations)/phrases/context for "be borne" and check conjugation/comparative form for "be borne". Mastering all the usages of "be borne" from sentence examples published by news publications.

Forstall's prediction to the iPhone team would be borne out.
Would my concerns be borne out by the exhibition itself?
This impacts the market and should be borne in mind.
These costs will have to be borne by coming generations.
It was expected to be borne by about 500 companies.
The costs of the probe would be borne by Sports Direct.
Yet, that doesn't appear to be borne out by Shutterstock's financials.
"Those costs should be borne by the government," Mr. Solomon said.
The idea that the costs will be borne elsewhere is naïve.
That promise seemed to be borne out in the early years.
How might the mission be considered a burden to be borne?
May's Conservative Party, who believe costs should be borne by France.
Such fears appeared to be borne out after the mysterious Aug.
It remains to be seen if that will be borne out.
All of these assumptions may not be borne out in fact.
A greater burden would then be borne by the private sector.
Life on this planet suddenly seems too fragile to be borne.
Its losses will be borne chiefly by shareholders and creditors, not taxpayers.
Henderson's version of events appears to be borne out by e-mails.
If recent trends continue, their bills will increasingly be borne by taxpayers.
When the risks occur, the losses will be borne by the public.
Well, like panicky responses, the consequences won&apost be borne by the execs.
It just won't be borne on the back of humans, but on machines.
Such costs would need to be borne either by consumers or the company.
Such hopes have yet to be borne out in nominating contests so far.
Of course the burden of vigilance must not be borne by regulators alone.
But that sweet, sweet $2 discount won't be borne of Hulu's generosity and kindness.
The consequences of such a decision will be borne by future generations, he added.
And the message seems to be borne out in practice, most of the time.
But the cost of it will largely be borne by its property manager partners.
As the voting took place on Friday, those themes seemed to be borne out.
The cost of such a move would ultimately be borne by the American consumer.
The bulk of these cuts would likely be borne by farmers in the Imperial Valley.
The cost will be borne by British taxpayers, for whom the government promises more austerity.
But the costs of natural disasters will ultimately be borne by Democrats and Republicans alike.
Or, are you just a hypocrite who expects that price to be borne by others?
Here, the costs of treatment would be borne by a risk pool of multiple payers.
If Congress increased the reimbursement rate, any additional costs would be borne by the government.
It should be borne in mind that the CEO is the 'public face' of the firm.
Not even economists in sympathetic think-tanks believe that the Republican claims will be borne out.
Some even think that the additional price would eventually have to be borne by the customers.
But as Lord points out, that theory will need to be borne out in future work.
Those services average $7,000 per unit per year, to be borne by Los Angeles County government.
And unlike other threats, it can be borne of malicious intent or an act of nature.
And every single bail-out ultimately is gonna be borne by our children and our grandchildren.
The cost of the restoration will be borne primarily by taxpayers, not by the sugar industry.
But the responsibility for making the world safe and prosperous cannot be borne by America alone.
Any increased costs will be borne by the plans and their enrollees, not the federal budget.
All consequences entailed from this will be borne by the U.S. and the Republic of Korea.
Although the state can facilitate all these developments, the main responsibility must be borne by Muslims themselves.
Such costs might be borne, were it not for the dreadful political economy of climate-change mitigation.
Being a junkie is bad enough; being a junkie whore is a debasement that cannot be borne.
Sadly, the toll of federal inaction will be borne by those with little responsibility for their situation.
Financial contributions are said to be borne by the central government, state governments and the private sector.
Good and brave The three men's fears for their children appear to be borne out by recent events.
The cost, however, would be borne by consumers, and could come to as much as $12bn a year.
That cost may be borne by local authorities or providers, depending on how care contracts are drawn up.
The banks have said the cost of the tax will be borne by their customers and their shareholders.
This is — our reporting is going to be borne to be accurate and we're 100 percent behind it.
Agrawal offers a litany of denials and explanations, many or all of which may yet be borne out.
While national in scope, the carnage yielded by these cuts will largely be borne out in the states.
The risk in 2019, in the wake of the tragedy of Virginia Beach, would be borne by Republicans.
Chief executives know the cost of throwing millions of people off insurance will be borne by taxpayers and employers.
The paper did not give a cost for such an intervention, which Levermann suggested could be borne by governments.
"This governmentally mandated cost shifting means that their cost per transport must be borne by others," the letter reads.
The analysts also argued the corporate tax changes and financial transaction tax would overwhelmingly be borne by the wealthy.
The expense of installing new ventilation will be borne entirely by salon owners, Alphonso David, the counsel to Gov.
The Vientiane Times cited him as saying that all compensation would be "borne by the project developer 100 percent".
For much of Johnson's 55 years, his belief that he was inoculated from disaster appeared to be borne out.
Overall, TPC calculated that almost 93% of the tax increases would be borne by the top 20% of households.
Those losses would be borne by banks, bondholders, government agencies and people who own their homes outright, analysts said.
"Any financial loss that results from this fraudulent activity will be borne by the bank," he told BBC radio.
An ageing population and the need to decarbonise are heavy responsibilities that cannot be borne by ever fewer people.
Part of residential earthquake risks will be borne by cooperatives such as Zenkyoren (National Mutual Insurance Federation of Agricultural Cooperatives).
The irony is that for all the GOP's vindictiveness, the collateral damage would be borne disproportionately by Trump's own supporters.
