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inefficiencies

n. (plural of inefficiency English)

Usage examples of "inefficiencies".

The auto companies estimated a couple of years ago that it was costing them about $500 extra per car just because of the inefficiencies of the U.

As I mentioned, it's striking that even Business Week, representing large sectors of the corporate community, wants to go over to a Canadian-style system because even the residual inefficiencies and expenses of the Clinton-style system will also, they assume, be harmful to them.

It also means that the public has to pay for the enormous inefficiencies involved, such as huge profit, big corporate salaries and other corporate amenities, to big bureaucracy to control in precise detail what doctors and nurses do and don't do.

So there are a lot of inefficiencies and inequalities and in my view just immoral elements to it.

Stripping away all the inefficiencies, the cosy deals, the feather-bedding, the smothering worst of the nanny-state.

Industrial base cut so close to the bone the marrow's leaking out, the old vaguely socialist inefficiencies replaced with more rabid capitalist ones, power centralised, corruption institutionalised, and a generation created which'll never have any skills beyond opening a car with a coat hanger and knowing which solvents give you the best buzz with a plastic bag over your head before you throw up or pass out.

This is nothing but a group of recognizable characters from a popular sitcom plunked down in Disney World discussing the reputed inefficiencies of our Quality Control department!

Mass evacuation would not only have weakened the creaking economy but revealed all the inefficiencies of supply and transport, not to mention all the corruption in the rationing of food supplies.