0 a person employed to buy and sell (especially shares etc) for others -- mekler
a stockbroker.
an insurance broker
In a context in which citizens derive their benefits directly from the bureaucracy, the roles that patron ' brokers ' can play are limited.
In addition, the dependence of the workers on language "brokers" to convey their grievances to management causes feelings of embarrassment, humiliation, and powerlessness.
First, he referred to the brokers as 'the best people from the musical+artistic world', alluding to the authority that they embodied.
The assisted brokers were not in a position to pay interest on what had been lent to them, let alone any repayments.
To sustain these strikes, workers had to persuade and cajole, manipulate and coerce to their side, the sundry patrons and power brokers of the neighbourhood.
Local power brokers may equally be able to hold the government to ransom.
Queries are routed by mediators and brokers to data retrieval agents.
Providers' costs include the commissions paid to annuity brokers and operating costs.