These changes will also bring increased costs for things like insurance and labor, which will ultimately be borne by consumers.
The decision to end a sexual encounter because of premature orgasm can be borne of mental dismay or physical discomfort.
The tax is expected to be borne by about 500 companies, accounting for 3 percent of the city's private sector.
Many activists argue that the heaviest burden of fighting climate change should be borne by large institutions rather than individuals.
It is not a cross solely to be borne by the oppressed in order not to hurt the oppressor's feelings.
Some of this stuff around what they did with Google, that will be borne out this year, the Waymo lawsuit.
Some of those costs would be borne by consumers in the form of higher electricity, natural gas and gasoline prices.
The worst of the storm will be borne by Hong Kong and Macau, however, which are currently in Mangkhut's path.
It needs to be borne in mind that you may be the only person that individual has spoken to that day.
"The cost of tariffs imposed by the United States should be borne by the U.S. market and consumers," the association said.
Americans probably still would want their iPhones ... and in some sense the increase in prices would be borne by the importer.
Moreover, many of the proposed measures will be borne by end consumers, due to increased energy prices and costs of credit.
Thus, the brunt of this regressive policy will be borne on the backs of junior enlisted service members and their families.
For us, a cold snap is something to be borne, enjoyed and maybe even whined about as the kids get restless.
Lincoln was saying that sometimes the costs of repairing sin have to be borne generations after the sin was first committed.
The cost of the light-rail line — to be borne by local, state and federal taxpayers — has ballooned beyond $3 billion.
That's something that'll be borne out in the review, which you can bet we are very eager to get started on.
The worst of the storm will be borne by Hong Kong and Macau however, which are currently in the storm's path.
" The ministry warned the United States against acting arbitrarily and said that any consequences would "be borne by the United States.
That would seem to be borne out by the data showing progressively dwindling numbers of women in advanced roles at tech firms.
The real costs though would be borne by other companies, such as startups who rely on customer datasets to power artificial intelligence.
Instead, the study said consumers will absorb 55% of the cost and 40% will be borne by businesses that use digital platforms.
Expectations had hovered between positive and very positive, and these had hitherto appeared to be borne out by strong third-quarter earnings.
If Buffett's recommendation were implemented, the U.S. economy would decline, capital would move abroad and the costs would be borne by workers.
"The court is engaging in political brinkmanship with this ruling, and the cost will be borne by our children," the statement said.
Restructuring costs were largely undertaken to reduce the bank's structural cost base and are expected to continue to be borne into 2017.
"It is in the end a cost that would be borne by European pension funds and industrials, ultimately European households," Carney said.
The United States decided not to pursue reparations from Japan after the war, so the costs will be borne by American taxpayers.
Though many companies have tried to hold the line on price increases, the cost of higher tariffs will eventually be borne by consumers.
"Convenience costs, and going forward, that cost will no longer be borne by the driver," said TLC Chair Meera Joshi in a statement.
NAB Chief Financial Officer Gary Lennon said the tax was "poor policy", with the financial consequences to be borne by customers and shareholders.
Costs will be borne by the White House, the National Park Service, the U.S. Secret Service and other law-enforcement agencies, Block said.
During the meeting, Trump said he wanted to defeat ISIS but that the costs of stabilizing Syria must be borne by regional players.
We need to recognize and recompense those in the Yucca Mountain area for the risk that will eventually be borne by their descendants.
The solution to this inequity must be borne by all citizens — with the service members sharing in that responsibility, not going it alone.
They seem to be borne out of Trump's sense that everyone is always thinking about him and everyone is always out to get him.
"If somebody [on the Jets] takes a knee, that fine will be borne by the organization, by me, not the players," Christopher told Newsday.
"If somebody [on the Jets] takes a knee, that fine will be borne by the organization, by me, not the players," he told Newsday.
The paper did not give a cost for such an intervention, which Levermann suggested could be borne by governments intent on protecting coastal cities.
And let's be clear: The cost of detaining more people at the border and then deporting them will of course be borne by taxpayers.
"The burden could not be borne by the ... structure and triggered a building failure," said the report, which was reviewed by Reuters on Tuesday.
But selling the loans at a significant discount would force Italian banks to recognise losses, some of which could be borne by retail investors.
Insurance losses are likely to be borne by Lloyd's of London , a commercial insurance marketplace home to dozens of specialist insurers, industry sources say.
This disenfranchisement will be borne disproportionately by low-income individuals and racial minorities, due to longstanding and well-documented racial gaps in poverty and employment.
Increasingly, the costs of building and maintaining the grid will be borne by those without the resources to defect from it, namely lower-income homeowners.
It should be borne in mind that Arab Light isn't actually a light crude like Brent, having an API gravity of around 32-33 degrees.
They feel the consequences could be borne by people who protect Clinton and are first in line if someone makes an attempt on her life.
In addition, the real output lost during that decade would be $652 billion, the report states, half of which would be borne by small businesses.
Those costs will ultimately be borne by every person in the US, because we pay for those health plans through our insurance premiums and taxes.
Those costs will ultimately be borne by hotel and casino customers and I find no indication of a willingness to pay extra for those costs.
"It should be borne in mind that even the most playful cat will scratch if you provoke it beyond a certain point," the newspaper said.
