Bailout
in sentence
528 examples of Bailout in a sentence
Do you call it "The
bailout
of Greece"?
Or "The
bailout
of a load of stupid banks which lent to Greece"? (Laughter) Because they are actually the same thing.
But I'm going to segue to another thing that relates, because one of my private campaigns I've been conducting for over three and a half years is for transparency and accountability around the
bailout
of CL Financial.
There was no
bailout
on the horizon.
There is no big rescue, no prince charming, no big
bailout
in the works.
We have the high income countries here, with the United States as a leading power; we have the emerging economies in the middle, which provide a lot of the funding for the bailout; and we have the low income countries here.
Will the
bailout
work?
So if you look at this in the context of visualizing the bailout, what you can see is, if you stack up dollar bills, first of all, 360,000 dollars is about the size of a five-foot-four guy.
So if you think about that, the context, the casualness with which we talk about trillion-dollar
bailout
here and trillion there, we are stacking ourselves up for long-term leverage.
So I think that the oil blowout, the bank bailout, the mortgage crisis and all these things are absolutely symptoms of the same cause.
Along the way one greedy robber decides to
bailout
with the money landing in a cornfield monitored by strange looking scarecrows.
It received
bailout
packages in 2010 and 2012 totaling €240 billion ($266 billion), including €30 billion from the IMF, more than triple Greece’s cumulative limit for IMF borrowing.
By contrast, South Korea’s 1997
bailout
package – which was larger than those received by Indonesia, Thailand, or the Philippines – totaled $57 billion, with $21 billion coming from the IMF.
Why would a major corporation – especially one like GM, which suffered a serious crisis that led to a massive government
bailout
in 2008 – risk appointing leaders, no matter how talented, who are bound to generate devaluing news coverage such as this?
The lessons from Greece and other unsuccessful
bailout
programs are sobering.
If a debt
bailout
program requires a wholesale change in a country’s economic, social, and political model, the best course of action might be to write off the private losses, rather than pour in public money to cover them.
Insurance policies that clearly specify the amounts that will be paid and the types of damage that will be covered are far better than the government-administered, after-the-fact
bailout
that many people seem to have expected.
In the real world of Europe today, debtors cannot break agreements that they have made in exchange for aid, and creditors must recognize the need to continue contributing resources to the
bailout
fund.
The early poll was no surprise: almost a third of Tsipras’s colleagues in his leftist Syriza Party refused to endorse the
bailout
he had negotiated with the country’s creditors.
Previous
bailout
programs failed because they entailed excessive austerity.
Just promising not to provide a
bailout
is not credible.
The financial marketplace was quite wary and tense in 2008, owing to the collapse of Lehman Brothers and the government
bailout
of mega-insurer American International Group (AIG).
But the unintended consequence of the
bailout
was to shatter confidence in the government’s solvency.
One problem is that the public’s appetite for a
bailout
of the unregulated and hemorrhaging “shadow” financial system, consisting of institutions like hedge funds and private equity firms, is rightly small, yet it too can serve to hold back bank lending if a large proportion of the distressed assets are held in weak institutions there.
Greece is still barely growing, after experiencing one of the worst recessions in history, although those who blame this on German austerity clearly have not looked at the numbers: with encouragement from left-leaning US economists, Greece mismanaged perhaps the softest
bailout
package in modern history.
Although both men have warily embraced the $700 billion
bailout
of the financial sector, the contrasts between the two men are sharp.
McCain is a man of strong traditional values who prides himself on his willingness to act quickly and decisively, which he sought to do during the negotiations on the
bailout
by suspending his campaign to return to Washington.
With the IMF in
bailout
frenzy, and Brazilian policymakers in denial, don't count on either for a successful program.
Having peddled the story, the IMF is now locked into asking for a bit on the budget and handing over a big
bailout
package in return.
The next day, the US government had to extend an $85 billion
bailout
to American International Group (AIG), the world’s largest insurer, owing to its inability to back up its deteriorating derivatives position.
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