0 competing in a strong and unfair way, without considering any harm caused to others: --
Many firms have fallen victim to cut-throat competition.
Scrapping of price fixing legislation led to a cut-throat battle for supermarket customers.
The protection afforded against this cut-throat competition has been of very great significance and a great advantage.
In the depressed conditions of the 1920s and 1930s industries got together to limit cut-throat competition.
We cannot get away from the fact that if we have cut-throat competition the tendency is to lower quality.
But cut-throat competition is inevitably both wasteful and expensive.
This was a wide-ranging advantage in avoiding cut-throat competition with each country endeavouring to export its own unemployment.
The price competition is cut-throat, not only in the road-transport sector but also between the different modalities.
The only way of reviving the industry hitherto attempted is by cut-throat competition, thoroughly unorganised—the so-called policy of attrition.
Everyone admits that cut-throat competition, like war, is merely ruining civilisation.