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226 Sentences With "subsidise"

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

"Even if Russia wants to continue to subsidise their gas prices, at some point in time they will run out of gas to subsidise," he added.
As a result of this week's ruling, states could be required to subsidise the cost of religious instruction whenever they decide to subsidise any private-school instruction.
There is no hiding that public health-insurance schemes require the rich to subsidise the poor, the young to subsidise the old and the healthy to underwrite the sick.
Others lobby governments to subsidise its distribution to favoured groups.
With public pensions, the rich tend to subsidise the poor.
Or, for that matter, for taxpayers to subsidise organised religion?
Plus we're subsidising it and we don't have to subsidise it.
Mr Trump's policy is really to subsidise parenthood, not child care.
In essence, the state decided to subsidise individuals rather than institutions.
Instead, Mr Boulay suggests that taxpayers or philanthropists should subsidise summer activities.
Meanwhile governments and donors must decide when to subsidise, and how much.
To do otherwise, say the Saudis, would be to subsidise uncompetitive producers.
Some will not use AWS because they don't want to subsidise a rival.
EU state-aid rules could thwart his plans to nationalise or subsidise industries.
Almost all subsidise tuition—in America, to the tune of $200bn a year.
Big investment banks can cross-subsidise research from more profitable businesses like trading.
Another is to subsidise home loans for a broader political or social purpose.
It's also important that higher volume routes don't subsidise those with lower volumes.
Ethiopia has invested in agrarian reform to subsidise industries through economic processing zones.
Foreigners, who can be charged more, help pad out budgets and subsidise local students.
Why should those who travel light subsidise those who have packed the kitchen sink?
If they did, the premiums of safe drivers would subsidise payouts to reckless ones.
Such people tend to be early adopters of expensive new equipment, so they subsidise innovation.
But most prestigious universities have sucked up students, grateful for their fees, which subsidise research.
Other changes include introducing a system where higher earners subsidise those who are paid less.
Many Democrats claim that such schemes subsidise big corporations, like Walmart, to pay low wages.
Some might wonder why they should subsidise the lifestyles of born-again crofters on Ulva.
Many students are wasting their own money and that of the taxpayers who subsidise them.
In rich economies, the better-off subsidise the poor through an array of welfare programmes.
Ohio's senate passed a bill this month to subsidise coal plants in which Duke holds stakes.
And there will be no large premium cabin to subsidise economy-class passengers on these planes.
The more cities PG&E loses, the less easy it is to cross-subsidise other places.
Uber and Lyft can afford to subsidise their trips heavily in order to gain market share.
Some of their supporters seem to be hoping that Russia will subsidise their countries' struggling economies.
Many European countries have preferred to subsidise the purchase of cleaner cars than tax dirty ones.
The result was perverse: in the name of equality, all taxpayers were forced to subsidise the privileged.
She would subsidise child care, and expand the child-tax credit, which shrinks parents' income-tax bills.
Many cities, particularly in America, generously subsidise driving by forcing developers to provide lots of parking spaces.
And the bill stumps up $182bn over a decade which states could use to subsidise the exchanges.
They might do well (Norway and Switzerland, both non-EU members, subsidise their farmers even more lavishly).
Banks make money from fees on products such as overdrafts, which effectively cross-subsidise "free" current accounts.
The idea is to hive unhealthy people off into their own dedicated market and then subsidise their coverage.
Meanwhile, the risk of a Trump administration is that it is about to subsidise some of the worst.
The existence of such externalities could, in theory, justify the use of public funds to subsidise sports teams.
Courting private payers, who have deeper pockets than councils and can thus subsidise state-funded residents, also helps.
Fundamentally, the government must either provide it directly, or regulate and subsidise the insurance industry to do it.
When I started out I had to work two jobs to subsidise both event losses and living costs.
The consortium, which includes Hyundai, has also called on the government to subsidise operating costs for hydrogen stands.
Public money will subsidise the purchase of the two banks' good assets by Intesa Sanpaolo, a big Italian rival.
