Example sentences of "goods and [noun pl] [prep] [art] " in BNC.

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1 Switch is an electronic card based scheme that enables customers to pay for goods and services without the need to write cheques or carry cash .
2 Similarly , in the summer months , workers associated with the winter sports industry and with the rush to produce and sell goods and services during the lead-up to Christmas find that their services are no longer required .
3 The UCTA is concerned to regulate the use of clauses which exclude liability for failure to perform , for certain other types of tortious acts , and for failure to comply with certain warranties implied into contracts for the supply of goods and services under the SGA and SGSA ( for instance as to good title under the SGA ) .
4 Having dealt with the question of exclusion clauses in general , the UCTA then deals with the question of the extent to which liability for breach of certain warranties implied into contracts for the supply of goods and services under the SGA , the SGSA and the Supply of Goods ( Implied Terms ) Act 1973 can be excluded by express provision in the relevant contract .
5 Of particular significance is the distinction between those who obtain goods and services through the private market and those who are forced to rely upon publicly-provided services .
6 National expenditure is the actual amount of money spent on goods and services over a given period of time , whereas aggregate demand is the total value that households , firms , the government and foreigners plan to spend out of their respective incomes over that time period : in other words , it is the total amount they are willing and able to spend .
7 For example , Britain received $3.2billion of the $12.8billion Marshall money — worth just over 7 per cent of all our imports of goods and services over the five years .
8 purchase system for buying Japanese goods and services as an incentive for Japanese buyers to renew contracts for Iranian crude .
9 This change of behaviour will be quickly felt in the economy , increasing demand for goods and services across the board .
10 While Hughes Aircraft , for example , was offering $18m in goods and services for the rebuilding effort ( its boss , Michael Armstrong , was an RLA board member ) Hughes 's parent , General Motors , was shedding 2,600 local jobs and closing its last remaining car plant in the area .
11 In addition , there was obviously competition from non-print media for advertising revenue and from other goods and services for the money in the newspaper reader 's pocket .
12 The culture adapts itself to change and is driven by the need to provide goods and services for the customer .
13 Resources used to produce goods and services for the government can not be used to make goods in the private sector .
14 In addition , £60 million was spent locally on goods and services for the site .
15 Classical economists begin from a model of a free market interchange of goods and services with no monopolies or imperfections in the capital market or the labour market .
16 First , your company is out to make money , to provide goods and services at a profit , for otherwise it can not survive .
17 In the market individuals exchange goods and services at a mutually agreed price , normally using the medium of money .
18 Their employee costs are much lower than ours , their social costs are much lower than ours and in and in the real world , we have to compete with them , and the boiling point will come from being competitive , supplying goods and services at a cost that the other countries will not by putting themselves in straight-jackets .
19 However , these flows may be ultimately recycled into the domestic circular flow because governments invariably spend what they raise in taxation , because expenditure on investment goods is frequently financed out of current saving , and because other countries often spend on domestically produced goods and services at the same time as we purchase their products .
20 There was no lack of commercial money-lenders , who combined into bodies like the Finance Houses Association , the Consumer Credit Association , the Institute of Credit Management , to satisfy the growing urge to borrow and purchase goods and services on a credit basis .
21 As an increasing exporter and provider of goods and services on a worldwide basis , the John Wood Group now spans many countries throughout the world .
22 In fact , there will be an excess supply of goods and services on the market which will exert downward pressure on prices .
23 The small firms provide goods and services to a large firm , which is in effect a monopoly buyer .
24 The extended school family includes : parents , the PTA , former parents , former pupils , staff both teaching and non-teaching , former staff , suppliers of goods and services to the school , friends and neighbours of the school .
25 Far fewer work-hours will be required to produce goods and services to the level needed to meet all the basic requirements for food , shelter , leisure , and health of the entire population , including the very old .
26 This chapter has been concerned with outlining the principal methods by which suppliers of products bring their goods and services to the attention of their markets , with the object of increasing their sales or market share , or both .
27 However , there are still general rules which apply to those who provide goods and services to the community .
28 More importantly , many will have increasingly supplied goods and services to the nearby villas and rural settlements , as individual small towns came to act as centres for periodic or permanent local fairs or markets .
29 The prices obtained are those actually charged in the selected retail outlets and an attempt is made to ensure that the prices collected relate to goods and services of the same quality every month .
30 Thus UK competition policy is very clearly directed at market behaviour and conduct that affects the supply of goods and services within the United Kingdom .
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