Word: marketing
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Dates: during 1940-1949
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...invite you to weigh the alternative . . . The vicious cycle of economic nationalism would again be set in motion., The consequences would be the cumulative narrowing of markets, the further growth of high-cost protected industries, the mushrooming of restrictive controls, and the shrinkage of trade into the primitive pattern of bilateral barter." Stated positively, only by. integration could Europe get a home market big enough to support efficient mass production...
...TIME, Dec. 29, 1947). But last week Harvard Economist Seymour E. Harris interrupted with a question. If the U.S. was determined to send so many Americans to college, could it also provide the sort of jobs college graduates have come to expect? In a book called The Market for College Graduates (Harvard University Press; $4), Economist Harris answered his own question...
Actually the terms to Kaiser are fairly stiff. For the $44.4 million, RFC required 1) a lien on all physical assets of K-F, 2) a guaranty for $15 million of the loan by two other Kaiser companies "who must also put up stock collateral having a market value of at least $10 million, and 3) a lien for $10 million of the loan on a fixed reserve of unsold autos...
...capita. As the cost of living has risen, this valuation which normally should follow the trend of the owner's prosperity, has remained steady; the land is so poor for industry and residence that even in good times it cannot command a reasonable price on the real estate market. The facts that so much of Boston is filled land and that so many of Boston's streets were planned without regard for the modern commercial world are the big reasons why this land cannot bring a higher price...
...European sellers must develop a more aggressive attitude toward the American market...