Excessive
in sentence
1494 examples of Excessive in a sentence
It restrains
excessive
credit expansion during booms, while reducing the risk of bank failure or a much diminished capital base in recessions, thereby enabling bank lending to kick-start a sustainable recovery.
In the current climate, it is impossible to measure the valuation of many financial assets to an accuracy of 3%, and the
excessive
leverage that has been a feature of many banks’ balance sheets through this crisis needs to be put right – and kept right for the future.
Third, China has had to rely on another round of monetary, fiscal, and credit stimulus to prop up an unbalanced and unsustainable growth model based on
excessive
exports and fixed investment, high saving, and low consumption.
But, in the medium term, the key will be labor rights: unionization and collective bargaining; prohibition of child labor, unpaid overtime, unjustified dismissal, and
excessive
outsourcing; and skills training to meet the economy’s changing needs.
Given that Obama will leave office in less than two years, the drone of unending criticism is
excessive.
But currency manipulation is also an unfair way to gain a trading advantage, with
excessive
negative effects on trading partners.
Germany and other Northern European countries maintain that the culprit is lax fiscal policy and
excessive
debt accumulation by other eurozone members.
At home, he exasperated party politicians by preaching the need for morality in politics or by warning against
excessive
partisanship.
Few were ready to admit that the advanced economies had bet the farm on the wrong growth model, much less that they should look to the emerging economies for insight into structural impediments to growth, including debt overhangs and
excessive
inequalities.
Such a policy response would have to include pro-growth structural reforms (such as higher infrastructure investment, a tax overhaul, and labor retooling), more responsive fiscal policy, relief for pockets of
excessive
indebtedness, and improved global coordination.
The fear is that policies will fail to pivot away from
excessive
reliance on central banks, and end up looking back to the new normal, with all of its limitations and frustrations, as a period of relative calm and wellbeing.
Zombie banks should be restructured,
excessive
debts (both private and public) written down, and increased investment combined with reforms to boost productivity (and thus wages).
It was not deficit spending by governments that fueled the economic collapse of 2007-2008, but
excessive
lending by banks.
Whether the US government deliberately lied to the world about the existence of Iraqi weapons of mass destruction or got carried away by its own rhetoric is less important than the lesson to be learned: it is dangerous to put
excessive
power in the hands of a few.
There are also concerns over
excessive
debt and related fears of a fragile banking system; worries about the ever-present property bubble collapsing; and, most important, the presumed lack of meaningful progress on economic rebalancing – the long-awaited shift from a lopsided export- and investment-led growth model to one driven by internal private consumption.
Second, greater reliance on services allows China to settle into a lower and more sustainable growth trajectory, tempering the
excessive
resource- and pollution-intensive activities driven by the hyper-growth of manufacturing and construction.
So, too, are signs of newfound policy discipline – such as a central bank that seems determined to wean China off
excessive
credit creation and fiscal authorities that have resisted the timeworn temptation of yet another massive round of spending initiatives to counter a slowdown.
The freedom of money, financial markets, and people to move – and thus to escape regulation and taxation – might be an acceptable, even constructive, brake on
excessive
official intervention, but not if a deregulatory race to the bottom prevents adoption of needed ethical and prudential standards.
Taxpayers and governments alike are tired of bailing out creditors for fear of the destructive contagious effects of failure – even as bailouts encourage
excessive
risk taking.
In their view, there was one cause, and one cause only of the crisis: the
excessive
credit creation that took place when Alan Greenspan was chairman of the US Federal Reserve.
Like them, it must develop regulatory approaches that offset the banking system’s bias toward
excessive
real-estate finance.
Excessive
deregulation could cause a re-run of the 2007 financial crisis, but that, too, is a risk for 2018 and beyond.
With the US economy growing faster than expected and long-term interest rates rising,
excessive
strengthening of the dollar is a third major risk.
Right now, sentiment is decidedly bearish, reflecting concerns about slowing growth,
excessive
buildup of local-government debt, and possible defaults in the shadow banking sector.
They often labor under hazardous conditions, handling poisonous chemicals, inhaling noxious fumes, and hauling
excessive
weights.
BERKELEY – The first two components of the euro crisis – a banking crisis that resulted from
excessive
leverage in both the public and private sectors, followed by a sharp fall in confidence in eurozone governments – have been addressed successfully, or at least partly so.
The risks will undoubtedly grow if sub-national authorities and private-sector entities gain similar access to the international capital markets, which could result in
excessive
borrowing.
Understanding the risks of
excessive
private-sector borrowing, the inadequacy of private lenders’ credit assessments, and the conflicts of interest that are endemic in banks, Sub-Saharan countries should impose constraints on such borrowing, especially when there are significant exchange-rate and maturity mismatches.
Such a new platform should also be used to work towards structural reform of the international monetary system aimed at reducing its
excessive
reliance on the US dollar as a reserve currency.
Financial deregulation enriched Wall Street, but ended up creating a global economic crisis through fraud,
excessive
risk-taking, incompetence, and insider dealing.
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