Betekenis van:
inefficiency

inefficiency
Zelfstandig naamwoord
    • unskillfulness resulting from a lack of efficiency

    Hyperoniemen


    Voorbeeldzinnen

    1. This inefficiency is a result of the animal's large body and massive legs and feet, which contribute a sideways motion to its walk.
    2. During the investigation, no structural inefficiency was detected which would make the Community industry uncompetitive.
    3. The manufacturer should confirm that this reasonably reflects the unit’s DC consumption plus some allowance for power supply and distribution inefficiency.
    4. The restructuring plan recognises that high absenteeism, rotation and the inefficiency of the employment and wage structure are among the yard’s main problems.
    5. Inefficiency with regard to this magnetic conductivity is called ‘core loss’, which is the prime indicator of the quality of the product.
    6. In order to avoid repeated customer identification procedures, leading to delays and inefficiency in business, it is appropriate, subject to suitable safeguards, to allow customers to be introduced whose identification has been carried out elsewhere.
    7. State aid which allows an operator to stay in the market in spite of its recurrent losses causes a major distortion of competition, as it leads in the long run to higher inefficiency, smaller supply and higher prices for consumers.
    8. However, since overfinancing usually leads to inefficiency and a heavier drain on State resources, it is by no means certain that increasing State funding will produce correspondingly improved profits.
    9. Furthermore, the Land intended to make a fundamental change in its business orientation by managing its own real estate and the real estate used by the various Land departments and institutions with the aim of reducing inefficiency.
    10. Since this is an external factor, inherent to all companies in financial difficulties and not linked to the inefficiency of the company itself, the Commission accepted that the actual performance of the yard could be adjusted by assuming smooth access to working capital.
    11. In addition to the circumvention of the original measures and the fact that the undertaking did not achieve the desired effect, it was also analysed whether other factors, like e.g. imports from other countries, or a hypothetical inefficiency of the Community industry, could explain the persistent poor financial situation of the latter.
    12. Irregular or lack of access to working capital can seriously disrupt the production process. Since this is an external factor inherent to all companies in financial difficulty and not linked to inefficiency on the part of the company itself, the Commission took the view that the yard’s actual performance could be adjusted by assuming easy access to working capital.
    13. Since this is an external factor inherent to all companies in financial difficulty and not linked to inefficiency on the part of the company itself, the Commission took the view that the yard’s actual performance could be adjusted by assuming easy access to working capital.
    14. The adoption of a uniform instrument to be used for enforcement measures in the requested Member State, as well as the adoption of a uniform standard form for notification of instruments and decisions relating to the claim, should resolve the problems of recognition and translation of instruments emanating from another Member State, which constitute a major cause of the inefficiency of the current arrangements for assistance.
    15. In conclusion, the electricity market in Sardinia exhibits a combination of problems (some of which are, however, common to the rest of Italy) which can be summarised as follows: high prices, a high degree of concentration of the market, dominant operators’ market power, excess generation capacity in the high cost-segment, relative inefficiency of generating plants which are becoming obsolete, lack of access to natural gas infrastructure, and insufficient interconnection.