Bankers
in sentence
1054 examples of Bankers in a sentence
Nor did it go as far as it might have in exploring what the "investors" -- all those prominent
bankers
-- thought they were doing.
After all, most of the students were sent there to become lawyers,
bankers
and doctors.
Central
bankers
have long recognized that it is imprudent to lower interest rates in pursuit of full employment if the consequence is an inflationary spiral.
Some days I think that, in the future, central
bankers
must also recognize that it is imprudent to lower interest rates in pursuit of full employment when doing so risks causing an asset price bubble.
In order to strengthen that potential, central
bankers
can only advocate economic reforms; it is governments that are responsible for adopting them.
Emerging-Market Target PracticeISTANBUL – Central
bankers
want only a few things.
Internally,
bankers
had enormous potential to benefit from risky moves, but were insulated from the costs of failure.
But central
bankers
are right to stress the limits of what monetary policy alone can achieve.
“Anglo-Saxon” is more often used in a negative sense by the French, as in “Anglo-Saxon bankers” or “Anglo-Saxon conspiracies” (to keep the French down).
Because real income growth is vital to boost consumption and prices, central
bankers
and politicians are now in the novel business of encouraging wage increases.
As a result, while central
bankers
before the 2008 financial crisis viewed themselves as heroes in a battle against inflation, they increasingly found themselves offsetting structural deflationary pressures by setting interest rates low enough to stimulate credit booms.
Transition Countries And The D-Mark - A Marriage OFRANKFURT: Investors and central
bankers
love the D-Mark.
Did she destroy the power of vested interests and create a genuine meritocracy, or did she entrench
bankers
and financiers as the new elite, with disastrous consequences?
Thatcher was certainly no friend of central
bankers.
Lenders (the bankers) are suspicious, worried about creditworthiness, and demand high risk premia.
Currently, however, central
bankers
are not worried about inflation, except in the sense that they want it to be a little higher.
In fact, even during Japan’s so-called “lost decades,” per capita income grew by as much as it did in the United States and Europe, and the employment rate rose, suggesting that deflation may not be quite as nefarious as central
bankers
seem to believe.
One might expect this evidence to compel central
bankers
to rethink their current concerns about deflation.
The US debt-ceiling fiasco has raised doubts in the minds of central
bankers
about the advisability of holding dollars, while Europe’s failure to resolve its sovereign-debt crisis continues to fuel doubt that the euro can survive.
Once upon a time (less than a year ago), it was possible to imagine international-reserve portfolios dominated by the dollar and euro; today, anxious central
bankers
are desperate for alternatives to both sick currencies.
Why the Fed Should Postpone Rate HikesJACKSON HOLE, WYOMING – As central
bankers
from around the world gather this week in Jackson Hole for the Federal Reserve’s annual Economic Policy Symposium, one key topic of discussion will be the current global stock-market turmoil.
Central bankers, I believe, are underestimating the impact of this structural shift.
Though some businessmen and
bankers
are annoyed by the disruption, the demonstrators are right to protest.
Macroprudential regulation is the new term of art among central bankers, supplementing their well-established inflation-targeting regimes.
The change reflects central bankers’ argument that to target credit or liquidity requires another tool.
The Hidden Debt Burden of Emerging MarketsLIMA – As central
bankers
and finance ministers from around the globe gather for the International Monetary Fund’s annual meetings here in Peru, the emerging world is rife with symptoms of increasing economic vulnerability.
At the benign end of the spectrum, this realm includes actors as diverse as
bankers
electronically transferring huge sums; at the other end are terrorists transferring weapons or hackers disrupting Internet operations.
Of course, independent central
bankers
are not Sarkozy’s favorite people.
Foreign bank mergers have proved poisonous for euro-zone central
bankers.
So, to hear a procession of investment
bankers
proclaim that, realistically speaking, Russia’s economy is of no more importance to the world than Santo Domingo, was more than humiliating: deep down many Russians suspected that this might very well be true.
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