Finance
in sentence
3564 examples of Finance in a sentence
Achieving these three goals will require good governance, public finance, and effective institutions.
As high-density, high-productivity settlements, cities can provide greater access to services of all kinds – including energy, water, health, education, finance, media, transport, recycling, and research – than can most rural areas.
Manufacturers will remain on the ropes, but
finance
will do the Lambada.
This dead-end strategy will feature vain attempts to game Germany and desperate economic expedients, such as the essentially coercive capture of domestic savings to
finance
government debt.
While technological progress clearly fosters growth, the rise of
finance
since the 1990s has probably had an adverse effect, via financial crises and the accumulation of debt.
Fourth, the agreement contains mechanisms to facilitate international linkage, including scope for residents of rich countries to
finance
emissions reductions in poor countries.
Some developing-country leaders may be displeased for another reason: the figure of $100 billion in
finance
from rich countries does not appear in the legally binding body of the agreement.
The $100 billion in
finance
has always seemed problematic.
Third, the EU needs to find sufficient funds to
finance
a comprehensive migration policy.
But the central government will need a large share of that income if it is to
finance
the construction of new institutions of governance, invest in critical infrastructure, undertake onerous reforms aimed at economic liberalization, and provide the resource-poor (and already restive) Sunnis of central Iraq with a greater share of the country’s wealth.
National treasuries,
finance
ministries, and anti-corruption agencies need to strengthen their efforts to cooperate on prevention, detection, and enforcement.
Roughly 90% of the world’s countries are without seats at the G-20 table, so many of their most serious development challenges – for example, limited access to foreign markets or to
finance
for infrastructure investment – are beyond their control.
Indeed, existing sources of finance, domestic and foreign, are inadequate to address the range and scale of these challenges.
Innovative new sources of development
finance
must be fostered and given legitimacy.
It helps to
finance
other countries’ trade deficits and domestic investment (many of its beneficiaries have large budget deficits that decrease national saving below domestic investment).
Atif Mian and Amir Sufi warn that US consumers’ purchases of cars and other durables have been bolstered by the same unsustainable “subprime” lending practices that were used to
finance
home purchases before the crisis.
But the rise of
finance
in industrialized countries has cast these issues in a new, much harsher light.
(The precise numbers are different in other industrialized countries, but the rise of
finance
is a general phenomenon.)
The government made a mistake in the past by not raising taxes to
finance
these programs or reducing the benefits that they promised.
In addition, in many countries, including France, Ireland, and Portugal, governments have raided pension funds in order to
finance
their budget deficits.
This capital does not
finance
investments or fuel economic growth; its sole purpose is to reap enormous but unpredictable profits for a select few.
The European Commission, too, has responded, with
finance
for food security coming via a number of instruments.
Extra money to address food security problems, among other things, should be one of the key outcomes of the
finance
package that the EU strongly supports for the next crucial event on the summit calendar: the Copenhagen climate conference in December.
A couple of weeks later, I was at a dinner in Europe, where the speaker was a former
finance
minister of a eurozone country.
Global
finance
would have to operate within the limits that a balanced payments system establishes.
Yet a major and destabilizing confrontation over public
finance
now seems unavoidable, particularly following House Speaker John Boehner’s surprise announcement that he will resign his position and his seat in Congress at the end of October.
Most importantly, together with the Swiss
finance
minister, Hildebrand introduced the “Swiss approach” to bank regulation.
Indeed, the Glorious Revolution enabled a revolution in
finance.
In the post-1945 period, government
finance
in rich industrial countries was also overwhelmingly national at first, and the assumptions of 1688 still held.
In the mid-1980’s, the US became a net debtor, relying increasingly on foreigners to
finance
its debt.
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