3 result(s) for hungarian lesson in Business
Amcham “Welcomes Hungarian Govt Higher-Ed Strategy”
- 13 Feb 2015 8:00 AM
- business
The American Chamber of Commerce has welcomed the government’s higher-education strategy, and their proposals set out in the guidelines conform to the government’s pursuits in higher education, the ministry of human resources said.
Zipcar Founder Gives Guest Lecture At CEU Business School In Budapest
- 2 Oct 2013 9:00 AM
- business
The ink had not yet dried on the Series A funding that would propel Zipcar to become the world’s largest carsharing company when one of its founders, Robin Chase, decided to send her customers an email that would keep her up most of the night.
CNBC On Hungary's "Economic Freedom War"
- 9 Aug 2010 3:00 AM
- business
"Comments by Hungary’s government officials have been "very mixed" about the deficit targets, Peter Attard Montalto, analyst at Nomura in London, told CNBC on Friday, adding that the issue is fundamentally about the cabinet’s attitude to international lenders and austerity. He said the government’s current approach is fine for now, but the markets will "bite eventually".
Amcham “Welcomes Hungarian Govt Higher-Ed Strategy”
- 13 Feb 2015 8:00 AM
- business
The American Chamber of Commerce has welcomed the government’s higher-education strategy, and their proposals set out in the guidelines conform to the government’s pursuits in higher education, the ministry of human resources said.
Zipcar Founder Gives Guest Lecture At CEU Business School In Budapest
- 2 Oct 2013 9:00 AM
- business
The ink had not yet dried on the Series A funding that would propel Zipcar to become the world’s largest carsharing company when one of its founders, Robin Chase, decided to send her customers an email that would keep her up most of the night.
CNBC On Hungary's "Economic Freedom War"
- 9 Aug 2010 3:00 AM
- business
"Comments by Hungary’s government officials have been "very mixed" about the deficit targets, Peter Attard Montalto, analyst at Nomura in London, told CNBC on Friday, adding that the issue is fundamentally about the cabinet’s attitude to international lenders and austerity. He said the government’s current approach is fine for now, but the markets will "bite eventually".