private cost

  • 11cost-effective — ˌcost efˈfective adjective bringing the best possible advantages in relation to costs: • Private banking isn t cost effective for the consumer with less than about $200,000, as those customers can get most basic services at lower fees from… …

    Financial and business terms

  • 12Private equity in the 1990s — relates to one of the major periods in the history of private equity and venture capital. Within the broader private equity industry, two distinct sub industries, leveraged buyouts and venture capital experienced growth along parallel although… …

    Wikipedia

  • 13Private healthcare — or private medicine is healthcare and medicine provided by entities other than the government. The term is generally used more in Europe and other countries which have publicly funded health care, to differentiate the arrangement from the usual… …

    Wikipedia

  • 14Private police — are law enforcement bodies that are owned and/or controlled by non governmental entities. These can be firms to which the government contracts out police work (e.g. the 1975 1977 Oro Valley, Arizona Rural/Metro contract, the 1980 Reminderville,… …

    Wikipedia

  • 15private carrier — a carrier who operates under a particular contract in each case and who may choose whether to accept or reject any request to carry. In the absence of a special term in the contract, a private carrier probably has no lien over the goods of a… …

    Law dictionary

  • 16Private Equity Analyst — is a newsletter that since 1988 has provided news and information about the private equity market and its investment specialities, including venture capital, leveraged buyouts, mezzanine investing and turnarounds.Based in Wellesley, Massachusetts …

    Wikipedia

  • 17Cost-shifting — is either an economic situation where one group underpays for a service resulting another group overpaying for a service (shifting compared to expected burden)[1][2] or where one group pays a smaller share of costs than before resulting in… …

    Wikipedia

  • 18Private finance initiative — Part of the Politics series on Neoliberalism …

    Wikipedia

  • 19Private prison — Articleissues|article=1|globalize=August 2007|tone=August 2007|cleanup=January 2007|pov=June 2008A private prison, jail, or detention center is a place in which individuals are physically confined or interned for profit. Private prison companies… …

    Wikipedia

  • 20Private Finance Initiative — The Private Finance Initiative specifies a method, developed initially by the United Kingdom government, to provide financial support for Public Private Partnerships (PPPs) between the public and private sectors. This has now been adopted by… …

    Wikipedia