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"As a result, the Government has decided to distribute the monetary equivalent of three months' coupons for wheat."
It is dependent on the monetary equivalent of the obligation owed and is usually limited in duration.
Forecasting a recovery for the euro has thus far been the monetary equivalent of waiting for Godot.
"It would also be good to have a full account of the privileges and luxuries accorded to party workers (accompanied by their monetary equivalents).
The White House is unable to accept cash, checks, bonds, gift certificates, foreign currency, or other monetary equivalents.
He also received monetary equivalents for proper behavior (and lost them if he was rude or impatient or didn't finish a meal in 15 minutes).
The campaign encouraged community members to give up smoking for a day and donate the monetary equivalent of a pack of cigarettes to a scholarship fund.
It would be practical to extend the range of support to industrial disasters as well and to reduce the threshold of the monetary equivalent of the damage.
Defying predictions that it would create the monetary equivalent of Airbus's rivalry with Boeing, the currency has not eroded the global dominance of the American dollar.
From the point of view of economics and efficiency, it is usually considered better to give someone a monetary equivalent of some benefit than the benefit (say, a liter of milk) in kind.
Introduced in 1991, DART had by 1995 offset the monetary equivalent of all funds DARPA had channeled into AI research for the previous 30 years combined.
Economic appraisal is a type of decision method applied to a project, programme or policy that takes into account a wide range of costs and benefits, denominated in monetary terms or for which a monetary equivalent can be estimated.
This mixing up of price and value perpetuates the myth that rising house prices equates to rising house values, which of course its does not - it equates to devaluation in the monetary equivalent of the house.
Alan J. Pomerantz, head of the real estate department of the law firm Weil, Gotshal & Manges, notes that owners often insist that leases specify that the tenant spend the monetary equivalent of extra free rent on building out the space.
A food stamp challenge is a trend in the United States popularized by religious groups, community activists and food pantries in which a family of means chooses to purchase food using only the monetary equivalent of what a family that size would receive in federal food stamps.
If the consideration for a supply is not in money (as in a barter transaction - see paragraph 8.7) or the consideration is partly in money and partly something else (as in part-exchange), the tax value of the supply is the monetary equivalent of the consideration.
An official or employee of the government who acts corruptly - as well as the person who induces the corrupt act - in the carrying out of their official duties will be fined by an amount that is not more than three times the monetary equivalent of the bribe in question.
Apart from any need to counter persistent infringement of the rules of dress and display, the number of enactments is indicative of considerable uncertainty, for not only did the legislature feel impelled to extend the terminology of rank with monetary equivalents, these latter were made the subject of continual amendment within the broad permanent framework.
Because one thing is clear: a European stability pact that is not concluded by all fifteen Member States, or a European stability council which is not a forum where all fifteen Member States can express an opinion, would be the monetary equivalent of Schengen, something which we in this House reject.