RCS definition

RCS means the Luxembourg register of commerce and companies.
RCS means the Registre de Commerce et des Societes (the Luxembourg Trade and Companies Register).

Examples of RCS in a sentence

  • RCS Cards Proprietary Limited (Registration Number: 2000/017891/07) is a registered credit provider and authorised financial services provider, of Golf Park 6, Golf Park, Raapenberg Road, Mowbray 7700 (hereinafter referred to as “us”, “we”, “our”).

  • For this purpose, RCS have compiled a new set of national poverty lines for developing countries drawn from the World Bank’s country-specific Poverty Assessments and the Poverty Reduction Strategy Papers done by the governments of the countries concerned.

  • Looking at it another way, based on the regression function in Figure 1, the $1.45 line corresponds to a level of consumption per capita of around $2.25 per day—above which the value at the poverty lines start to rise with mean consumption (RCS).

  • However, it makes sense to focus on the poorest 15 since the econometric tests reported in RCS imply that national poverty lines tend to rise with consumption per person when it exceeds about $2 per day, which is near the upper bound of the consumption levels found amongst these 15 countries.

  • Each tag topology has RCS reduction at the resonance frequency, so a reader can detect the data.


More Definitions of RCS

RCS means the Luxembourg Trade and Companies Register (Registre du Commerce et des Sociétés);
RCS means the Commission will accept financial responsibility for the residential care subsidy.
RCS means the regulatory compliance statement (also available on www.sc.com/en/rcs) setting out the legal and regulatory requirements that apply to each Borrower’s relationship with the Bank (as amended from time to time).
RCS means RCS Cards (Pty) Limited, a company registered according to the company laws of South Africa, with registration number: 2000/017891/07;
RCS means a division of ALTSA.
RCS means the Rideau Canal Skateway.
RCS has the meaning set forth in the Recitals hereto.