Betekenis van:
vested interest

vested interest
Zelfstandig naamwoord
    • groups that seek to control a social system or activity from which they derive private benefit

    Hyperoniemen

    Hyponiemen

    vested interest
    Zelfstandig naamwoord
      • (law) an interest in which there is a fixed right to present or future enjoyment and that can be conveyed to another

      Hyperoniemen


      Voorbeeldzinnen

      1. The performance of a task carried out in the public interest or in the exercise of official authority vested in the controller (Article 7 (e)).
      2. It also referred to the vested interest of the network operator and of the broadcasters in the digital terrestrial switch-over.
      3. IMI actors and users carry out tasks in the public interest or in the exercise of official authority vested in them.
      4. It understands that HSCz was financed by loans granted by suppliers on a commercial basis and prepayments from steelwork customers, who had a vested interest in the continuation of steel production at Huta Częstochowa.
      5. It also doubted that the assistance was necessary since the market participants had a vested interest in the switch-over and since alternatives to the assistance provided had existed.
      6. A similar line was taken by ANGA, which also pointed to the lack of transparency in respect of the result of the tender procedures at the level of the network operation and the broadcasting licences. It also referred to the vested interest of the network operator and of the broadcasters in the digital terrestrial switch-over.
      7. All registrations in IMI are validated by the IMI Coordinator after making sure that the competent authority in question does carry out tasks either in the public interest (for example doctors or veterinary bodies ensuring that their members conform to ethical or sanitary rules) or in the exercise of official authority vested in them (e.g. Ministries of Education ensuring that secondary education teachers have the correct qualifications).
      8. In this context, it should be noted that neither Article 2(1)(a)(iv) of the basic Regulation nor the ASCM require a charge on the public accounts, e.g. reimbursement of the commercial banks by the GOI, to establish a subsidy, but only government direction to carry out functions illustrated in points (i), (ii) or (iii) of Article 2(1)(a) of the basic Regulation. The RBI is a public body and falls therefore under the definition of ‘government’ as set out in Article 1(3) of the basic Regulation. It is 100 % government-owned, pursues public policy objectives, e.g. monetary policy, and its management is appointed by the GOI. The RBI directs private bodies, within the meaning of the second indent of Article 2(1)(a)(iv) of the basic Regulation, since the commercial banks are bound by the conditions it imposes, inter alia, with regard to the maximum ceilings for interest rates on export credits mandated in the RBI Master Circulars and the RBI provisions that commercial banks have to provide a certain amount of their net bank credit towards export finance. This direction obliges commercial banks to carry out functions mentioned in Article 2(1)(a)(i) of the basic Regulation, in this case provide loans in the form of preferential export financing. Such direct transfer of funds in the form of loans under certain conditions would normally be vested in the government, and the practice differs, in no real sense, from practices normally followed by governments, within the meaning of Article 2(1)(a)(iv) of the basic Regulation.