Debts
in sentence
1153 examples of Debts in a sentence
Moreover, as
debts
grow ever larger, banks’ willingness to lend will decline, driving debtors to the unregulated shadow-banking sector, where interest rates are extremely high, for their liquidity needs.
Furthermore, given that local governments and state-owned enterprises are responsible for the majority of China’s bad debts, write-offs, funded by central-government bonds, will probably be necessary – and soon.
While the West accumulated debts, Asia had startled the world with its long economic boom.
The authorities have defied the International Monetary Fund, defaulted on debts, and proudly proclaimed that Argentina has transcended traditional economics.
The burden of existing
debts
is high, and investors’ key goal is loss-avoidance, not profit-seeking.
Moreover, some local spending took place in regions that will continue to enjoy high growth in tax revenues for the foreseeable future, thus ensuring that the
debts
will be serviced.
The most important change that may keep the problem manageable is that China’s monetary authorities have been putting the brake on the growth of these
debts
since late last year.
While experts are not sure whether Deripaska will repay the loan, the Kremlin and the oligarchs have their own ways of settling
debts.
To accept de Gaulle’s offer, these leaders had to agree, among other things, to allow the stationing of French troops on their territory, provide France with a steady supply of raw materials at pre-determined prices, assume all colonial-era
debts
incurred by France, maintain the CFA Franc as their common currency, and grant the French Treasury veto authority over their sub-regional central banks.
Japan’s continued growth is assured only by large fiscal deficits stretching well into the 2020s; the Bank of Japan, which now holds government bonds equivalent to about 75% of GDP, will hold some of them forever, permanently monetizing accumulated fiscal
debts.
It makes clear that Greece’s
debts
will not be sustainable without further concessional loans and an extension of existing debt maturities; perhaps, it suggests, a write-off of some €50 billion ($55 billion) will also be needed.
But this still ignores the reality that Greeks can walk away from their
debts
– not only metaphorically, by defaulting, but also literally, by migrating to Germany, for instance.
It has been clear for five years that Greece’s
debts
are unsustainable.
This system has made a market-based approach to addressing unsustainable
debts
impossible.
Rather than risking write-offs of government or bank debt, eurozone governments and the ECB absorbed the
debts
that were initially extended by the private sector onto the public balance sheets of the eurozone’s member states.
The desirable effect would be that governments would find it harder to accumulate
debts
they could not afford.
But appropriate future reforms cannot change the fact that, today, Greece’s
debts
are unsustainable.
Debts
ballooned everywhere.
But local governments cannot continue to rely on revenue from land sales to repay their
debts
or support current spending.
Coco for EuropeBERKELEY – After a year and half of delay and denial, Greece is about to restructure its
debts.
Rather than resorting time after time to bailouts and delay, isn’t there a way to more swiftly and decisively restructure the
debts
of insolvent sovereigns?
And raising borrowing costs for governments with dangerously heavy
debts
– thereby discouraging them from further borrowing – is precisely what we should want to do.
But not adding them is a recipe for more delay, more bailouts, and more chaos the next time the
debts
of a sovereign like Greece become unsustainable.
Low long-term interest rates have kept the region’s
debts
manageable, while high consumer demand has helped bid up prices for the region’s commodity exports.
To protect commercial banks from risking their own solvency (and the whole country’s solvency besides) once again, Richard Robb suggested that a small tax on banks’ short-term
debts
be imposed in order to deter banks from over-borrowing.
But it has led to significant wasted investment in heavy industry, real estate, and urban infrastructure, and leaves China facing the challenge of deleveraging and working out bad
debts.
Politics, however, owes its
debts
to the living.
The biggest gold outflow in a generation imperiled America’s ability to repay its
debts
abroad.
He attributed this not to pre-existing high public debts, but to the fact that the ECB could not act as a backstop for government funding and spare fiscal authorities the loss of market confidence.
The precise terms of Grexit – agreed by the troika (the IMF, the European Commission, and the European Central Bank) and Greek authorities – surely would have included a negotiated reduction in Greece’s debts, as well as a strategy for recapitalizing the banking system in order minimize uncertainty, pain, and disruption.
Back
Related words
Their
Countries
Would
Public
Which
Government
Governments
Private
Financial
Could
Banks
Growth
Interest
Country
Large
Deficits
Crisis
Years
Repay
Rates