Any breakthrough, Democrats have long believed, would be borne of demographics and triangulation: Focus on the cities, with their surging Hispanic populations and creeping cosmopolitanism.
The carbon dioxide we pump into our atmosphere, however, is expected to last for centuries, and its effects will be borne out over thousands of years.
That distinction should be borne in mind when trying to make sense of the first indictments to be handed down as part of the Mueller probe.
But some of the blame, political observers and the opposition leaders themselves say, has to be borne by the opposition, which is divided and largely ineffective.
Municipal debt crises would have adverse effects down the road, but those would be borne by future officeholders rather than those currently incurring too much debt.
These are costs that would normally be borne by private enterprise, but in Kansas City and in many other cities they can be imposed on taxpayers.
"At the time of the transfer being made to Nissan, it was made clear that any losses would be borne by Mr. Ghosn," Mr. Otsuru said.
We worry, too, about the threat of even more sabre-rattling and war waging, the burden of which will be borne by our children and grandchildren.
They are trying to generate public opposition by claiming that border adjustment will raise the cost of imports and that cost will be borne by consumers.
That view appeared to be borne out by the official data at the weekend which suggested that production expanded in December at a slightly more modest pace.
"It's going to make the car more costly, but this is a cost that can be borne by larger cars, more expensive cars," he said to Hungerford.
But any opioid liabilities, according to Allergan, would instead be borne by Israeli drug giant Teva, which acquired the Actavis generics business in 2016 for $40 billion.
We are a very capital-intensive sector, we require solid investments, long term investments, so all this should be borne in mind when any decisions are taken.
Today, a $10 tax would not influence oil consumption and would act as a simple tax increase to be borne disproportionately by lower to middle income consumers.
But now that the Trump administration is in the business of deregulating, agencies are ignoring the costs of deregulation, which will be borne by society at large.
The second reason that a voluntary restructuring seems implausible is the very size of the losses that are likely to have to be borne by the creditors.
There is a chilling Big Brother-like quality to this, with an enormous cost to be borne by the American taxpayer; for science; and for the children.
That loss will probably have to be borne by UEFA reducing the amount it pays to clubs competing in the Champions League and Europa League, Olsson said.
Every course seems to be borne on multiple beautiful plates, and the stemware is so light, you worry about crushing the wine glasses with just your fingers.
The eyes, not quite matched, are set far apart in a square and noble head, which feels too heavy with care to be borne upon his shoulders.
"The cost of failure could either be borne honestly by the defendant or they could be passed on banks, in particular a state-owned bank," he said.
"This disenfranchisement will be borne disproportionately by low-income individuals and racial minorities, due to longstanding and well-documented racial gaps in poverty and employment," the suit says.
And when the campaign pressured the Republican party to scrub its platform of criticism of the Kremlin and support for Ukraine, those concerns appeared to be borne out.
"As every business owner or employee knows, every extra cost needs to be borne by customers or shareholders, or a combination of both," Narev said in a statement.
But some of those claims about later health benefits for kids — like higher IQ, lower obesity, less asthma — don't seem to be borne out in the best data.
Doing so would expand Medicaid to 4.5 million people in those states alone, and at least 90 percent of the costs would be borne by the federal government.
Since the migrant crisis started, it has been clear that this system is inadequate, and that some of the burden must be borne by Europe's wealthy northern states.
That seemed to be borne out last month when the tribunal freed Jésus Santrich, a FARC commander whom American authorities accuse of trafficking cocaine after the peace deal.
For each additional measure of monetary stimulus there is an equal or greater cost to be borne elsewhere in the economy - banks, insurers and savers the obvious losers.
The cost of security, including snipers on rooftops and a counter-UAV system, will top $40 million, Bridebook estimates, and is expected to be borne largely by taxpayers.
He says the burden of getting to Mars shouldn't be borne by Elon Musk's SpaceX alone and says it will fundamentally change the way humans think about existence.
Before a study can begin, scientists and institutional oversight bodies weigh the anticipated benefits of the research against the potential costs that may be borne by the animals.
"In Singapore, leadership is a responsibility to be borne, not a position to be sought," he said, citing a comment previously made by Transport Minister Khaw Boon Wan.
All costs would be borne by the Malaysian government, Lai said, but the search must be successfully completed within 90 days for the company to claim its reward.
I have repeated a mantra that pitching 100 investors per round is not uncommon for many startups, and that seems to be borne out here in the data.
" In one appearance, Mr. Pompeo said the costs of any attacks by Iran or its partners on American interests would "be borne by Iran and its leadership itself.
Carney highlighted encouraging signs for the economy in early 2020, but said the BoE was waiting to see if this would be borne out in hard economic data.
The meeting was a giant green light for an industry and the multitrillion-dollar investment it will represent, the cost largely to be borne by consumers and government.
No doubt too there must be debate concerning the amount of subsidization to be borne by taxpayers, but that debate needs to be informed by transparent cost information.
"Funds for the CVR search will be borne by Lion Air which has signed a contract for a ship from a Singaporean company," a finance ministry spokesman told Reuters.
Much of the cost of the extra spending or revenue losses would have to be borne by the government that will take charge after the election due by May.
The most crucial question for Takata, specialists say, is how much of the recall costs will ultimately be borne by its automaker customers, rather than by the company itself.
Mr. Zuma said that the upgrades, including a swimming pool and chicken coop, were necessary to ensure his safety and that the costs should therefore be borne by taxpayers.
