Bankruptcies
in sentence
104 examples of Bankruptcies in a sentence
Ease of access is essential, as are tax holidays spanning several years (the cost of which will be offset by a fall in bankruptcies).
This is particularly important because continued currency turmoil would tip the economy into recession, raise inflation, stress the banking system, and increase corporate
bankruptcies.
In the US, Alexander Hamilton famously negotiated the federal assumption of states’ debt in 1790, but many states behaved badly in the early nineteenth century, with multiple bankruptcies, until they adopted laws or amendments to their constitutions requiring balanced budgets.
The number of
bankruptcies
has multiplied in a year, while the number of profitable enterprises has increased greatly, as a radical differentiation is occurring between successful and failing enterprises, signifying radical enterprise restructuring.
While
bankruptcies
often are fraudulent, the key is that the worst villains are forced to close down.
Finally, one major deficiency of the current international financial architecture is the lack of an institutional framework – i.e., a court similar to those created to manage
bankruptcies
in national economies – to manage debt overhangs at the international level.
That, in turn, merely drove down prices further, leading to more credit rationing, bankruptcies, and bank failures.
Of course, the millions of personal
bankruptcies
and home foreclosures in the US are not popular, but they provide debt relief each time, thereby enabling households to make a fresh start.
A weaker economy means more
bankruptcies
and home foreclosures and higher unemployment.
Rather than waiting to get rid of debt through bankruptcies, governments should “mandate debt forgiveness.”
Unfit for modern markets, France’s tax system actually stifles the country’s businesses, reflected in a disturbing increase in
bankruptcies
among small and medium-size companies.
Bankruptcies
remain rare.
Short-term emergency policies are needed to deal with high unemployment, home foreclosures, business bankruptcies, and often with hunger, disease, and a number of other ills.
The result is a currency collapse and a wave of
bankruptcies.
The industry has faced many
bankruptcies
in recent years, with those still operating often having laid off large numbers of staff, especially in their foreign bureaus.
The spread of
bankruptcies
triggered a severe credit crunch, which triggered a deep recession and with it a brutal rise in unemployment.
Without a sufficiently large stimulus (in excess of 2% of GDP), we will have a vicious negative spiral: a weak economy will mean more bankruptcies, which will push stock prices down and interest rates up, undermine consumer confidence, and weaken banks.
Given the recurring complications of adjudicating sovereign-debt contracts in foreign courts, and the world’s inability to organize a credible and fair procedure for foreign bankruptcies, perhaps the best idea is to steer the bulk of international debt flows through debtor-country courts.
So 2009 will be a painful year of global recession and further financial stresses, losses, and
bankruptcies.
The 2.5-3.5 million foreclosures expected this year will exceed those of 2009, and the year began with what is expected to be the first of many large commercial real-estate
bankruptcies.
Forced conversion would destroy much of the value of savings, and the resulting currency mismatches would unleash a wave of
bankruptcies
(in Greece or the rest of the eurozone, depending on the exact terms of the conversion).
Bankruptcies
among small energy-sector companies, which are of limited economic importance themselves, are creating pressures in global banking and reducing the availability of credit to healthy businesses and households that would otherwise be beneficiaries of cheaper oil.
Manufacturing production has plummeted, the trade balance has deteriorated sharply, and corporate
bankruptcies
are increasingly frequent.
But the bitter pill of bankruptcies, consolidation, and recapitalization is what the system needs to repair itself.
The financial reaction to the collapse of a bubble and the resulting wave of
bankruptcies
drives the natural rate of interest below zero, even though there are still many ways to put people productively to work.
If the currency were devalued without addressing the contractual issue, the dollar value of debts would automatically increase to offset the weaker exchange rate, resulting in massive
bankruptcies
and huge increases in public debt.
China’s government could, if it so chose, bail out banks in trouble, preventing contagious
bankruptcies.
This system has worked quite well since the nineteenth century, even though (or because) it involved a substantial number of state
bankruptcies.
And Lehman was constantly invoked during the European financial crisis that erupted after 2010, highlighting fears of a “death spiral” stemming from state
bankruptcies
and defaults.
A Global Green New DealNAIROBI – With unemployment soaring,
bankruptcies
climbing, and stock markets in free-fall, it may at first glance seem sensible to ditch the fight against climate change and put environmental investments on hold.
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