It spends $2bn a year (4% of GDP) to subsidise a power company that cannot provide 24-hour electricity.
Germany doesn't subsidise renewables; its feed-in tariffs transparently procure them and charge customers, using no general tax revenue.
"[F]ederal and Ohio law already mandate[s]" that government funds may not subsidise elective abortion, Judge White notes.
They swiped from the New Democratic Party, a more leftish outfit, the notion that government should subsidise prescription drugs.
One reason cable cars are popular is that governments usually subsidise them in order to compete with private buses.
Their role irks some British taxpayers, who subsidise the rail network to the tune of £20163bn ($5.6bn) a year.
Such measures are necessary: Jordan spends $1.2bn a year (9% of its budget) to subsidise food, fuel and water.
There is no convincing reason for making high-earning graduates, as opposed to high-earners in general, subsidise education.
The OECD would like the state to subsidise social-security payments by people who earn the minimum wage or less.
Homeowners in safe areas cross-subsidise the insurance of those in risky ones through Flood Re, a government-run scheme.
Universal health care needs the rich, the young and the healthy to subsidise the poor, the old and the sick.
To make things worse, Chinese tech firms often heavily subsidise customers and suppliers in their eagerness to dominate a market.
The rise will be used to subsidise basic food items including milk and cereals as well as housing, officials say.
Critics worry that British depositors and taxpayers subsidise the bank by funding its foreign operations and implicitly guaranteeing its liabilities.
It is now planning to start a cheap Wi-Fi service using drones to subsidise Internet costs in the country.
Most European states subsidise their historically dominant Christian denominations, directly or indirectly, while also leaving the sects' religious masters relatively autonomous.
Many try to subsidise fertiliser for poor farmers, only for the stuff to be stolen before it reaches the intended recipient.
The UK government, however, continues to subsidise about half of TfL's investment plan and pledged to support its long-term commitments.
An EU scheme to subsidise farmers to reduce production could add impetus after it was fully subscribed for 1 million tonnes.
A more radical option, says Mr Barr, would be partially to subsidise universities that opt to charge less than the full whack.
But the policy made the scheme unviable because the open-market dwellings could no longer subsidise the affordable ones, the company says.
The scheme is more likely to subsidise "pointless" new projects, according to Randal O'Toole of the Cato Institute, a libertarian think-tank.
India's state-owned railways depend on the cash generated by transporting coal to subsidise passenger tickets (coal provides 44% of freight revenues).
It is hardly a recent affair: in the 1960s Britain slapped a tax on the service sector in order to subsidise manufacturing.
The government agreed to subsidise diesel for 20163 days to placate the drivers, whose strike was provoked by rises in fuel prices.
Some cities might also operate their own robotaxi fleets, or subsidise rides in poor neighbourhoods using toll revenues collected in rich ones.
A portion of revenues could be pooled and shared between teams across Europe, and used to subsidise weaker clubs and lower divisions.
It uses some moneymaking activities to subsidise the rest—15% of the profits from its microfinance arm go into its core budget.
Winton will act as a market maker and subsidise trading, rather than taking a cut or skewing the odds in its favour.
It is not a bad idea for governments to subsidise seeds to persuade farmers to try productive varieties for the first time.
That has consequences: lots of Europeans expect politicians to shield firms deemed national champions from competition or to subsidise jobs in favoured industries.
True, the federal government spends over $226 billion a year on student aid, and elite universities make every effort to subsidise poorer students.
The companies are willing to invest heavily in the project, Henrar said, but they want the state to subsidise initial loss-making phases.
He would also subsidise the 22013 local call centres that serve the national suicide-prevention lifeline, and tend to operate on a shoestring.
The president-elect promises prudent budgeting and no tax increases, but also says he will freeze petrol and electricity prices and subsidise agriculture.
However, as Palaszczuk pointed out, the state will not impose a A$1 levy on passengers to subsidise the package as NSW did.
