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The phrase "exploitative business" is grammatically correct and commonly used in written English.
You can use this phrase when referring to a business or company that takes advantage of others for their own gain, often by exploiting their labor or resources. Example: "The documentary shed light on the exploitative business practices of the fast fashion industry, revealing how workers are paid unfairly and the environment is harmed for the sake of profit."
Exact(19)
We work shifts, often in poorly maintained environments with extremely exploitative business practises.
Another line of research investigates the conditions under which non-transparent and exploitative business practices persist in markets.
Roosevelt opposed monopolistic and exploitative business practices, adopted a more conciliatory attitude toward labour, and urged the conservation of natural resources.
Mr. Blair's government and the Conservative opposition joined today in denouncing the lucrative and exploitative business of smuggling human beings into Britain.
It's nice, but not enough, Bakshi insists: "How you make your money in the first place is more important than how much you give away". Gandhi's questioning of potentially exploitative business models certainly fits with his welfare for all philosophy.
How, when his armies of darkness are on the march, co-opting teenage power balladeers to work for scale or nothing in exchange for lucrative prime-time exposure – a nakedly exploitative business model that has somehow yet to attract the attentions of the UN Commissioner for Karaoke Rights?
Similar(41)
Ambidextrous leaders are great at running big, mature, exploitative businesses, while simultaneously leveraging corporate assets and capabilities to explore new areas.
The whole affair reeks of the worst side of the exploitative music business of those days – and yet … somehow they made something beautiful.
The exciting opportunity for startups is to skate to where the puck is going — by thinking beyond exploitative legacy business models that amount to embarrassing blackboxes whose CEOs dare not publicly admit what the systems really do — and come up with new ways of operating and monetizing services that don't rely on selling the lie that people don't care about privacy.
The exciting opportunity for startups is to skate to where the puck is going — by thinking beyond exploitative legacy business models that amount to embarrassing blackboxes whose CEOs dare not publicly admit what the systems really do — and come up with new ways of operating and monetizing services that don't rely on selling the lie that people don't care about privacy. .
In the heyday of the ruthless, exploitative 19th-century business magnates who earned themselves the title robber barons, Mark Twain set about to illuminate injustice, proselytize for compassion and divert and instruct his readers with the fantasy he called "The Prince and the Pauper".
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Since I tried Ludwig back in 2017, I have been constantly using it in both editing and translation. Ever since, I suggest it to my translators at ProSciEditing.

Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com