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Quotes About Supply

As a customer, I would see pieces that I loved and then find out they weren't being made because no store had ordered them.
~ Aslaug Magnusdottir
Gerir uma empresa com trabalhadores que não têm horário, que se limitam a ligar uma aplicação quando querem trabalhar e que concorrem com outros trabalhadores para qualquer trabalho que esteja disponível exige um poderoso conjunto de algoritmos, para assegurar que a oferta de trabalhadores e de clientes se mantenha num equilíbrio dinâmico.
~ Tim O'Reilly
buscar un mercado antes de idear un producto es más inteligente que lo contrario.
~ Timothy Ferriss
There is no free market in oil.
~ Peter DeFazio
There is no free market for oil.
~ T. Boone Pickens
There is no free market for oil. It's controlled by a cartel, OPEC.
~ Frederick W. Smith
Woman,' he said, 'seek divine wealth, not the paltry tinsel of earth. After acquiring inward treasure, you will find that outward supply is always forthcoming.
~ Paramahansa Yogananda
The law of demand and supply reaches into subtler realms than I had supposed." Ananta spoke with a spiritual enthusiasm never before noticeable. "I understand for the first time your indifference to the vaults and vulgar accumulations of the world." Late as it was, my brother insisted that he receive diksha into kriya yoga. The 'guru' Mukunda had to shoulder the responsibility of two unsought disciples in one day.
~ Paramahansa Yogananda
Satan is our chief enemy, and his primary target is our knowledge of and trust in God. Satan's constant assault is aimed at our belief in God's goodness and power, that God will supply all our needs, and that we can trust God to be sufficient in all ways.
~ Dallas Willard
There is only one way to make money: finding out what other people want or need and then providing those things to as many of our fellow humans as possible. This is the only way to earn money, no matter your occupation.
~ Daniel Lapin
the New World had become the oil granary for the Old; altogether, the United States was to satisfy 80 percent of the Allies' wartime requirement for petroleum.
~ Daniel Yergin
the $25 billion, 2,800-mile ESPO (Eastern Siberia–Pacific Ocean) oil pipeline. In 2005, just 5 percent of Russia's oil exports went to China. It rose to almost 30 percent, and Russia eclipsed Saudi Arabia as China's number one supplier.
~ Daniel Yergin
Disruptions of supply affect the global system into which America is so integrated—with almost 30 percent of U.S. GDP and close to 40 million jobs resulting from trade with the rest of the world.
~ Daniel Yergin
Mitchell Energy was contracted to provide 10 percent of Chicago's natural gas. But the reserves of gas in the ground to support that contract were running down.
~ Daniel Yergin
In the decade and a half following its entry into the World Trade Organization in 2001, China's oil consumption increased two and a half times over. It is currently the eighth-largest oil producer in the world, at 3.8 million barrels per day. But its demand has surged far ahead of domestic supply. It has become the world's largest importer of oil: by the beginning of 2020, 75 percent of total demand.
~ Daniel Yergin
Shale gas was proving to be cheaper than conventional natural gas. In 2000 shale was just 1 percent of natural gas supply. By 2011 it was 25 percent, and within two decades it could reach 50 percent.
~ Daniel Yergin
January 1861, fell to 50 cents by June and, by the end of 1861, were down
~ Daniel Yergin
North America's natural gas base, now estimated at 3,000 trillion cubic feet, could provide for current levels of consumption for over a hundred years—plus.
~ Daniel Yergin
there was always a considerable stock
~ William Boyd
ingenuity was apparently given man in order that he may supply himself in crises with shapes and sounds with which to guard himself from truth.
~ William Faulkner
Guyana black and magenta, of course, which we generally acknowledge to be the single most valuable stamp in the world—it is in perfectly horrible condition. Corners cut off, nasty blob of a postmark. With stamps of this great rarity, these unique stamps, condition is less of a factor than supply and demand. Most especially, of course, demand." I nodded. Ollie Weston had told me much the same thing.
~ William G. Tapply
You can always sell tools," Skinner had mused, perhaps to Yamazaki, perhaps to himself. "Somebody'll always buy 'em. But then you always need 'em again, exactly the one you sold.
~ William Gibson
For too long we've been suffering the tyranny of lowest-common-denominator fare, subjected to brain-dead summer blockbusters and manufactured pop. Why? Economics. Many of our assumptions about popular taste are actually artifacts of poor supply-and-demand matching—a market response to inefficient distribution.
~ Chris Anderson
It's easy for Americans to forget that the food they eat doesn't magically appear on a supermarket shelf.
~ Christopher Dodd