Supporters say such a league in England would generate sums that could subsidise long-form county cricket and reignite interest in the game.
But in an era of tight public finances, some governments are trimming the payments they offer to cover, or subsidise, care-home places.
Dzindic said that any strategic investor would seek favourable electricity prices but that the government could not subsidise the prices on open market.
At one point they even promised to subsidise the cost, an act of desperation that made Wuhu an emblem of China's real-estate woes.
Cuts have also bumped up costs for those paying for their own care, whom providers increasingly use to subsidise residents funded by the state.
German regulators can subsidise deliveries to remote rural areas by any operator, should the market fail to provide a universal service on its own.
His family contained no sheikhs, and his village, flyblown Bayt-al Ahmar, had no one rich enough to subsidise him through officers' training school.
Thanks to low oil prices and its own incompetence, the government does not have enough money to subsidise imports to make up the shortfall.
Using one product to subsidise another is how the banks got into the untransparent state they're in – offering free current accounts and overcharging elsewhere.
But some city folk argue that taxpayers should not have to subsidise farmers in tough years, given that profits in good times can be enormous.
China's government does not subsidise the overproduction of iPhones which are then dumped on the market, causing iPhone-makers in America to be laid-off.
By setting taxes and tolls accordingly, planners can subsidise rides in poor districts, for example, or encourage people to use public transport for longer trips.
There is no new project to subsidise jobs, and existing such schemes—"the least efficient of all employment policies", said Ms Pénicaud—will be shrunk.
Khaled Hanafi's resignation coincides with an investigation into whether millions of dollars intended to subsidise farmers were used to purchase wheat that did not exist.
It's estimated that the implementation of facial recognition technology would cost up to £4 million, with the Scottish government slated to subsidise any installation price.
As things are now, charges for analysis of equities and fixed income instruments get squished together with those for trade execution, which subsidise substandard research.
Venture capitalists who have financed some 800 food-related outfits in India are happy to subsidise losses as long as their companies gain market share.
In response, Abe said the government would create a fund to subsidise workers who had to take time off work to care for their children.
But the AFPM has opposed standards requiring refiners to blend or subsidise the blending of biofuels into the gasoline pool, saying it hurts independent refiners.
Alternatively, the companies in the north could raise charges at home to offset the losses, effectively forcing poorer, stay-at-home customers to subsidise travellers.
Both companies have spent heavily to subsidise fares to gain market share in the country, raising speculation in local media that they might ultimately join forces.
Suddenly, revenues from selling mixed waste to China which waste-management companies used to cross-subsidise collection, dried up, hitting margins for American waste-management companies.
In 270 Congress created the DC Opportunity Scholarship Programme, the first school-voucher scheme directly subsidised by the federal government (states and charities subsidise many others).
The federal and local governments have already put up around 4 billion since 2015 to subsidise provision of fast broadband in hard-to-reach rural areas.
Nandan Nilekani, an Indian tech luminary opposed to Free Basics, suggests that, instead, the government subsidise a monthly allowance of free mobile data for each user.
Both countries subsidise their farmers even more lavishly than the EU, so the idea that Brexit would save taxpayers from supporting British farmers is also questionable.
As well as the outsourcing programme, schemes subsidise poor children to attend cheap private schools and pay entrepreneurs to set up new ones in underserved areas.
Alternatively, existing American visitors could subsidise the nuptials if, on average, they spend an additional 20 pounds on ceremonial mugs, biscuit tins or other royal memorabilia.
Woolworths investors are concerned it is losing grocery sales to Coles, ALDI and others due to high shelf prices which it has used to subsidise losses elsewhere.
The strike ended only after Michel Temer, the country's unpopular president, agreed to subsidise diesel for 60 days and to adjust its price monthly rather than daily.
Many of the "migration organisers" who fanned out to villages, offering to subsidise journeys to cities, seem to have been expected to sign up 450 migrants each.
A little more than a week before, Rick Perry, the energy secretary, issued a proposal to subsidise plants which competitive markets do not properly reward for "resiliency".
