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35 Sentences With "capitalistic system"

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

In a capitalistic system, maximizing profits is the overarching concern.
We are all part of this huge global economic capitalistic system.
I think we need to have a capitalistic system that actually works.
And you have it in a capitalistic system, you have these cycles.
"capitalistic system"—one of several weaselly ways the authors decline to say
Without wading directly into the political debate, Dimon defended the capitalistic system.
A capitalistic system cannot exist if government is at war with business.
This is a capitalistic system of embedding the real cost of externalities of this product.
Any enterprise in a capitalistic system still has to have enough money to keep the company alive.
As a result, I am disturbed by the unequal distribution of wealth that has resulted from our capitalistic system.
Bloomberg added that the US shouldn't be embarrassed over its capitalistic system, contrasting the success of American capitalism with the failed system in Venezuela.
Brexit is a huge boon for Trump and a wake-up call to Hillary that ordinary people are sick and tired of being lied to and cheated by the crony capitalistic system.
The designation of serious losers has resulted in a lack of confidence in the capitalistic system that has so miraculously served our society by lifting the global standard of living to spectacular levels.
To many, the agricultural subsidy came as somewhat of a random solution to a problem that really should not exist, nor does it provide a solution most U.S. farmers or a capitalistic system want.
In an essay published by The New York Times on October 14, Benioff advocates for a new capitalistic system that is better equipped to combat inequality and writes that "higher taxes on the wealthiest among us" could pay for it.
This, of course, in spite of the fact that he still has investments in oil and gas companies, not to mention an undying faith in the consumerist capitalistic system that led the planet to the point of collapse in the first place.
It is beginning to look, however, like any other capitalistic system that has a cyclic pattern to it: a period of excess borrowing, and construction beyond reasonable demands, followed by years of explosive GDP growth as well as financial and currency manipulation.
Working with youth was the best job I'd ever had, but by funding many of these organizations, the federal government is able to monitor, derail, and disrupt social justice movements by recruiting activists into career-based models of "activism" that replicate the same capitalistic system that oppresses us to begin with.
The early capitalistic system of wage labour should slowly be transformed into New Work. This New Work should consist of three parts: # A third gainful employment # A third High-Tech-Self-Providing ('self-sufficiency') and smart consumption # A third of work that you really, really _want_.
We do not need anybody who explains the world to us; we rather want to play an active role in the development of our consumer products. 26\. We ask to be involved and to co-design something actively instead of consuming passively. 27\. Social networks are about to break up the structures of our capitalistic system step by step. 28\. CEOs and managers underestimate the political power of social affairs of in the internet. 29\.
Karl Marx claimed that recurrent business cycle crises were an inevitable result of the operations of the capitalistic system. In this view, all that the government can do is to change the timing of economic crises. The crisis could also show up in a different form, for example as severe inflation or a steadily increasing government deficit. Worse, by delaying a crisis, government policy is seen as making it more dramatic and thus more painful.
The message of the story has been described as politically right-wing. Ed Natcher of Prism Comics wrote that Barks "wrote from a socio-economic viewpoint that was somewhat to the right of Ayn Rand" and that the story could make "any Bush blush with envy at its conservative credentials". Donaldist Jon Gisle called the story "a classic defence of the capitalistic system". Gunnar Bårdsen, a Norwegian professor of economics, has pointed out the similarities between the story and Nobel prize- winning economist Milton Friedman's 1969 theories of "helicopter money".
The Global Economic Crisis, the worst financial crisis since the Great Depression, can be partially attributed to neoliberal globalization. Although globalization promised an improved standard of living, it has actually worsened the financial situation of many homes and has made the financial crisis global through the influences of international financial institutions such as the World Bank. Globalization limits development and civilization to a path that only leads to a Western and capitalistic system. Because of the political and structural differences in countries, the implementation of globalization has been detrimental for many countries.