Carney pointed to encouraging signs for the economy in early 2020 but said the BoE was waiting to see if this would be borne out in hard economic data.
This would ultimately discourage investments in infrastructure and increase costs that will be borne disproportionately by small businesses and low or fixed-income households that can least afford it.
But such costs, over time, would "pale in comparison to the increasing costs of climate impacts, the brunt of which would be borne by developing countries," the U.N. agency noted.
"This proposal would kick 600,000 Washingtonians off Medicaid unless the state can come up with $1.3 billion, a burden that would be borne entirely by the state's taxpayers," Washington Gov.
State officials hope the Federal Emergency Management Agency will foot up to 222 percent of the repair bill, while the rest would likely be borne by State Water Project customers.
Compliance with the mandate will also inflict an estimated $3.5 billion in financial costs on commuter railroads, which must be borne by the state and local governments that own them.
You want to see unfamiliar heads, not necessarily with bodies attached; it may be because we don't recognize the victims, indeed, that all the chopping and chewing can be borne.
That view appeared to be borne out by a survey from payments company Visa which found British shoppers reined in their spending by the most in four years in October.
The actuarial tables were not always to be trusted and, even if the math were to be borne out, I would not trade away a single one of these days.
Cranking tariffs up or down may offer politicians the temporary sense that they can control foreign competition, but the costs of protection will be borne elsewhere in the economy, largely unseen.
The UK site, whose cost will be borne by Polestar, will be the marquee's first independent facility, with the company having so far relied on Volvo for its R&D capacity.
If Mr Iger wants to safeguard Disney's acquisition of the Fox assets, he can ask Fox to increase its offer for Sky, a cost that would eventually be borne by Disney.
"Tighter financial conditions could lead to distress" for weaker firms, the IMF said, noting that resulting losses would be borne by banks, life insurers, mutual funds, pension funds, and overseas institutions.
While such thinking is largely rooted in the mid-century psychoanalysis boom, the intuition is also beginning to be borne out in clinical research trials that use psychedelics to facilitate therapy.
But when he speaks about Mr. Cuomo, he does so with a disdain that seems to be borne as much out of his feelings about the governor's personality as his politics.
"(This is) because the predicted economic benefits would accrue to the present generation but the long-term environmental, heritage and agricultural costs will be borne by the future generations," it ruled.
The brunt of the impact is expected to be borne by Chinese airlines that service Wuhan, the epicenter of the outbreak — particularly those like China Southern, China Eastern, and Air China.
The economic burden of refugees cannot be borne by one nation alone; it should be the responsibility of the international community, led by organizations like the U.N. High Commissioner for Refugees.
"If Donald Tusk doesn't want to go down as Mr No Deal then I hope that point will be borne in mind by him, too," Johnson said on his flight to France.
The CC9 phones are the first to be borne out of Xiaomi's recent acquisition of selfie tech company Meitu's hardware assets, which probably explains why the Mimoji feature expansion is happening now.
"If Donald Tusk doesn't want to go down as Mr No Deal then I hope that point will be borne in mind by him too," Johnson said on his flight to France.
Since, under the Republican proposals, many insurance plans would not cover prescription drugs, mental health care, or maternity care, costs for these services would be borne entirely out of pocket by consumers.
"But if they continue to move on with this deployment, there will be consequences -- and those consequence will be borne by the Americans and ROK (Republic of Korea)," he warned, without elaborating.
Textbook economics, however, says that currency values would adjust to offset this and the true cost would be borne by American citizens who own a lot of assets denominated in foreign currencies.
The United Nations estimates that adapting to climate change could cost $500 billion yearly by 2050 — a price tag that would be borne by everyone, including governments, the private sector and citizens.
Gasoline sulfur level cuts, a cost that will be borne largely by the government due to capped prices for the fuel, will start in October, moving to 2.83 ppm from 1,000 ppm.
But, like Germany, the Italian election is expected to produce a hung parliament where no one party gains a majority, if consistent voter polls are to be borne out in the vote.
Most of the excess mortality will be borne by those closest to the plants, so it's hardly surprising that the Trump administration doesn't appear particularly concerned with excess deaths among this demographic.
Transurban said that the total costs of the project would be about A$5.5 billion, of which the company would contribute A$4.0 billion with the rest to be borne by the state.
In the meantime, rich people buying special treatment from a government that fails to provide basic services at every level and ultimately eluding justice doesn't require a conspiracy theory to be borne out.
Politicians are divided on how much of disaster costs should be borne by everyone and how much should fall on the shoulders of those living in hazardous areas or communities making building decisions.
Riyadh has indicated that much of the huge cost of the zone will be borne by the Saudi government, but a large, though undisclosed, portion would come from domestic and international private investors.
Whatever President Donald Trump might say, the burden of his planned tariffs on Mexico will be borne by Americans — as much as $210 per household, according to a group of economists Vox surveyed.
It is likely that given its vast resources Qatar will be able to handle strains on supplies of food and other goods, but at a cost, which might eventually be borne by the government.
But the highest tolls of this outage will be borne by the most vulnerable: People who depend on medical equipment at home, whose jobs will be closed, and who face food insecurity without refrigeration.
That cost would be borne by the country's banking system, whose net interest margins are "already suffering" as a result of negative interest rates being set for a prolonged period of time, she added.
