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Word: long-running (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
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...think it'll probably help [reduce the lines] in the long-run," Lee said.CrimsonJohn F. CoyleA STEP UP: MAC users now have the benefit of 14 new StairMasters...

Author: By Anne C. Krendl, CRIMSON STAFF WRITER | Title: MAC Gets Windfall From Anonymous Donor | 9/10/1997 | See Source »

...still responded fervently to the drop, aiming to drive the number of women back up in the short-term and past the historical average in the long-run...

Author: By Matthew W. Granade, | Title: Percentage of Women at HBS to Rise Next Year | 7/11/1997 | See Source »

...stress on liberal arts education in American institutions like the College fosters the type of post-graduate pragmatism that a business school embodies. We are allowed to be impractical as undergraduates so long as we are all the more practical in our career choices. Oxford acknowledges a certain amount of specialization initially, but is trying to fight the tide of careerism in the long-run. Strangely enough, the school that allows undergraduates to study business refuses to erect an edifice designated exclusively for that topic, and the school that discourages pre-professionalism among undergraduates is home to a "B-school...

Author: By Joshua A. Katzin, | Title: Cents and Sensibility | 3/12/1997 | See Source »

...average person would keep more of any additional earned income than he would previously and, as a result, would supply more labor. At the same time, the elimination of all taxes on investment income would encourage people to save and invest which would raise the supply of capital. Since long-run economic growth depends primarily upon the supply of capital and labor, the flat tax would increase growth and economic prosperity...

Author: By Bradley L. Whitman, | Title: The New Voodoo | 2/6/1996 | See Source »

...deficit. Yet such a flat tax would require a rate of around 25 percent. Once the various deductions currently allowed are taken into account, such a flat tax would result in higher taxes for the middle class and lower ones for the wealthy. This flat tax would admittedly increase long-run economic growth, but it would also engender even greater economic inequality by undermining the middle class. This would return us to the familiar world of the efficiency-equity trade-off. More of one requires less of the other...

Author: By Bradley L. Whitman, | Title: The New Voodoo | 2/6/1996 | See Source »

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