The United States Postal Service issued a 22-cent postage stamp in his honor on August 3, 1987.Scott catalogue #2350. Faulkner had once served as Postmaster at the University of Mississippi, and in his letter of resignation in 1923 wrote: > As long as I live under the capitalistic system, I expect to have my life > influenced by the demands of moneyed people. But I will be damned if I > propose to be at the beck and call of every itinerant scoundrel who has two > cents to invest in a postage stamp.
As a very capitalistic system in essence, social inequality and income gap started to become an issue. King of Talamanca Antonio Saldaña is murdered because of his opposition to the United Fruit Company and President Gonzalez Flores’ attempt to tax the capital causes the 1917 Costa Rican coup d'état lead by Tinoco. But Tinoco's regime was short- lived. Parties like the Christian socialist Reform Party of priest Jorge Volio Jiménez (who became Vice President thanks to an alliance with progressive liberal Ricardo Jiménez Oreamuno) and the emergence of communists, socialists and anarchists groups caused uproar in the political establishment.
The stock market crashed in October 1929, and ushered in the Great Depression. By the winter of 1932–33, the economy was so perilous that the unemployment rate hit the 25 percent mark. Unions lost members during this time because laborers could not afford to pay their dues and furthermore, numerous strikes against wage cuts left the unions impoverished: "one might have expected a reincarnation of organizations seeking to overthrow the capitalistic system that was now performing so poorly. Some workers did indeed turn to such radical movements as the Communist Party, but, in general, the nation seemed to have been shocked into inaction".
By 1700 or so, Osaka had become the mercantile center of Japan. Osaka merchants had organized themselves into a national clearinghouse system. A major obstacle to the development of a modern capitalistic system in Japan at this time was the problem of transportation. While some commodities, such as woven silk and sake could be transported easily in a cart, most crops were harvested in such volume that a caravan of packhorses or carts across the rough and dangerous roads, transported by the individual farmers, simply could not work out. Thus, a number of towns served as waystations where merchants would act as middlemen, storing farmers’ goods and transporting them to major trade centers such as Osaka, for a price.
The principal concern of Post Keynesians is to have a more complex and realistic aggregate supply and demand framework that includes mark-up pricing, the trend to monopoly, the workings of endogenous money and credit, circular and cumulative causation, and a pragmatic guide to policy. The workings of uncertainty lead to an unstable capitalistic system that requires the making of agreements and accords to promote stability. At the global level, it requires a fairer distribution of power such that the onus is on nations with trade surpluses to adjust their policies. More than anything, Post Keynesians eschew the quantity theory of money, since money and credit are seen to affect output and employment in both the short and long term.
The New York stock exchange traders' floor (1963) In the period following the global depression of the 1930s, the state played an increasingly prominent role in the capitalistic system throughout much of the world. The postwar boom ended in the late 1960s and early 1970s and the situation was worsened by the rise of stagflation. Monetarism, a modification of Keynesianism that is more compatible with laissez-faire, gained increasing prominence in the capitalist world, especially under the leadership of Ronald Reagan in the United States and Margaret Thatcher in the United Kingdom in the 1980s. Public and political interest began shifting away from the so-called collectivist concerns of Keynes's managed capitalism to a focus on individual choice, called "remarketized capitalism".
Ted W. Margadant, "French Rural Society in the Nineteenth Century: A Review Essay," Agricultural History, (1979) 53#3 pp 644–651 French national policy was protectionist with regard to agricultural products, to protect the very large agricultural population, especially through the Méline tariff of 1892. France maintained two forms of agriculture, a modern, mechanized, capitalistic system in the Northeast, and in the rest of the country a reliance on subsistence agriculture on very small farms with low income levels.Eugene Golob, The Meline tariff: French Agriculture and Nationalist Economic Policy (Columbia University Press, 1944) Modernization of the subsistence sector began in the 1940s, and resulted in a rapid depopulation of rural France, although protectionist measures remained national policy.John Ardagh, France in the 1980s (1982) pp 206-57.