Chinese regulators limit competition on domestic routes, allowing airlines to make healthy profits to cross-subsidise loss-making international routes chosen to reward allies such as Cuba.
And Chinese regulators are belatedly liberalising the domestic market by giving up their control of fares, potentially leaving carriers with less spare cash to subsidise foreign operations.
Many now worry that firms that exploit the ignorance of such consumers will rack up profits, or use the revenues to subsidise juicy deals for other customers.
It violates the First Amendment right to freedom of speech, she and nine other teachers say, to be forced to subsidise an organisation whose politics they reject.
Antitrust policy is supposed to protect customers, whom Le Maire is effectively asking to subsidise a European champion – unhelpfully similar to the complaint he levels at China.
Although Africa's governments have mostly got out of the seed-production business, governments often subsidise seeds and former state monopolies still dominate the seed trade (see article).
Mr Janus argues that the fee violates his First Amendment right to freedom of speech, because it forces him to subsidise an organisation whose bargaining position he rejects.
That Zimbabwe hopes to subsidise not one, but two airlines ought to raise a red flag for international lenders who are being asked to write off its debts.
Some further 3 billion dirhams were allocated for a credit guarantee scheme for small and medium-sized enterprises (SMEs) and another 5 billion dirhams to subsidise utility bills.
Some cities already have congestion-charging regimes, subsidise ride-hailing in poor areas ill-served by public transport, or impose per-ride taxes on Uber, Lyft and their kind.
Mr Macron is desperate to dispel suspicions in Germany that he wants a "transfer union" in which prudent northern European taxpayers are shaken down to subsidise the indolent elsewhere.
Plenty of governments subsidise highbrow fare, like sober news programmes and classical-music broadcasts, on the basis that they are public goods which lead to an informed, cultured population.
It makes more sense to subsidise wages through a negative income tax, thus swelling take-home pay for the lowliest workers without making them more expensive for the employer.
Uber's tax bill in Taiwan comes amid Massachusetts deciding last week to levy a 5 percent fee on ride-sharing trips, in order to help subsidise traditional taxis there.
He says the government may only be able to achieve this by encouraging private developers to do the building, and by offering to subsidise the rents of poorer tenants.
The owner, Maulana Malik Muheisen Shafiq, decided to go round-the-clock four years ago to spread the message of Islam—and subsidise the education of the madrassa'spoorer boys.
It is sensible policy for the Queensland state government to decline to subsidise struggling resource companies, even if this will come at the cost of mine closures and job losses.
It's also clear that they're trying to subsidise some of the drivers' costs, by offering petrol discounts from tie-ups with fuel companies, among other items such as car insurance.
Because it is costly to provide electricity to remote areas, "the cities subsidise the costs of providing electricity to rural areas", says Severin Borenstein of the University of California, Berkeley.
But the president-elect has also made expensive promises, including to freeze petrol and electricity prices in real terms, to subsidise agriculture, to pay for scholarships and to expand pensions.
She says that most surgeries cross-subsidise the treatment of chronically ill patients with the money they get from the NHS for the other, mostly healthy people on their books.
That reduced their ability to cross-subsidise different parts of the business, triggering a 22019% fall in European cash equity revenues over this period, industry data tracker Coalition Development estimates.
That reduced their ability to cross-subsidise different parts of the business, triggering a 220% fall in European cash equity revenues over this period, industry data tracker Coalition Development estimates.
A few weeks after a meeting with Mr Murray, Rick Perry, the energy secretary, ordered a study that became the basis for his proposal to subsidise coal and nuclear plants.
Roughly a quarter of the EU's annual budget spending over the next decade will be channelled towards green goals, including part of the Common Agricultural Policy funds, which subsidise farmers.
To bar Ohio from taking action against Planned Parenthood, Judge Sutton wrote, is to "move the law perilously close to requiring states to subsidise abortions", something no previous case has done.
They are, however, outside the EU's much-criticised common agricultural policy (in fact they subsidise their farmers even more egregiously than the EU does), as well as its common fisheries policy.
