Sentence examples for business to regulate from inspiring English sources

Exact(3)

It is the government's business to regulate your behavior when you are in such a position of power.

Cities better make up their mind, though, otherwise there soon might not be taxis in business to regulate.

But increasingly it entails a mix of earth-tone-themed high-ticket events and plans for international bureaucrats in cahoots with big business to regulate the entire economy of the planet.

Similar(57)

Rick Donley, president of the Beer Alliance of Texas, which lobbies for companies that distribute major-brand beer and some craft brews, said the three-tiered system — which regulates the production, distribution and retail sales of beer separately — made the beer business easier to regulate and tax, and keeps any one business from creating a monopoly.

Still more ominously, banks, trusting no one to pay them back, simply stopped making the loans that most businesses need to regulate their cash flows and without which they cannot do business.

It may seem odd, then, that the shift has not produced more of an outcry.In part, this is because its complexity shields it from scrutiny, and because, unlike politicians who seek to publicise their attempts to regulate business, business tends to keep quiet about its successful acts of resistance.

Participants seemed to trust business over government to regulate the Internet.

In what may be the first comprehensive look at public attitudes about the Internet, results from focus groups held around the country by the nonprofit Markle Foundation showed that participants seemed to trust business over government to regulate the Internet, echoed the call of buyer beware when it came to privacy and fraud but also seemed to expect some type of rules or protections.

The law – called the fueho law, or formally the "Law on Control and Improvement of Amusement Businesses" – is intended to regulate and restrict the sex industry ("amusement businesses" is the Japanese euphemism for prostitution).

The law called the fueho law, or formally the "Law on Control and Improvement of Amusement Businesses"—is intended to regulate and restrict the sex industry ("amusement businesses" is the Japanese euphemism for prostitution).

Proponents of this view ignore the clear and painful lessons of recent experience -- that business cannot be trusted to regulate itself, that regulators are far more likely to be too weak than too bold, and that the costs of clean-up and the burdens on the economy of financial crises are far higher than the cost of effective up-front regulation.

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