The New York stock exchange traders' floor (1963) The economic recovery of the world's leading capitalist economies in the period following the end of the Great Depression and the Second World War—a period of unusually rapid growth by historical standards—eased discussion of capitalism's eventual decline or demise. The state began to play an increasingly prominent role to moderate and regulate the capitalistic system throughout much of the world. Keynesian economics became a widely accepted method of government regulation and countries such as the United Kingdom experimented with mixed economies in which the state owned and operated certain major industries. The state also expanded in the US; in 1929, total government expenditures amounted to less than one-tenth of GNP; from the 1970s they amounted to around one-third.
The group styles itself as an organization of "black revolutionaries" engaged in a "people's war" against a white-dominated "oppressive capitalistic system." The group advocates on behalf of civil rights and social justice and actively seeks to end gang violence so as to "change gang mentality into revolutionary mentality." The BRLP professes a belief in the ideas of revolutionary socialism, and on May Day 2012 were part of a small and ineffectual "General Strike" effort in Los Angeles. The group claimed that their May 1 participation was met with retaliation by government authorities, who are said to have burst into the home of party leader Mischa Culton two days later with automatic rifles during what was later explained as a routine "compliance check" by the California Department of Corrections and Rehabilitation.
Jaroslav Kříženecký (1896–1964) was one of the prominent Czechoslovak geneticists opposing Lysenkoism, and when he criticized Lysenkoism in his lectures, he was dismissed from the Agricultural University in 1949 for "serving the established capitalistic system, considering himself superior to the working class, and being hostile to the democratic order of the people", and imprisoned in 1958. In the German Democratic Republic, although Lysenkoism was taught at some of the universities, it had very little impact on science due to the actions of a few scientists (for example, the geneticist and fierce critic of Lysenkoism, Hans Stubbe) and information exchange with West Berlin research institutions. Nonetheless, Lysenkoist theories were found in schoolbooks as late as the dismissal of Nikita Khrushchev in 1964. Lysenkoism dominated Chinese science from 1949 until 1956, particularly during the Great Leap Forward, when, during a genetics symposium opponents of Lysenkoism were permitted to freely criticize it and argue for Mendelian genetics.
A large part of our everyday lives is about economic actions, be it as consumer, as employee of a company, as shareholder at the stock exchange or as part of the community that defines the political parameters of the economy. 3\. In order to get the economic system up and running, it needs us as we perform the central functions of the economic system together on a daily basis. 4\. Bit by bit, the winners and losers of our economic system become apparent. 5\. The capitalistic system is in a big crisis, having not yet found the road towards renewal. 6\. Due to its maximization approach, the guild of economists bears the responsibility that economy has dehumanized and disconnected from our needs. 7\. Nowadays, economic theory does not correspond with our perceived reality at all. 8\. Current riots around the globe are one result thereof. 9\. We are all asked to change economy. 10\. It is up to us to improve economy and there by improve the living conditions of millions of people. 11.
Hwanyeong (환영 The Spector) depicts the process of how a woman turns to selling all her labor as well as her sex for family, through which the author shows how the capitalistic system of value exchange and the patriarchy have reduced women to sex, and how they have consistently supported the commercialization of women's bodies.Shin, Jin-kyeong, "The Gender Politics of Violence on Women", Gender and Culture 4(2). In Kim Yi- seol's stories, the violence that is done to women's bodies is depicted through women who belong to the lowest level of society in Korea. The protagonists of Kim Yi-seol's stories are those who are exposed to the worst imaginable risks, and will be exposed to those risks, such as a female homeless person, a surrogate mother, an abandoned girl, a uterine cancer patient, a mentally handicapped woman, and a prostitute. By showing the violence that is being done on such people, Kim Yi-seol's stories depict how bad the ‘impoverishment of women’ has become since its progress after the IMF.

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