Bailout
in sentence
528 examples of Bailout in a sentence
Indeed, that is why the latest deal with Greece, which entails even more
bailout
funds, could work, as long as the country is accorded the debt reprofiling that it needs to reverse the decline of its GDP, reduces its primary surpluses, and pursues balance-sheet-strengthening reforms.
And now, with the US House of Representatives having rejected the Bush administration’s proposed $700 billion
bailout
plan, it is also obvious that there is no consensus on how to fix it.
In such circumstances, is there any
bailout
plan that can work?
Any government
bailout
that pays fair value for these assets will do nothing to repair that hole.
Even if a
bailout
plan were implemented quickly – which appears increasingly unlikely – there would be some credit contraction.
There is a growing consensus among economists that any $750 billion
bailout
based on Paulson’s plan won’t by itself do the trick of resuscitating our economy.
Europe’s Trojan HorseBERKELEY – Europe is now moving ineluctably toward a
bailout
for Greece.
The results were predictable: the 1998
bailout
did not work, but devaluation did.
The last
bailout
program from the “troika" (the International Monetary Fund, the ECB, and the European Commission), initiated in 2010, foresees a primary budget surplus (which excludes interest payments) of 4% of GDP this year.
This is significant, because, in May 2010, a group of prominent German economists, led by Joachim Starbatty, commenced litigation before the German Constitutional Court in which they argued that the EU’s assistance to Greece and Europe’s new financial rescue fund violated Article 125, the EU treaty’s so-called “no bailout” clause.
All treaties and commitments – including, crucially, the Maastricht Treaty’s “no bailout” clause – must be respected without exception.
Nations everywhere are starting to implement aggressive stimulus and
bailout
packages.
Beyond that, national leaders are defending extraordinary
bailout
measures by not-so-veiled comparisons to the Great Depression.
The current stimulus and
bailout
plans were hatched in reaction to that dreadful week.
To that we must add coordinated financial regulation and
bailout
policies, as deposits flow rapidly across borders in response to national guarantees and insurance in the euro zone.
In fact, eurozone banks’ preference for home-country sovereign bonds is rooted in a combination of factors, including fear of redenomination – a consequence of the crisis that leads banks to concentrate their risk domestically – and the expectation that
bailout
mechanisms will be national.
As for the UK’s “serial dependence” on the IMF from the mid-1950’s to the mid-1970’s, there were actually only two episodes: the 1956
bailout
during the Suez crisis and the 1976
bailout
that preceded the winter of discontent when strikes in many essential industries – even the dead went unburied – practically brought the country to its knees.
The reality of the 1976
bailout
is even more complicated.
Ireland’s Lessons for GreeceMUNICH – Greece’s government, led by the left-wing Syriza party, is demanding a new deal from its European creditors, claiming that the
bailout
program provided by the “troika” (the International Monetary Fund, the European Central Bank, and the European Commission) has plunged their country into a spiral of deflation and austerity.
An unwavering focus on putting its public finances in order and cleaning up the banking sector enabled Ireland to exit its €67.5 billion ($73.7 billion)
bailout
program as planned at the end of 2013.
Having shrunk by as much as 6% in 2009, the Irish economy was outperforming the other
bailout
countries by 2011.
For starters, the IMF’s research and similar studies show that the likelihood of a
bailout
over the life of the bonds already issued by banks is indeed now lower.
Lower
bailout
risk could reflect the perception that the regulation already in place is appropriate and complete.
In 2010, the IMF made a play for resurrection, presenting itself as central to solving the euro crisis – beginning with its role in financing the Greek
bailout.
The fact is that only the US and the massively over-represented countries of the European Union supported the Greek
bailout.
Indeed, the major emerging economies all strongly opposed it, with the Brazilian representative calling it “a
bailout
of Greece’s private debt holders, mainly European financial institutions.”
The End of Big BanksWASHINGTON, DC – After nearly a decade of crisis, bailout, and reform in the United States and the European Union, the financial system – both in those countries and globally – is remarkably similar to the one we had in 2006.
The creditors must find the money to fund the
bailout.
Despite pressure from Germany and other countries to participate in the new
bailout
program, the Fund will not get involved unless it judges Greece’s debt to be sustainable.
Third,
bailout
fatigue is apparent.
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