Standard & Poor's, a credit-rating agency, says the facility's closure could trim pre-tax earnings by up to $250m (about half of the pain would be borne by outside investors in the Indian entity).
Whether those objections will be borne out by a spike in bison hijinx in the coming years remains to be seen, but for now, the new settlers are safely back home on the range.
Baker said that an FTT could raise more than $85033 billion a year and said that the full amount of the tax would be borne by the financial industry rather than individual stock holders.
Creating a new air traffic control regulator outside of the FAA would be a risky and expensive undertaking, the consequences and costs of which would be borne by American taxpayers and the traveling public.
If rumors of movement toward a settlement should be borne out, the global economy should be ready to begin an upswing from short of the 2 percent growth barrier that generally denotes a recession.
"We're talking about a loss that's going to be borne by United States taxpayers," said Amine Ouazad, a professor in the department of applied economics at HEC Montreal and one of the paper's authors.
"We're talking about a loss that's going to be borne by United States taxpayers," said Amine Ouazad, a professor in the department of applied economics at HEC Montreal and one of the paper's authors.
Not only will most of the cost and risk be borne by the private partner, the public entity will also not have to worry about maintenance or upgrades over the term of the agreement.
Finally, a prize regime would place the costs of drug innovation on budget, where they would be borne by all taxpayers rather than just by consumers who happen to need drugs (and their insurers).
He added that the SkinGun technology is an improvement on current stem cell research, though the results "need to be borne out in further studies" before it can be embraced by the burn center community.
Brown and other trade experts point out that the brunt of this will be borne by lower-income families, since poorer people spend a greater percentage of their income on goods than their wealthier peers.
"While punitive measures against a corporation may ultimately be borne by its shareholders, a finding that those measures targeted shareholders directly is a wholly different matter," Chief Judge Sharon Prost wrote for the appeals court.
"It is considered an illegal operation that carries legal consequences which will be borne by the entities carrying out this operation," al-Bishri was cited as saying by Sudan's state news agency SUNA on Wednesday.
"It is considered an illegal operation that carries legal consequences which will be borne by the entities carrying out this operation," al-Bishri was quoted as saying by Sudan's state news agency SUNA on Wednesday.
The mayor's office said the flights were paid for by JetBlue and the rest of the trip's $2,500 cost — for her, Deputy Mayor Herminia Palacio and six staff members — would be borne by the city.
The report also outlined the costs to industry: $23 million in annual compliance costs for the coal industry as a whole, of which roughly half was expected to be borne by mining operations in Appalachia.
But Eddy's conceptual underpinnings are what give her work real impact and resonance, particularly for any viewer who notices the limitations of biological replication, in favor of savoring the fruits that may be borne of reinterpretation.
"While punitive measures against a corporation may ultimately be borne by its shareholders, a finding that those measures targeted shareholders directly is a wholly different matter," Chief Judge Sharon Prost wrote for a three-judge panel.
The direct cost of the storm's impact is still unknown, and the global web of the industry's re-insurance ties means that some of the fallout might eventually be borne by insurers far from the scene.
But given that unpredictability is driven in large part as a response to changing business conditions, imposing a uniform federal policy on all employers will hurt businesses, but the costs will also be borne by workers.
Jon Abt, co-president of retailer Abt Electronics, said the price of washers made outside the United States may increase only by about $50 as he expected the tariff to be borne by manufacturers rather than consumers.
"A lingering concern is that supply-side constraints pose a risk to the sector's ability to kick on," Smith said, adding that huge delivery delays would inevitably be borne out by sustained upward pressure on input costs.
As for Browder's assertion that Veselnitskaya is fixated on him and the Magnitsky Act, this appears to be borne out by notes taken at her meeting with the Trump camp by embattled former campaign chief Paul Manafort.
Without carefully designed policies, the losses would be borne by the wrong people, those who cannot realistically hope to get new jobs for as long as restrictions on activity close off the path to national economic expansion.
While Airbnb is refunding the fees it charged hosts on cancelled reservations, it's not offering to reimburse them for their lost booking revenue, meaning the financial burden of the cancellations will largely be borne by property managers.
"We feel highly confident that the losses that American Airlines have incurred won't be incurred by American shareholders, but will be borne by the Boeing shareholders," American CEO Doug Parker said on an earnings call in October.
It'll allow us to move faster, with more innovation, better consumer offerings, more different price points, more effective advertising, and people are going to see that more of the cost of content can be borne by advertising.
In the case of quick-service chains, the added labor expenses and the costs of the automation technology such as ordering kiosks might be borne by the fast-food franchisees although sometimes the franchisor helps, the analyst said.
The human and economic costs compel us to act: if we fail to do so, the brunt of these will be borne by our children and grandchildren, and felt most keenly in the poorest parts of the world.
The Jets chairman, Christopher Johnson, says that he&aposs going -- this is his take on it, that if somebody on the Jets takes a knee, that fine will be borne by the organization, by me, not the players.
Lower Saxony, home to Volkswagen, Europe's biggest carmaker, suggested vehicle owners should receive up to 2,000 euros in incentives and tax breaks to fund retrofits, the cost of which should be borne by manufacturers and the federal government.
Part of the unions' calculus is that the costs of such targeted higher minimum wages, especially in the travel and hospitality industries, will primarily be borne by visitors and affluent local residents, rather than those with lower incomes.
