Similar words: deprivation, derivation, motivation, captivation, organisation, improvisation, satisfaction, industrialisation. Meaning: n. changing something from state to private ownership or control.
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121. Mass privatisation broke the planners' grip but failed to create the hoped-for shareholder democracy.
122. In theory privatisation has the scope to restructure the economy, but a fire sale risks letting the choicest assets fall into the hands of cronies who will manipulate regulation to suit themselves.
123. The risk is that they bring in bad policies. One such would be maintaining the government's support for Mr Kamei's ill-conceived reversal of the postal privatisation.
124. In the 1990s, while other former Soviet states limped from rampant privatisation to financial crisis, the Belarussian economy remained stable under almost total state control.
125. Privatisation remains a thorny issue in a country where private property became a constitutional right only in 2004 and where the right to own productive assets remains unclear.
126. Many firms, including state companies up for privatisation, are only now starting to keep proper, audited accounts.
127. It would be unwise for the government to think of privatisation as a means of saving money.
128. We will be pressing ahead with our policies on privatisation, deregulation and cutting out waste.
More similar words: deprivation, derivation, motivation, captivation, organisation, improvisation, satisfaction, industrialisation, private, privately, ovation, sensation, cessation, elevation, salvation, accusation, private school, innovation, renovation, starvation, excavation, compensation, private property, depravation, reservation, observation, dispensation, conversation, condensation, the private sector.