Young Plan

(noun)

A program for settlement of German reparation debts after World War I, written in 1929 and formally adopted in 1930.

Related Terms

  • Dawes Plan
  • Article 231
  • Occupation of the Ruhr
  • Treaty of Versailles

Examples of Young Plan in the following topics:

  • War Debts and Reparations

    • Dawes,   proposed a plan in 1924.
    • Young and presented its findings in June 1929.
    • The Young Plan was accepted and was ratified by the German Government in 1930.
    • In early July, Brüning announced "his intention to seek the outright revision of the Young Plan."
    • Describe Germany's reparations following World War I, including the Dawes and Young Plans, and their effect on the German economy.
  • Juvenile Crime

    • Young men disproportionately commit juvenile delinquency.
    • One suggestion is that ideas of masculinity may make young men more likely to offend.
    • Being tough, powerful, aggressive, daring, and competitive becomes a way for young men to assert and express their masculinity.
    • Alternatively, young men may actually be naturally more aggressive, daring, and prone to risk-taking.
    • Poster promoting planned housing as a method to deter juvenile delinquency, showing silhouettes of a child stealing a piece of fruit and as an older minor involved in armed robbery.
  • Medicaid and Medicare

    • The health plan is then responsible for providing for all or most of the recipient's healthcare needs.
    • Nationwide, roughly 60% of enrollees are enrolled in managed care plans.
    • Some plans offer dental coverage, vision coverage, and other services not covered by Medicare Parts A or B.
    • These plans are a good value for the health care dollar, if an individual wants to use the provider included in the plan's network.
    • They contribute to the fund when they are young and able to work.
  • The Brief Reign of Peter III

    • Young Peter of Holstein-Gottorp lost his mother, Elizabeth's sister Anna, at three months old and his father at the age of eleven.
    • Elizabeth invited her young nephew to Saint Petersburg, where he was received into the Orthodox Church and proclaimed heir in 1742.
    • The young princess formally converted to Russian Orthodoxy and took the name Ekaterina Alexeievna (Catherine).
    • As Duke of Holstein-Gottorp, Peter planned war against Denmark in order to restore parts of Schleswig to his Duchy.
    • On the night of July 8, Catherine the Great received the news that one of her co-conspirators had been arrested by her estranged husband and that all they had been planning had to take place at once.
  • Higher Education

    • During the nineteenth century, many small colleges helped young men make the transition from rural farms to complex urban occupations.
    • During the nineteenth century, the nation's many small colleges helped young men make the transition from rural farms to complex urban occupations.
    • Aided by the secession of many states that did not support the plans, this reconfigured Morrill Act was signed into law by President Abraham Lincoln in 1862.
    • The college was a center of middle-class values that served to help young people on their journey to white-collar occupations.
  • The Marshall Plan and Molotov Plan

  • New Approaches to the Developing World

    • He also founded the Peace Corps, which recruited idealistic young people to undertake humanitarian projects in Asia, Africa, and Latin America.
    • In March of 1961, Kennedy proposed a ten-year plan for Latin America, which called for an annual increase of 2.5% in per capita income; the establishment of democratic governments; the elimination of adult illiteracy by 1970; price stability to avoid inflation or deflation; more equitable income distribution; land reform; and economic and social planning.
    • Although Israel's Prime Minister David Ben-Gurion had publicly assured the United States that Israel did not plan to develop nuclear weapons, Kennedy tried to persuade Israel to permit some qualified expert to visit the site.
    • By naming young appointees, including scholars and liberal Democrats with government experience, to several embassies, Kennedy broke with Eisenhower's pattern.
  • Management mistakes and the incompatibility of growth strategies and organizational structure

    • A third mistake is to not recruit competent and professional staff to implement the planned strategies.
    • The growth of start-ups must be planned, and supported by one or more of the above mentioned strategies.
    • It is a significant growth mistake to do without planning and strategic development.
    • Some of the classic mistakes made by young firms are either to wait too long before decentralizing, decentralizing too soon, and/or failing to coordinate the new departments.
    • Each of these mistakes, or a combination, can have a restricting effect on the growth of a firm, and in the worst case can even increase the risk of a young firm's going bankrupt.
  • Purpose of the Marketing Plan

    • A formal marketing plan provides a clear reference point for activities throughout the planning period.
    • Still, what's the point of creating a formal marketing plan?
    • Exactly what purpose does a marketing plan serve?
    • A formal marketing plan provides a clear reference point for activities throughout the planning period.
    • However, perhaps the most important benefit of these plans is the planning process itself.
  • Overview of Types of Strategic Plans

    • The broader overview of strategic plans, as well as the five subgroups within strategic planning, provide businesses with direction.
    • Short-range plans: Short-range plans generally apply to a specific time frame in which a specific series of operations will be carried out, assessed, and measured.
    • Long-range plans are those most closely related to the overall strategic-planning process.
    • Single-use plans:As opposed to standing plans, single-use plans cover a specific operation or process that is an outlier to normal operations.
    • Differentiate between the five general planning frames and recognize considerations that must be made prior to planning
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