Banking
in sentence
2429 examples of Banking in a sentence
The Liu family is one of thousands of poor farming families in China’s interior who contracted HIV through contaminated blood donations during the 1990’s, when under-regulated for-profit blood
banking
companies reused needles and transferred blood from infected donors to clean donors after extracting the plasma.
China’s
Banking
RevolutionOne of the greatest challenges China must confront before the WTO treaty enters into force in 2007 is to prepare the country’s
banking
system for privatization and competition with foreign banks.
The recent capital-spending boom produced a burst of speculative lending in 2003 and 2004 because the
banking
system was still state-owned and responsive to political pressure—until the government itself imposed credit controls in April 2004 to prevent a sharp upsurge in non-performing loans.
The transformation in China’s
banking
system, coupled with the recent decision to revalue China’s currency, will require major changes in the conduct of monetary policy.
The transformation in China’s
banking
system is complex and difficult because it involves a change in its fundamental nature.
Finally, once the crisis erupted, the fiscal consequences of bailing out too-big-to-fail financial institutions contributed to rapid public-debt unsustainability, which threatens to boomerang on the
banking
sector.
In particular, it would be helpful to devise a way to identify potential risks to fiscal stability (such as those implied by an over-extended
banking
and financial system).
The elements of a
banking
union, starting with a single supervisor, are beginning to materialize.
Negotiations over the
banking
union could collapse.
It must strengthen the European Parliament’s powers so that the EU has a political counterweight to its increasingly powerful economic entities – not just the ECB and the single
banking
supervisor, but also the European Commission, which will eventually become the enforcer of fiscal discipline.
One of the more striking regularities that Reinhart and I found is that after a wave of international
banking
crises, a wave of sovereign defaults and restructurings often follows within a few years.
This correlation is hardly surprising, given the massive build-up in public debts that countries typically experience after a
banking
crisis.
Jan Dhan Yojana, a high-priority Indian federal-government program that provides access to the
banking
sector for the poor, has enabled 250 million new bank accounts to be opened in less than two years.
The difference is that customers at the bottom of the pyramid have few
banking
alternatives.
But the Chinese policy elite are also very taken with the idea that a first-rank country needs a prominent
banking
system that is active internationally.
Achieving ambitious goals for inclusive growth and job creation quickly without an enabling state and without using the
banking
system will be extremely difficult.
Many of the early reforms have already been implemented, and reasonably sophisticated
banking
systems are in place.
The European Central Bank’s vehement opposition to what is essential to all capitalist economies – the restructuring of failed or insolvent entities’ debt – is evidence of the continuing fragility of the Western
banking
system.
After all, America’s financial mismanagement played an important role in triggering Europe’s problems, and financial turmoil in Europe would not be good for the US – especially given the fragility of the US
banking
system and the continuing role it plays in non-transparent CDSs.
As they close in on effective joint
banking
and fiscal policies incorporating more and more elements of Hamilton’s fiscal federalism, they are increasingly constrained by state politics – exactly as Europe’s leaders are inhibited in the current system.
Despite the recent rebound, China’s stock-market capitalization amounts to only 40% of GDP, while
banking
assets total 266% of GDP.
She feared that independent central banks would serve the interests of their
banking
“clients,” rather than those of the economy as a whole.
The 2008 financial crisis started on Wall Street, but quickly spread to the entire world, pointing to the need for global cooperation on
banking
and finance.
The new FTT might still face political opposition in Europe, especially in the United Kingdom, with its large and influential
banking
sector, but at least the principle of greater tax fairness is high on the European agenda.
The PBOC has since resumed its reverse repo operations – purchasing securities from commercial banks with an agreement to resell them in the future – thereby injecting liquidity into the
banking
system.
The Irish government’s aim, of course, was to save the
banking
system.
Islamic banking, for example, may soon be introduced, though some local and foreign investors argue that sharia regulations could drive away much-needed foreign investment.
Unfreezing CreditCHICAGO – Little political enthusiasm exists for further support to the
banking
sector.
Similarly, the unfinished reforms in China's
banking
sector and state-owned enterprises have been used as evidence of state subsidies for dumping activities.
With a determined move toward fiscal and
banking
union, things could be much better.
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