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She urged them not to provide unfair advantages to state-owned enterprises or to draft market-shaping government regulations in secret.
This [fund] is looking at, from an entrepreneur's perspective, how do we continue to provide unfair advantages to the companies that work with Kleiner Perkins".
The heart of the Act was Title I, Section 3, which permitted trade or industrial associations to seek presidential approval of codes of fair competition (so long as such codes did not promote monopolies or provide unfair competition against small businesses) and provided for enforcement of these codes.
A striking finding was the distrust that lower-level workers felt toward their superiors: allowances were perceived to provide unfair financial advantages to already better-off and well-connected staff.
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Whirlpool also sought countervailing duties against imports from South Korea, saying that country's government provided unfair subsidies.
The trouble with liberalism, for example — and one can hardly begin to imagine the fun that Waugh would have had with the political dispensations of today — was that it provided unfair exemptions to original sin.
The trouble with liberalism, for example—and one can hardly begin to imagine the fun that Waugh would have had with the political dispensations of today was that it provided unfair exemptions to original sin.
And it provides unfair advantage to an elite few who happen to be connected.
The EU claims that this provides unfair market competition, whereas the Philippines defends the law on the grounds that it provides support to indigenous communities, producing spirits from their raw materials, like coconut and sugarcane.
The EU, in this dispute, countered that most varieties of pisco, the domestically produced spirit, by law was required to have an alcohol content below 35percentt; whereas most imported spirits had alcohol content of 40percentt or above; thus having the effect of providing unfair tax advantage to the domestic product.
In 1963, the Royal Society [ 1] defined brain drain as the migration of British scientists to the United States, with the term being subsequently used more widely to describe the migration of professionals and scholars from developing to developed countries, seriously compromising the economy of developing countries and providing unfair technological advantages to developed countries [ 2].
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com