211 examples of competitive in sentences

This was really an exiting break for me because, being a sportsman myself, having played competitive judo, and with keen interest in football, I naturally took to Sportswatch like a fish to water.

Further, if care is taken to make these papers or periodicals at the same time competitive, attractive, people-friendly and useful, then the scope and longevity of Roman Konknni journalism will be ensured.

Without shedding its principles, it needs to look to adapting to new trends, being more competitive, and delivering the needs of the readers.

It conceived Germany as at war with something like itselfpractical, prosaic, capitalist, competitive Germany, prepared to cut us up in battle as she cut us out in business.

" "What chance would I have in a competitive exam.

Competitive aspect of organization and particular wages.

#Competitive aspect of organization and particular wages.

If this be true, as doubtless it is to some degree in many trades and places, it is in accordance with competitive principles that, as the elite of the trade, the organized laborers should get higher wages than those outside the unions.

Where neither the employer has a monopoly in his business nor the organized laborers have a monopoly of the labor supply, there is two-sided competition in the labor bargain, and organization may help to raise particular wages inasmuch as it acts in the competitive ways above mentioned and as it helps to restore to the laborers a truer equality of competition.

The action of organized labor is not, however, limited to the competitive field, above discussed.

Wages in particular industries may, by the action of trade unions be raised and maintained above a true competitive rate.

While this may be true, it would seem, on the other hand, that an unmodified closed shop, with the conditions of membership in the control of the union, creates a distinct monopoly of labor leaving the employer helpless in any wage dispute and enabling the union to enforce its every demand regardless of the competitive conditions of the labor-market for that class of services. § 15.

In truth, what is in the public's thought, somewhat vaguely, is approval of unions so far as they go to establish a real equality in competitive bargaining with the employers, but disapproval where the power of the union gets greater and becomes monopolistic.

In the light of the principles of wages it appears that organization most easily gains results, and the most stable results, when wages are below or near the competitive rate.

With so modest an ideal however, as the true competitive wage, organized laborers and their leaders cannot be expected always to be content.

In a competitive industry this would compel a speedy readjustment of wages downward.

In a period of rising prices due to an increasing supply of gold, the readjustment of wages (per hour) away from an artificially high level down to a competitive rate goes steadily on.

Competitive survival struggle results in social improvement.

In a very real sense these ghoulish results were the logical outcome of competitive nationalism armed and equipped with the technology produced during the two centuries of the great revolution.

Its outcome was a competitive life and death struggle for wealth and power, with the nation or a bloc of nations as the units of competition.

Preparations for another general war were expanded and intensified as the competitive struggle for oil and other natural resources mounted.

The histories of all three countries from 1870 to 1950 provide ample support for the contention that the central theme of western civilization, as of its predecessors, is a competitive struggle for wealth and power, aimed at expansion and exploitation, using war and the threat of war as instruments of policy.

Under the conditions prevailing before the great revolution, competitive struggle between nations and empires, expanding as a result of victory in war, had ceased to be a practicable means of gaining, holding and increasing wealth and power.

New techniques, chiefly non-competitive, must be discovered and employed in the maintenance of social relations.

Civilization as a life style, built around the competitive struggle for wealth and power, using war as an instrument of policy and multiplying the techniques of expansion and exploitation, has had a series of experimental tryouts already under way at the dawn of written history.

211 examples of  competitive  in sentences