Banking
in sentence
2429 examples of Banking in a sentence
Interest rates reach a ludicrous 20% in the shadow
banking
sector, and run even higher for some private lending.
With local governments and companies struggling to make interest payments, they are forced into a vicious cycle, borrowing from the shadow
banking
sector to meet their obligations, thereby raising the risk-free interest rate further.
The
banking
system would not survive this without help, so the EU’s bailout activities should be refocused accordingly.
In late April, the European Parliament issued a report highlighting the danger that unrestricted data mining that relies on racial, ethnic, or national origin would subject innocent people to arbitrary stops, travel restrictions, and bans on employment or
banking.
Likewise, Switzerland long used mandatory military service and mountainous geography as hard-power resources for deterrence, while making itself attractive to others through banking, commercial, and cultural networks.
The P-6’s goals would include measures to reduce their debt burden and increase domestic demand, probably through targeted stimulus in Germany, the formation of a
banking
union with a robust resolution mechanism, and the introduction of Eurobonds.
All this has negative implications for US consumption, for the building industry, and for the
banking
system.
Moreover, despite the recent
banking
reform legislation, the US has not yet resolved the structural deficiencies of its capital markets.
Perhaps US Vice President Joe Biden summed up Russia’s predicament best: “The reality is, the Russians are where they are, having a shrinking population base, a withering economy, and a
banking
structure that is unlikely to withstand the next 15 years.
Another $50 billion is needed in telecommunications infrastructure if Myanmar is to make full use of digital technology to leapfrog stages of development – for example, by using mobile
banking
or e-commerce to avoid the cost of building physical banks and shops, and to extend health and education services to even the remotest villages.
France has been actively helping to stabilize the eurozone by encouraging structural progress, such as the establishment of a European
banking
union.
A Latin American default would have brought down the
banking
systems of all the major industrial countries, causing something like a replay of the Great Depression.
Consider just a few examples: Anat Admati and Simon Johnson have advocated radical
banking
reforms;Thomas Piketty and Tony Atkinson have proposed a rich menu of policies to deal with inequality at the national level;Mariana Mazzucato and Ha-Joon Chang have written insightfully on how to deploy the public sector to foster inclusive innovation;Joseph Stiglitz and José Antonio Ocampo have proposed global reforms;Brad DeLong, Jeffrey Sachs, and Lawrence Summers (the very same!) have argued for long-term public investment in infrastructure and the green economy.
But China’s rulers know that their highly repressed
banking
system is vulnerable as the country continues to pursue gradual financial liberalization, and that foreign currency reserves may be needed for recapitalization.
Fed Policy and Inflation RiskCAMBRIDGE – During the past four years, the United States Federal Reserve has added enormous liquidity to the US commercial
banking
system, and thus to the American economy.
During the past year, the Fed has further increased the liquidity of the
banking
system – and of the American economy – by a strategy called Operation Twist, buying $400 billion of long-term securities in exchange for short-term Treasury bills.
This process of labor substitution and disintermediation has been underway for some time in service sectors – think of ATMs, online banking, enterprise resource planning, customer relationship management, mobile payment systems, and much more.
Non-performing loans in the
banking
sector and unemployment continue to rise in many countries.
While Central and Eastern Europe has been the emerging-market region to suffer the most in the crisis, it has generally avoided the currency collapses, systemic
banking
failures, and spikes in inflation that were the staple of previous crises.
In the near term, Italy’s ongoing
banking
crisis could flare up again and threaten European stability; in the longer term, Italy may have to leave the eurozone, which would put the single currency itself at risk.
That, in turn, would require MPS’s junior bondholders to take losses, unless the government breaches the EU’s bank “bail-in” rules, which would undermine the eurozone’s new
banking
union.
And Europe faces a desperate need to build pan-European institutions to ensure
banking
and fiscal union, and to address serious competitiveness problems in France and Italy.
This is where the real test of cooperation lies, for our success will rely on securing the appropriate interaction and flow of intelligence between the relevant services and the financial and
banking
communities.
The ECB’s generous provision of liquidity to European banks at only 1% interest for up to three years has prevented a
banking
crisis from piling on top of the sovereign-debt crisis.
And, indeed, it has: the shocking collapse this week of the Greek
banking
system.
Given its great depression, Greece should use its savings to pay pensioners, provide food relief, make crucial infrastructure repairs, and direct liquidity toward the
banking
system.
If there is no recourse but to pursue stronger sanctions, the US should coordinate with others, including the European Union and ASEAN, to impose targeted financial and
banking
measures to ensure that military leaders and their associates cannot evade the impact of what otherwise would be less-effective unilateral sanctions.
For a credible
banking
system remains the stuff of dreams; external debt and corruption are as high as ever, and capital flight continues unabated.
As their small and open economies were already heavily “euro-ized,” the pass-though of higher foreign prices into inflation would have been huge following any devaluation, which would also have broken their otherwise reasonably healthy
banking
systems.
Under the auspices of the government-sponsored enterprise (GSE) Fannie Mae, Stiglitz published a paper in 2002 arguing that the chance that the mortgage lender’s capital would be depleted was less than one in 500,000, and in 2009 he called for nationalization of the US
banking
system.
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