Borrow
in sentence
809 examples of Borrow in a sentence
Businesses are also reluctant to borrow, because they recall how previous increases in inflation – and thus in interest rates – pushed otherwise healthy companies into bankruptcy.
The security policy of the Bush administration has been worse than frightening; it has been, to
borrow
one of the president's most frequent utterances nowadays, terrifying.
The most influential users get a direct line to the brands, and starting next week will be able to
borrow
the latest fashion releases from the Weardrobe closet.
The most trusted and active members will get to borrow, wear, and pose in clothing from this brand.
Under the proposed IFFEd, development banks would
borrow
from capital markets to increase their annual investments in education to $10 billion by 2020, and to $20 billion by 2030.
In the worst case, have the government step in,
borrow
money, and buy stuff, thereby rebalancing the economy as the private sector deleverages.
A standard money-making strategy for investors with access to Chinese financial markets has been to
borrow
dollars at low interest rates and buy high-yield Chinese assets.
But tapering, by auguring higher US interest rates, makes it more expensive to
borrow
dollars and invest in Chinese assets.
Many emerging markets preferred to self-insure by accumulating reserves rather than
borrow
from the Fund.
In Africa, very few people
borrow
money for such purchases.
To
borrow
the title of a 1982 Australian film, 2017 will probably be remembered as the year of living dangerously, at least in terms of globalization.
Although the introduction of floating exchange rates removed the incentive to
borrow
in a foreign currency (and thus the need for self-insurance), the political humiliation of losing sovereignty to the IMF – if only temporarily – was so devastating that the economic costs of building a massive foreign-currency war chest seemed worthwhile.
Yes, the debt will be higher and interest on that debt will have to be paid, but the British government can
borrow
now at extraordinarily favorable terms.
When interest rates are low and you can
borrow
on favorable terms, the market is telling you to pull government spending forward into the present and push taxes back into the future.
To be sure, back in the 1970’s, confidence in the credit of the British government collapsed, forcing it to
borrow
from the IMF so that spending could be cut and taxes raised gradually rather than abruptly.
To
borrow
from your own people is especially non-humiliating when your economy is in depression, when the interest rates at which you can
borrow
are at near-record lows, and when every economic argument cries out for spending now and taxing later.
The government would
borrow
the money directly from the central bank and use it to build houses, renew transport systems, invest in energy-saving technologies, and so forth.
With college tuition soaring, the only way their children could get the education that would provide a modicum of hope was to borrow; but, with education loans virtually never dischargeable, student debt seemed even worse than other forms of debt.
Stagnant economic growth and high debt burdens in Europe and Japan have destroyed politicians’ will to raise taxes or
borrow
more to create space for fiscal expansion.
No country can
borrow
forever or at least at very high rates.
Indeed, low US interest rates, though an appropriate domestic response to the financial crisis, have pushed a global carry trade in which people
borrow
in dollars to fund investments in the apparently less crisis-hit large emerging-market economies.
Reprofiling is a euphemism for debt restructuring, which allows countries to
borrow
from existing creditors for longer periods and at lower interest rates than they would be able to do on the open market.
Russia needed to borrow, and it was borrowing heavily in foreign currency.
And how can it possibly ever become negative, as it now is in much of the global economy, with the world’s moneyed people “bribing” governments to
borrow
from them more than $5.5 trillion?
“Better to
borrow
money at almost no cost,” you think, “and buy back a few more of my company’s shares, boost their price, earn more on the stock exchange, and bank the profits for the rainy days that are coming.”
The federal government is scheduled to
borrow
more than $1 trillion in 2019 and subsequent years.
As is customary, many Russian businessmen pledged their shares to
borrow
money for stock purchases.
It is easier for a young couple to
borrow
and buy a house in the US than in Europe.
In the middle of the nineteenth century, Japan became the first Asian country to embrace globalization, and to
borrow
successfully from the world without losing its uniqueness.
Although the dynamics leading to increased income concentration have not changed, it is no longer easy to borrow, and in that sense another boom-and-bust cycle is unlikely.
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