The respondents admit, as they must, that the free-speech rights of disgruntled teachers like Rebecca Friedrichs are at stake when they are compelled to subsidise a union's collective bargaining efforts.
Subsidy reform is a sensitive issue in Algeria because the government spends about $30 billion a year to subsidise almost everything from basic foodstuffs and fuel to medicine, housing and education.
It set up the Regional Air Connectivity Fund in 2013 to subsidise new domestic and international routes to airports outside the capital to the tune of £56m ($80m) over three years.
Similarly, policies to subsidise child-care—often supported by the left—help all single-earner households become multiple-earner households, including those where the single-earner already has a high income.
Lawmakers have questioned whether British banks charge high fees for customers who go overdrawn without permission to maintain other services at low costs and to subsidise free in-credit bank accounts.
Leaving aside the odd implication that two-year-olds are divisible into the categories "pious" and "profane", the state's brief replies that "declining to subsidise" a church does not violate its rights.
The cause was a ten-day lorry drivers' strike that crippled Brazil's economy and forced Petrobras to freeze diesel prices for ten days and the government to subsidise them for two months.
By doing their own deliveries in cities, where profits are juicier, these firms could leave less money on the table for post offices to cross-subsidise rural services, where costs are higher.
But this time the state government, now in the hands of the Labor Party, plans instead to subsidise purchases of personal deterrent devices which emit electromagnetic waves thought to ward off sharks.
The package will subsidise the wages of 120,000 apprentices, offer one-off cash payments for welfare recipients and give up to A$25,000 ($16,160) to small businesses, Prime Minister Scott Morrison said.
Saudi officials talk about defending market share and refusing to subsidise "high cost" production which encompasses unconventional output such as oil sands and frontier areas such as deep water and the Arctic.
The owner of the Three Mile Island nuclear-power plant in Pennsylvania said it would shut the facility in 2019, unless the state government steps in to subsidise its delivery of clean energy.
They might subsidise the travel of low-income workers, or take over such systems entirely (a common fate for mass-transit systems which begin life as private enterprises, including the New York subway).
"Every dollar spent to subsidise the price of day care frees up a dollar for the two-income family to spend in the bidding wars for housing, tuition, and everything else," she continued.
The office of U.S. Trade Representative (USTR) Robert Lighthizer said the WTO ruling recognised that the United States had proved that China used state-owned enterprises (SOEs) to subsidise and distort its economy.
"We are [also] in discussions with insurers who might subsidise the product or give it away completely for free to certain more affluent customers to minimise the risk of water escape," adds Zajac.
The European Union should consider allowing member states to subsidise their steel industries, which are suffering from a collapse in prices and carbon regulation, European Commissioner Elzbieta Bienkowska told the Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung.
The government will return more unemployment insurance premiums to job-saving firms and subsidise small firms to hire college graduates with employment contracts longer than a year, the cabinet said in a statement.
The sale comes after the European Commission in December approved British plans to subsidise Lynemouth's conversion to burn biomass instead of coal, a plan RWE at the time said would take 18 months.
Moon is set to spend $1.8 billion in central government funds to subsidise car sales and to build refuelling stations for the five years to 2022 at current subsidy levels, Reuters calculations show.
From 2020, the federal funds that currently subsidise poorer buyers would instead be divvied up among states in proportion to the distribution of Americans earning between 50% and 138% of the federal poverty line.
Yet the same tolling schemes that will let city planners minimise congestion or subsidise robotaxi services in underserved "transport deserts" have a darker side—and one to which too little attention has been paid.
For example, California, which educates 12% of America's public-school pupils, chooses to subsidise health care for retired teachers and their families who could otherwise qualify for the Affordable Care Act (ACA) and Medicare.
In 8.2012 Congress approved more than $5.2bn in "child care and development block grants", which subsidise child care for low-income families, nearly doubling available funding and indicating a rare example of bipartisan collaboration.
