Creditors
in sentence
1217 examples of Creditors in a sentence
The IMF, the World Bank, and the cartel of good intentions in the world has taken over our rights as citizens, and therefore what our governments are doing, because they depend on aid, is to listen to international
creditors
rather than their own citizens.
Nowhere on the planet have all the
creditors
been bailed out in excess of what their statutory entitlements were.
Second point: I want to see who are the
creditors
of the group who have been repaid?
I was imagining that there was a genuine interest on the side of the
creditors
to find common ground.
So private creditors, multilaterals and bilaterals came together and decided to do the Highly Indebted Poor Countries Initiative and give debt relief.
The rate is typically an annual percentage of a loan that borrowers pay to their
creditors
until the loan is repaid.
And my mother, alone, was grieving the love of her life trying to raise three children, and the
creditors
were knocking.
This is the story of a starving young artist who finds he's won the lottery just as his
creditors
come calling.
When films
creditors
find out that O&J's backer is an eccentric sort who thinks he's a millionaire broker, they put an injunction on the film, and its up to Olsen & Johnson to prove their case in court to save the film.
While trying to escape from his creditors, he has a flat tire and parks his car in a decadent mansion in Sunset Boulevard.
You Can't Cheat An Honest Man finds widower W.C. Fields running a second rate circus and trying to stay one step ahead of the law as he's
creditors
just about every place he goes.
But, as its
creditors
have now recognized, providing more money will not address Greece’s insolvency.
At the same time, a write-down of official debt, like the “haircut” given to private
creditors
in 2012, will be necessary.
Greece’s membership in the European Union gives its
creditors
significant leverage, but evidently not enough to change the fundamental calculus.
The “troika” of
creditors
– the International Monetary Fund, the European Central Bank, and the European Commission – simply do not enjoy the kind of leverage over Greece that, say, the Municipal Assistance Corporation wielded over New York City when it teetered on the edge of bankruptcy in the mid-1970s.
In cases like Greece, the creditors’ passion for structural reforms might be better directed at home – particularly toward improving financial regulation.
Some member states are touting their sovereign right to embrace unilateral action, even as they request financial assistance, while others are acting as mere creditors, ignoring the social suffering that the current debt crisis has caused.
In the real world of Europe today, debtors cannot break agreements that they have made in exchange for aid, and
creditors
must recognize the need to continue contributing resources to the bailout fund.
It would also help if
creditors
understood that their contributions, like their decades of support to cohesion funds, will not impoverish them (by, say, depleting their public pensions).
The early poll was no surprise: almost a third of Tsipras’s colleagues in his leftist Syriza Party refused to endorse the bailout he had negotiated with the country’s
creditors.
So was the international community’s sigh of relief after the latest financial rescue – additional money from Greece’s
creditors
in exchange for structural reforms – premature?
There was no counter-balancing move to increase demand by publicly funding infrastructure investment; domestic reforms were inadequate; and the
creditors
offered no substantial debt restructuring or debt forgiveness.
The IMF and other
creditors
are demanding economic adjustments to increase the fiscal surplus, including higher tariffs on privatized public services and a wage freeze for public employees.
Within an integrated economy, there are divergent categories of actors, such as
creditors
and debtors, or manufacturers and agricultural producers, the combination of which can affect the outlook of states and regions.
Until this latest crisis, the discussion about the EU was dominated by talk of a divide between northern
creditors
and southern debtors.
Creditors
can agree to relax Greece’s fiscal targets.
In this context, the eurozone’s most heavily indebted countries will have to force their
creditors
to accept a restructuring of public debt.
Creditors
demand their pound of flesh; debtors clamor for relief.
Creditors, asserting their right to be repaid in full, historically have created as many legal and political obstacles to default as possible, insisting on harsh sanctions – garnishment of income, for example, and, at the extreme, imprisonment or even slavery – for borrowers’ failure to honor their debt obligations.
Widespread social resistance to creditors’ claims on debtors’ property for non-payment has meant that “foreclosure” has rarely been carried to extremes.
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