The agreement's Article V says the United States will bear all costs for U.S. troops' maintenance, except those to be borne by South Korea, which included furnishing and compensating for "all facilities and areas and rights of way".
Chinese ports can refuse discharge of some shipments and it's up to the importer to find another port but costs due to delays would be borne by the importer, said a shipping manager for a Chinese trading firm.
His foreign minister, Nikos Kotzias, told his Turkish counterpart on Saturday it would be "borne very seriously in mind" by authorities that the arrested stand accused in their country of violating constitutional legality and attempting to overthrow democracy.
Whether their plan is effective or not will be borne out in how much better or worse its recommendations are for individual users, so keep an eye on that home page and see if the hit rate goes up.
MI The government aims to list the state railway in 2016 but the company first had to be put in shape for a listing and market conditions needed to be borne in mind, Treasury deputy minister Enrico Morando said.
BERLIN, June 29 (Reuters) - Significant costs are expected to be incurred from new security measures on flights to the United States, which will likely be borne by airports, airlines and passengers, European airports association ACI Europe said on Thursday.
"The costs of these $890 billion in burdens must be borne by someone, and it is the American people who inevitably end up paying for these rules in some form," said Sam Batkins, director of regulatory policy at AAF.
This is separate from the compensation fund approved last week, which includes more than $10 billion in costs to be borne by customers in the form of a levy on electricity bills for the next decade and a half.
But no matter where the new data centers are built, the basic transmission infrastructure will need significant upgrades to cope with the expected growth — and the cost of this won't be borne by Apple or Amazon but by Irish taxpayers.
States will have to pick up some of the increased Medicaid costs, while much of the cost of providing care for the low-income Americans who lose coverage will be borne by health care providers as bad debt and uncompensated care.
Crucially, Russia agreed to cut output by up to 300,000 bpd in the first half of 603, its first joint action with OPEC since 2001, and another 300,000 bpd in cuts are to be borne by other non-OPEC producing nations.
There is "many a slip between the cup and the lip" and, while you've shown promise, there is no guarantee your new thesis will be borne out by the evidence — and that risk needs to be reflected in the price.
Crucially, Russia agreed to cut output by up to 300,000 bpd in the first half of 2017, its first joint action with OPEC since 2001, and another 603,000 bpd in cuts are to be borne by other non-OPEC producing nations.
The SPD's Schulze said a deal must include hardware upgrades and that the entire cost should be borne by the industry: "The car industry caused the problem, and now they have to fix it," she told SWR Radio in an interview.
If the reverse is true – if Chinese consumers cannot easily substitute away from a particular product, making them less responsive to changes in prices than U.S. producers – then most of the cost of the tariff will be borne by Chinese consumers.
SEOUL (Reuters) - The 2800-year security alliance between the United States and South Korea is under fresh focus as Washington seeks a sharply higher share of cost to be borne by Seoul for hosting U.S. troops as deterrence against North Korea.
The Venezuelan refugee crisis has taken on global proportions, and its costs should not be borne by its regional neighbors alone: The international community has a responsibility to protect the world's migrants and refugees and support the countries that assist them.
The costs of the law will be borne by courts, which are an awkward place to ascertain Saudi responsibility for 9/11, and especially the president, who will have to deal with the diplomatic fallout with Saudi Arabia and other nations.
The cost of subsidizing those with pre-existing conditions would be borne by taxpayers in general, rather than focused narrowly in the premiums of those purchasing plans on the individual market – allowing that insurance market to be restored to health.
But he knew that the concentration of greenhouse gases in the atmosphere was increasing, and he knew that its heaviest consequences — more extreme droughts, floods, fires and storms — would be borne by his children's generation and those that came after it.
Financial contributions to the plan are set to be borne by the central government, state governments, and the private sector, and would be initially focused on projects in sectors such as power, railways, urban development, education and health, local media reported.
Pfaff proposes guidelines that would curb overaggressive charging, and better funding for public defenders; he likes the idea that the costs of housing prisoners would be borne in part by the D.A.'s county budget, not just by the state budget.
Instead, as directed with Olympian calm by Colette Robert, the production takes on cumulative power in its steady, cleareyed depiction of a time when it was a given that pain would be borne uncomplainingly by human beings regarded as chattel.
"The scale, cost, and complexity of the facilities required to make progress on the frontiers of many of the current generation of science questions can no longer be borne by a single nation," says Marcia McNutt, president of the National Academy of Sciences.
This is a cost that must be borne from the outset by the platform: With the exception of certain situations where they can punt (definitions of hate speech or groups for instance), they are responsible for setting the rules on their own turf.
Whether by invading, bombing or arming dubious international fighters about whom we know little, our activist foreign policy keeps creating vacuums that are filled by our enemies or assuming burdens that should not be borne by our taxpayers or brave service members.
"Although the absence of evidence of sauropods in these southeast Australian sediments is not necessarily evidence of their genuine absence, it should be borne in mind that no sauropods are yet known from palaeolatitudes higher than 66° in either hemisphere," Poropat noted.
This prospect would be borne out if "Orangutan" (2017, 11 x 14 inches) were a mirror instead of a canvas — not inconceivable, given its slightly amused subject's position in space, which is roughly equal to the viewing distance the painting calls for.
The first of these is balance: balance between interests and values, between priorities at home and abroad, between declared goals in different parts of the world, and between how much America should take on and how much should be borne by allies.