Seeking to change that, capital markets regulator Securities and Exchange Board of India this year eased rules for cities selling bonds, while the government has said it will subsidise part of the interest payments.
"The Appellate Body has now settled this case definitively, confirming our view the US has continued to subsidise Boeing despite WTO rulings to the contrary," European Trade Commissioner Cecilia Malmstrom said in a statement.
"The Appellate Body has now settled this case definitively, confirming our view the U.S. has continued to subsidise Boeing despite WTO rulings to the contrary," European Trade Commissioner Cecilia Malmstrom said in a statement.
The East African nation's government spent 6 billion shillings ($58.6 million) last year to subsidise maize imports after a drought caused shortages and sent the price of the staple soaring before a key election.
The government needed to subsidise electricity prices for industries and divide transmission payments between importers and exporters, Pandza said, adding that the price of electricity has reached a "stunning" 70 euros per megawatt hour.
On Sunday, the government classified the worst-hit South Korean provinces as "special disaster zones", allowing the government to subsidise up to half of restoration expenses and exempt residents from taxes and utility payments.
China's aviation regulator said on Wednesday it would support restructuring or mergers to help airlines cope with the outbreak, and that it would continue to lobby authorities to subsidise airlines hurt by travel curbs.
Fitch expects first-home buyers to remain a diminishing part of the Australian housing sector, in the absence of a policy response to reduce house prices or subsidise first-home buyers' entrance into the market.
A more realistic route to improving the lot of low-skilled workers would be to beef up labour market regulation, and to subsidise unskilled jobs to the degree necessary to keep them profitable for employers.
This sees each company that signs up with Feedr subsidise the cost of items on the menu so that workers can have a fresh healthy lunch daily for under £5, or cover the cost entirely.
Vannie Lau, a solicitor defending 21 arrested protesters, including Tai, said many lawyers are already volunteering for 27.7723 cases, the maximum number for which the government will subsidise fees for defendants who can't afford representation.
Local governments will subsidise between 50% and 100% of the costs of medicines on the list, which is expected to boost patients' willingness to use high-quality foreign brand-name drugs that would otherwise be unaffordable.
If there is demand, it might even offer the rings for sale in the rich world, in the hope that the cash so generated could cross-subsidise production for poor countries where the need is greatest.
Fees and charges allow banks to cross-subsidise free-in-credit bank accounts that underpin market share, but the entry of tech companies could change that, forcing banks to introduce charges for accounts, the FCA said.
The government may only be able to subsidise biodiesel for eight to 10 months if crude prices continue stay at current levels or fall further, said Bayu Krisnamurthi, head of the Indonesian Estate Crop Fund Agency.
Indicated 1.1 percent higher BMW has recorded rising sales of the latest version of its electric car, the i3, following the Berlin government's push to subsidise electric cars, weekly German newspaper Frankfurter Allgemeine Sonntagszeitung (FAS) said.
As his petition to the justices reads, the Abood rule requires him "to subsidise AFSCME's efforts to compel the state of Illinois to bend to the union's will" regarding a series of proposed cost-saving reforms.
On Thursday, China's Ministry of Finance punished at least five car makers, accusing them of cheating its programme to subsidise electric and plug-in hybrid vehicles, receiving roughly 1 billion yuan ($150 million) in illegal subsidies.
Arrayed against this sort of solution are the ideas of ideologically moderate contenders like Michael Bennet, Joe Biden, Mr Buttigieg and Amy Klobuchar, who would like to subsidise higher education more without making it entirely free.
U.S. President Donald Trump's gripes about having to "subsidise" Europe is forcing it to contribute more, while French president Emmanuel Macron has ruffled feathers by calling NATO "brain dead" and suggesting a "strategic relationship" with Russia.
TOKYO, Dec 6 (Reuters) - Japan's government will approve an economic package on Friday that will set aside around 2 trillion yen ($17.84 billion) to subsidise education costs and improve elderly care, a draft document showed on Wednesday.
