Word: investments
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Dates: during 1970-1979
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...Quebec's economy. "The uncertainty that exists in the province of Quebec is very damaging economically. The kind of irresponsibility [the Parti Quebecois] has introduced in Quebec... will probably mean economic hardship for a lot of people in Quebec," she said. "We have no statistics on the indecision about investments, but all we hear is bad news... Certainly if the businesses have not decided not to invest in Quebec, they have decided to postpone [their investment] for the time being." Sauve added that "come the winter, we will have a very bleak picture in the province of Quebec... That...
Carter gives the labor leaders little satisfaction. He says the U.S. is attempting to get foreign nations, especially Japan, to invest in the U.S. and thus help create jobs. It would be counterproductive to do that on the one hand and move aggressively to limit Japanese imports on the other. His firmly put conclusion: "Your members are also American citizens; what concerns the rest of the country also concerns them. And one of the things that concerns the rest of the country is inflation. When you put tremendous restraints on imports, it has an enormous effect on inflation...
...Carter does do something more than listen. It is only moments later that he is back in the Cabinet Room, this time meeting with a group of Japanese businessmen escorted by Georgia Governor George Busbee (Carter's successor), who is trying to encourage Japanese investment in his state. Says Carter to the group: "I told Premier Fukuda when I saw him recently that I would like Japan to share its great wealth. We would like to have you invest here. It's hard for me to avoid greater import restrictions when there is such an imbalance of trade...
...assigned top real estate and financial people to staff it. Next he discussed the project with his competitor, Richard C. Gerstenberg, then chairman of General Motors, over lunch at the GM building; by dessert, Gerstenberg had pledged his active support. Four months later, GM announced that it would invest $6 million and form a subsidiary of its own. (Gerstenberg eventually put up another $6 million.) With Ford Motor as the managing partner, legions of other megacorporations pitched into Ren Cen as limited partners: Allied Chemical, Amoco, Burroughs, Goodyear, Gulf & Western, Kresge...
...version of the Marxist analysis of commodity fetishes and the mass production of goods. Instead of penetrating capitalism as a system of production and power, Sennett bows once more to appearances. To his mind, the drab, undistinguished-looking mass-produced clothing made in the new factories freed people to invest the clothes with personality. By breaking down the conventions of dress that defined the public image in 18th century London, industrialism let loose the private in the public realm. The emptiness of this seemingly sophisticated explanation evokes the images of the emperor in his new clothes...