As for the costs, they will largely be borne by firms that have something to hide rather than firms that recognize that they have good systems in place to protect workers and that reporting the occasional injury is not a horrible thing.
"I am concerned that a project that the President stated would be paid for by Mexico will now be borne by military servicemembers and their families, as they will be forced to remain in 'poor' or 'failing' conditions," Kaine said in the letter.
"I am concerned that a project that the President stated would be paid for by Mexico will now be borne by military servicemembers and their families, as they will be forced to remain in 'poor' or 'failing' conditions," Kaine said in the letter.
"Make no bones about it: No matter how they try to move a shell game around, the cost will be borne as another mandatory spending program in Washington," said Representative Rodney Davis of Illinois, the ranking Republican on the House Administration Committee.
These costs alone would represent 46 percent to 134 percent of DIRECTV Now's $35 retail price, against which third parties will be competing for AT&T Mobility customers, and would be borne in addition to all other costs of providing service by the unaffiliated provider.
But to help replace an estimated $11 trillion in health care spending that would be borne by American households over a decade — on premiums, deductibles and other out-of-pocket costs — Ms. Warren lays out a series of new taxes on corporations and wealthy people.
Given that the planet is overpopulated, we are told, "the one practical, humane, and lasting solution to humanity's greatest problem" is to give some of those humans—volunteers only—such a magical zapping that an entire family can be borne around in a cat basket.
If a large increase in investment coincides with a small increase in wage rates, then the benefits of the tax cuts will still accrue primarily to business owners, and the promises made about the benefits of the tax cut will not be borne out.
Paul Achleitner, the Deutsche Bank chairman, said that its supervisory board had been holding "very detailed and extensive discussions about whether and to what extent personal or collective responsibility for past misconduct" should be borne by members of its management board at the time.
Mr. Holtz said he predicted that his confidence in the old investment strategy would be borne out on Tuesday, when he plans to reveal the fund's average annual return from 1993 to the present, a period that includes the biggest bull market in American history.
But most economists expect the BoE will keep rates on hold until 2019 as the country exits the EU. Economists said Tuesday's figures from the CBI looked upbeat but warned that improvements in the survey have yet to be borne out by official data.
As with many efforts to deregulate environmental and species protections, the benefits of a weakened ESA will flow to a limited number of individuals, whereas the costs will be borne by the broader American public as we lose iconic species and the healthy environments that sustain them.
The tweets come after top White House economic adviser Larry KudlowLawrence (Larry) Alan KudlowMORE on Sunday contradicted Trump, saying China isn't paying tariffs on goods going into U.S. Many Democrats have criticized Trump's reliance on tariffs and said their costs will be borne by farmers, not China.
"The damages will be borne by creditors and German taxpayers, who will see nothing of the Air Berlin bridging loan in the amount of 150 million euros," said Hans Michelbach, deputy leader of the Bavarian CSU party in parliament and financial spokesman for the conservative bloc.
Many lawyers, particularly in the well-financed realm of white-collar criminal defense, regarded the case as a flagrant instance of government overreach: the problem with convicting a company was that it could have "collateral consequences" that would be borne by employees, shareholders, and other innocent parties.
This explanation for the delayed aid doesn't seem to be borne out by the evidence, though: Trump's own officials, including acting Chief of Staff Mick Mulvaney and Ambassador to the EU Gordon Sondland, have said it was for other reasons, involving either Democrats or the Bidens.
"Nearly all of the loan modifications SPS will complete for credit will be performed on loans owned by third parties, and to the extent those modifications result in any loss, it will be borne by the owner of the loan, and not Credit Suisse," the report noted.
That sense appeared to be borne out in a Baruch College/NY1 poll released on Thursday in which about a third of respondents blamed the mayor for subway problems, while roughly the same percentage blamed the governor and a third were unsure of who to blame.
It could cost up to 1.5 trillion yuan ($220 billion) between 2019 and 2025, according to consultancy EY. Much of that is likely to be borne by the biggest of the three, the $200 billion China Mobile, usually called on to do the heaviest lifting for national service projects.
"While there is little doubt that the deal is a net positive for the economy, the more optimistic estimates of its impact on the economy in the near term are unlikely to be borne out," said Adam Collins, Latin America economist at Capital Economics in a research note.
"While there is little doubt the deal is a net positive for the economy, the more optimistic estimates of its impact on the economy in the near-term are unlikely to be borne out," Adam Collins, Latin America economist at Capital Economics, said in a report last week.
Under the legislation passed last week, if the Public Utilities Commission determines that it is reasonable to do so, the costs arising from the utility's liability — estimated at $218 billion for the 26 fires, more than eight times its profit that year — could be borne by its customers.
But Mr Weitzman assumed that predicting the reaction of prices to a regulated quantity, and vice versa, is partly guesswork (an assumption that would be borne out, decades later, when the prices of carbon permits in the European Union's emissions-trading scheme collapsed unexpectedly after the financial crisis).
In "The Mannequin Makers," Cliff makes real a desolate, windswept country at the turn of the early 20th century and beyond, a place populated by men and women who have learned that life is hard, and that it can be borne only by keeping one's feelings carefully trammeled.
" The Greek Foreign Ministry said the asylum request would be examined on the basis of "the provisions of Greek and international law," but "it will be borne very seriously in mind that the arrested parties stand accused in their country of violating constitutional legality and attempting to overthrow democracy.