There has been growth over the past two decades in the number of students taking degrees in social sciences and law, which have the advantage of being cheap to teach, and can thus subsidise niche language courses.
In Newham's old town hall Sir Robin Wales, the mayor of the borough, talks proudly about removing ethnic newspapers from local libraries and refusing to subsidise street parties if they are designed to attract only one group.
KHARTOUM, Feb 12 (Reuters) - Sudan will continue to subsidise bread prices during transitional rule after the ouster of Omar al-Bashir but wants to achieve "justice" in distributing subsidies, its trade and industry minister said on Wednesday.
Government programmes are not completely barred from touching places of worship: it is not an "establishment of religion", Everson held, for states to subsidise the cost of busing children to parochial schools as well as to public ones.
In fact the scheme is a cash machine that spews public money into the hands of fuel importers, employees of the state-owned oil company and government officials who collude to pocket cash paid to subsidise fictitious imports.
LESS than three years ago the British government struck a deal with EDF, a French state-owned utility, to subsidise the first new nuclear power station built in Britain since 1995: Hinkley Point C on the Somerset coast.
Switching the listing from the holding to the high-speed business supports expectations that the government is unwilling to deprive itself of key assets, which will be supported with nearly EUR35bn of transfers to subsidise the spending plan.
Uber and China's Didi Kuaidi, backed by Chinese technology giants Tencent Holdings and Alibaba Group Holding, have both spent heavily to subsidise fares to gain market share, betting on China's Internet-linked transport market becoming the world's biggest.
So as an example, when you talk about education for the moment and how we subsidise it, we are largely subsidising sending Americans, in the millions, to a higher education system designed for an era that no longer exists.
Hafiz Pasha, a former head of an official economic advisory body, argues that the PML-N has undermined the benefits of the new plants by obliging industry to subsidise other power consumers through a series of surcharges and taxes.
The government has also intervened in the market by allocating IDR219trn in this year's budget to subsidise micro loans so that the interest rate for these loans may fall to as low as 268% from 265% to 267% previously.
A paper published in August by the World Bank found that a scheme to subsidise local entrepreneurs to open schools in 199 villages increased enrolment of six- to ten-year-olds by 30 percentage points and boosted test scores.
China has overproduced steel for so long because regional Communist Party officials, who control local steel plants, prefer to subsidise their local plants to keep them open rather than risk the unemployment and unrest that may follow shuttering them.
So while Uber is locked in a fierce competition with rivals in most markets for customers and drivers, and has chosen to subsidise journeys to avoid losing market share, Airbnb has no need to pay up to keep hosts and users.
Treaty rules to limit Britain's ability to subsidise export industries should also be negotiated: "The EU-UK Agreement will have to include robust provisions on State aid to ensure a level playing field with the Member States," another slide said.
These currently subsidise firms like McDonalds, the argument goes, because the only reason such firms can only pay so-called "poverty wages" is because the government picks up the rest of the tab for housing, feeding and clothing their employees.
Observers think Justice Gorsuch will join his four conservative brethren to say that workers should not be compelled to subsidise union negotiations for higher wages any more than they are required to pay for efforts to elect candidates or advocate for political causes.
Left-wing website Exif published an email in which Uwe Junge, leader of the AfD in the western state of Rhineland-Palatinate, offered the first 30 members in the region who come forward 50 euros to subsidise their travel to the demonstration.
BP, Shell and other large refiners which have invested in cleaner fuel technology in recent years have also opposed AFPM's efforts to oppose standards requiring refiners to blend or subsidise the blending of biofuels into the gasoline pool, saying it hurts independent refiners.
Retail roaming fees account for about 5 percent of all EU retail mobile revenue and companies warn that if wholesale charges do not fall they could recoup income by raising prices in their home markets, effectively making poorer customers subsidise frequent travellers.
It won the most recent state election after refusing to subsidise a railway which Adani will need to transport its coal 400km to the coast, and had since knocked back the firm's plans to conserve local fauna, notably the black-throated finch, an endangered species.
