Word: short-term
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: all
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
...work for 15-hours shifts that last until 7 a.m., six days a week, for about $100 a day. Though they earn low wages, Royal attends college in Azerbaijan, and Yasin is a student at one of Turkey's best universities. They came to New York this summer on short-term visas, hoping to improve their English. But they have mastered the names of every variety of fruit—and little else. In Turkey, Yasin told me, vendors often give gifts to their customers as they make small talk. Americans, he said, quietly hand over the money...
...Soon, though, the debate will get back to the plans' central flaw. From Berlin to Baltimore, government subsidies to boost car manufacturers hit by the recession have been a huge short-term success. But where will the consumers come from when the government aid runs out? "These scrapping schemes bring forward sales that would have occurred later," says Tim Urquhart, automotive analyst at IHS Global Insight in London. "They are just deferring the pain...
...against these short-term military needs lie the questions of how long Britain must commit its troops to succeed in Afghanistan and what success will look like in a country rife with corruption and lawlessness. The head of the British army, Sir Richard Dannatt, has said before that the country should be committed to Afghanistan for the "long haul." On Sunday, Sir Nigel Sheinwald, Britain's ambassador to Washington, put the time frame as "decades...
...culture of Wall Street has not changed is precisely because we - as in most Americans - are so tied up in it. Our 401(k)s and our pension funds are tied up in Wall Street doing well, even if we don't think this particular system of short-term bonuses and liquid culture is a good long-term strategy. Wall Street's values have reached out to so many corners of people's daily lives that actually changing the system means everyone has to change. (See 10 ways your job will change...
...Obama Administration would somehow link bonuses to long-term corporate productivity or long-term shareholder value - long-term meaning four to five years instead of five months or a year - and reinstate the Glass-Steagall Act [that separated investment and commercial banking]. These are big reforms, but they'd give you a more stable landscape to make even more changes. Part of what I learned is that the very kinds of daily practices that created the boom in the first place - wanting to book as many deals as possible for short-term bonuses, a workplace structured so that they...