In July, Stan Wise, the chairman of the commission, argued that Georgia may be better positioned to finish its reactors than South Carolina, in part because costs would be borne by a broader base of customers: 2.4 million for Georgia Power compared with 700,000 for South Carolina Electric & Gas.
Banks have opposed the tax announced in the federal budget on May 8, with Commonwealth Bank of Australia (CBA), Westpac Banking Corp, National Australia Bank Ltd (NAB) and Australia and New Zealand Banking Group Ltd (ANZ) now putting a number on costs they say will be borne by customers and shareholders.
"What it allows us to do is just move faster, with more innovation, better consumer offerings, more different price points, more effective advertising, and therefore people are going to see that more of the cost of content can be borne by advertising," Time Warner Chief Jeff Bewkes told CNN on Monday.
A Senate Finance Committee report on the 1942 tax bill justifies the medical deduction as follows: This allowance is recommended in consideration of the heavy tax burden that must be borne by individuals during the existing emergency and of the desirability of maintaining the present high level of public health and morale.
"If there's some golden goose that proves the investment strategy is worthwhile — whether that's content, fulfillment, Prime membership, better same-day delivery capabilities — any of those will be borne out as positives for Amazon," said Daniel Kurnos, internet, media and communications analyst at the Benchmark Co. Amazon is slated to report first-quarter earnings Thursday afternoon.
Assuredly, the rap subgenre had made its share of Billboard gains previously, particularly on specialized charts, but getting a song as uncompromising as this to No. 1 suggested a watershed moment for trap and hip-hop at large, one that would be borne out over the months to come with scores of rap singles making it of the Billboard singles chart.
As she recites her woes in a group-therapy session for the bereaved, or raves with indignation in front of Peter and Steve, tumbling over her words ("All I get back is that fucking face on your face"), the effect verges on the comic, and some of "Hereditary" can best be borne, or relieved, by means of a jittery laugh.
The admission of vast numbers of unskilled people who do not speak English is a financial burden that will be borne by the poor, and a financial gift to the wealthy whose houses are cleaned by the migrants and whose lawns are mowed by the migrants and who own interests in industries that profit from the cheap labor of migrants.
"China will have to take necessary counter-measures," a spokesperson for China's Ministry of Commerce said in a statement, adding that "all the consequences will be borne by the US." Beijing may be able to cope with the fallout from an escalating fight between the world's two biggest economics, but it faces more constraints than Washington and will have to calibrate retaliation carefully.
Put another way, if the Constitution forbids a combination of state and local federal tax levies in excess of 100 percent of income — which many conservatives and some liberals would agree it does — it would be the classic conservative position that the burden of this limit must be borne by the federal government, while many liberals might be inclined to limit state power.
"If the proposed rules are adopted, proxy advisers would face the prospect of suits against them by issuers that are displeased with their recommendation, and this prospect would operate to discourage recommendations that are unfavorable to managers and to impose costs that would be borne by investors," said Lucian Bebchuk, a law school professor who directs a program on corporate governance.
A nuanced discussion of mental health might include the fact that even within the diagnosis of depression there are degrees of severity, that other illnesses like psychosis deserve recognition, that there is an entire dimension of human suffering in the form of personality vulnerabilities and personality disorders that can be borne of trauma and that need much greater understanding and discussion.
The Internal Revenue Code has also always required by statute that 501(c)(4) activities and expenditures be devoted exclusively to various "social welfare" activities, including the advocacy of civil rights, civil liberties, environmental issues and so on, and that gifts in excess of the annual federal gift tax exemption amount (now $14,000) be subject to a gift tax, to be borne by the donor.
To my eye, what the release of the transcript of the Ukraine call did is the exact opposite of what Trump claimed it did: It made the whistleblower seem all the more credible Now, to be clear: Simply because one piece of the whistleblower complaint seems to be borne out by what we know actually happened doesn't mean the entire report is as accurate.
" "They both know what a formal demarche would mean: an irreversible step that neither of them is prepared to take," Teebs said of former London mayor Boris Johnson and parliament member Michael Gove, adding, "All that remains is for someone to have the guts to stand up and say that Brexit is unachievable in reality without an enormous amount of pain and destruction, that cannot be borne.
"Given the size of Russia's economy, its interconnectedness and prevalence in global asset markets, and the likely over-compliance by global firms to U.S. sanctions, the magnitude and scope of consequences from expanding sanctions to sovereign debt and derivatives is uncertain and the effects could be borne by both the Russian Federation and U.S. investors and businesses," said the report, which was submitted to Congress on Monday.
Tariffs Airbus ceo says working to secure higher rates of production Airbus cfo says decision to maintain ebit target while cutting deliveries reflects strong profitability on a320-neo family aircraft Airbus ceo says says hard to increase speed of a321 acf assembly line due to complexity Airbus ceo says says tariffs are to be paid by airlines, working to find solutions Airbus ceo says late in reaching a320-family production rate of 60/mth in 2020, reaffirms goal of 63/mth in 2021 Airbus ceo says tariffs are import duties to be borne by airlines, but trying to ease them on case by case basis Airbus cfo says made very good progress on a350 profitability Airbus ceo says demand shifting from simple a320 to more complex a321, leading to transformation of production system Airbus ceo says will have richer mix of more complex a321 aircraft in 2021 (Reporting by Tim Hepher)

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