In 2016 its then prime minister, Manuel Valls, labelled the religion a problem, but found that the principle of laïcité (secularism in public affairs) and a law from 1905 stating that "the republic shall not recognise or subsidise any religion" prevented him from tackling it.
The deal with Reliance, an oil-to-telecoms conglomerate, is Apple's latest attempt to grow in India's competitive smartphone market, similar to the way it boosted sales in countries like the United States by partnering with network operators to subsidise the cost of the phone.
"We are looking to find a way out to structure deals that combine the incentives into syndicated loans as the National Development Fund has promised to subsidise 0.1% of bank commissions for those borrowing more than NT$10bn under the plan," a second loan banker said.
He will cut the number of deputies by at least 25%, introduce a share (of about 20%) of proportional representation in parliament, decentralise more decision-making to local levels, and add 150 citizens to an assembly that will first look into how to subsidise greener behaviour.
Since 1977, when Abood v City of Detroit Board of Education was decided, it has been acceptable to require non-members to subsidise contract negotiations over their salary, benefits and working conditions, but a no-no to make them pay toward a union's lobbying or political organising.
And although many hoped that subsidising university for all would encourage more youngsters to apply, that does not seem to have happened: Welsh entry rates this year were 32%, compared with 37% in England, where rich students pay steep fees in order to subsidise the poor ones.
PBMS have already tried to get insurers to pass on rebates to consumers, he says, but they prefer to use the savings (arising mostly from drugs used by the sickest) to cross-subsidise and lower the cost of typical insurance plans (to win more healthy customers).
Precious few Chinese voices question the political sustainability of a global economic order from which China has profited so copiously, claiming to be a developing country with the right to subsidise domestic firms and close markets to foreign rivals, while growing to become the second largest economy on Earth.
This is not only to use on running, investing and improving existing operations, but to subsidise marketing and business development in a category where — both for users and the contractors the startups need to make their businesses work — there may be little in the way of brand loyalty.
Revenue from the club on the ground-floor helped subsidise the music studios upstairs, which Shapes rented out to local producers at below-market rates; Shapes also ran DJ workshops for children and literacy programmes in local schools, and gave free use of the space to local community groups.
The irony is that, by withdrawing from the TPP—a trade agreement which, though it currently excludes China, might one day have constrained its ability to pollute and subsidise state-owned enterprises—Mr Trump has immediately turned his back on the most promising way to change the economy he seems most worried about.
For Amazon and Netflix the rents flow in the other direction because their prices are low today: in total they subsidise their combined 240m paying subscribers to the tune of about $50 per person per year, based on the amount of additional free cashflow they would have needed to cover their cost of capital in 2017.
Second, in late September Rick Perry, the energy secretary, proposed that the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission (FERC) should, in effect, subsidise power plants that have a 90-day fuel supply on site—a category that includes coal and nuclear plants, and excludes renewables, which rely on weather, and natural gas plants, which get their energy through pipelines.
Any knowledgeable supporter could offer an immediate reform agenda: dedicating more money to subsidise the sport for children and teenagers to ensure that all promising athletes can learn regardless of their families' income; setting up a promotion-and-relegation system in the professional game; and encouraging young players to ply their trade in Europe in the meantime, as Mr Pulisic has done.
That we are here for the masses and hence a broad selection of transport options is needed to serve their diverse needs – from the businessmen arriving for a meeting in style on GrabCar+, to the students using GrabBike to beat congestion and reach classes on time; from drivers depending solely on Grab to feed their families, to the car-owners using GrabHitch to subsidise their driving costs and to make new friends.
In particular that means making greater use of wage insurance, to compensate workers who have to move to jobs with a lower salary; reforming education systems to boost early-childhood education and support retraining and lifelong learning; extending income tax credit to improve incentives to work and reduce inequality; removing regulations that hinder job-switching; providing "mobility vouchers" to subsidise relocation as the distribution of jobs changes; and changing zoning rules to allow more people to live in the cities where jobs are being created.

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