Banking
in sentence
2429 examples of Banking in a sentence
So, instead, the Modi administration – and, in particular, Arun Jaitley, the finance minister – has taken the RBI to task for not preventing the accumulation of non-performing assets in the
banking
system after the credit spigots were opened to help cope with the global financial crisis.
Higher political considerations, as well as the interests of the
banking
system, militated against an exit.
The EU’s newcomers have adopted growth models that rely to varying degrees on foreign capital to finance domestic investment, and on
banking
systems that are largely owned by west European banks.
The
banking
sector will still be “de-risking,” limiting the flow of credit to small and medium-size companies and undermining hiring and investment in plant and equipment.
And Iraq’s invasion of Kuwait in August 1990 led to a spike in oil prices at a time when a US
banking
crisis was already tipping America into recession.
Moreover, financial technology firms in Africa and Asia are finding innovative ways to analyze data generated by poor people’s activities, and using that data to design and deliver better
banking
services.
Abandoning the euro, for example, would cripple the continent’s
banking
system, affecting both Germany and the affluent north and the distressed countries in the south.
Unless confidence in sovereign debt within the eurozone can be restored, Europe’s
banking
skyscrapers will need to be cut in half.
The broader and more worrying trend is the politicization of central
banking.
It can easily be evaded by relying on offshore
banking
centers, some pointed out, as if not all financial regulations face that very same challenge.
When that crisis broke, the IMF quickly committed itself to more than $100 billion in loans to the four countries involved, subject to conditions agreed on with the IMF, conditions on government budgets, monetary policies,
banking
regulations, and the like, varying somewhat from country to country.
In retrospect, many observers, myself included, believe that much of the advice was based on the IMF’s experience with countries whose problem derived from excessive government spending and budgets and was not appropriate to East Asia, where the problem was not a fiscal crisis but a
banking
crisis -- in Japan as well as in the pegged exchange rate countries.
The EU's Deposit-Guarantee EndgameTILBURG – While existing European Union institutions were always unlikely to implement a common deposit-guarantee system (DGS) on their own, the formation of a European
banking
union will naturally lead to such a scheme.
But, in the second half of 2011, the eurozone-based parent banks that dominate emerging Europe’s
banking
sector came under renewed pressure to deleverage.
For starters, the Basel III package of global
banking
reforms and the European Union’s corresponding Capital Requirements Directive IV rule create disincentives for cross-border financing.
And spillover effects from Greece will continue to affect Balkan and other emerging European
banking
markets.
That is why the Vienna Initiative must become an effective “voice” for the host countries in the Europe-wide debate on debt resolution and
banking
union.
Some progress has been made toward safeguarding emerging Europe’s
banking
system.
The European Commission and multilateral lenders should help to facilitate ongoing structural change in the
banking
sector, including bank acquisitions and balance-sheet restructuring for viable export-driven companies.
Europe’s Triple ThreatPALO ALTO – Europe is suffering from simultaneous sovereign-debt, banking, and currency crises.
Calls are rampant for surrendering fiscal sovereignty; for dramatic recapitalization of the financially vulnerable
banking
system; and/or for Greece and possibly other distressed eurozone members to quit the euro (or for establishing an interim two-tier monetary union).
The sovereign debt, banking, and euro crises are closely connected.
There are three basic approaches to resolving the
banking
crisis (which means resolving the fiscal adjustment, sovereign debt, and euro issues simultaneously).
The Obama administration adopted this option, following the unpopular Troubled Asset Relief Program, which injected hundreds of billions of public dollars into the
banking
system (most of which has been repaid).
Europeans, both debtors and creditors, must address the
banking
problem forthrightly, and simultaneously with the euro, sovereign-debt, and fiscal-adjustment issues.
For example, in Moldova, Europe’s poorest country, a billion-dollar
banking
scandal has spurred a wave of public protests calling for fresh elections.
Moreover, under its new president, Mario Draghi, the European Central Bank appears willing to do anything necessary to reduce stress on the eurozone’s
banking
system and governments, as well as to lower interest rates.
The credit crunch in the
banking
system is becoming more severe as banks deleverage by selling assets and rationing credit, exacerbating the downturn.
Negative rates, moreover, have begun to impair the health of the
banking
system.
Soon after the crisis erupted, the G-20 countries embraced massive stimulus packages, unconventional monetary policies in the advanced economies, and major institutional efforts, such as the Dodd-Frank financial-reform legislation in the United States and the Basel III initiative to strengthen
banking
standards.
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