Financing
in sentence
2025 examples of Financing in a sentence
Of course, capturing this surplus may allow for income redistribution, as many suggest; but a much bigger and sustainable bang can be achieved if the proceeds go instead to
financing
inclusion.
As a result, southern Europe adopted an economic configuration in which its wage, price, and productivity levels made sense only so long as it spent €13 for every €12 that it earned, with northern Europe
financing
the missing euro.
Moreover, the conditionality and close monitoring typically associated with the multilateral institutions make them less attractive sources of
financing.
With slowing world economic growth, US
financing
needs could cause a drop in investors’ confidence in the future of US-based assets, precipitating a sharp dollar depreciation.
The Fund now openly talks about the need to focus on poverty, and it candidly acknowledges that it had imposed too much conditionality when providing
financing
to poor countries.
As the two institutions responsible for all Chinese overseas financing, they are making waves around the world.
In a world weary of the limited effectiveness of most development programs in curtailing endemic poverty, China’s growing role in countries around the world provides ample opportunity to reconstruct the landscape of economic aid and
financing.
Given the major role that tax revenues play in funding development efforts – providing two-thirds of the
financing
for the UN Millennium Development Goals, with official aid and private flows covering the rest – the bleeding must be stanched.
The peripheral countries’ external deficits are falling rapidly, thus diminishing the need for foreign
financing.
Countries that have their own currency, like the United Kingdom – and especially the United States, which can borrow from foreigners in dollars – do not face a direct
financing
constraint.
None of the new EU member-states have concrete plans or
financing
mechanisms to develop networks of community-based alternatives on a national scale.
Egypt’s government needs to secure consistent foreign
financing
to keep the country afloat, providing leverage for international opposition to Morsi’s efforts to impose an agenda that runs contrary to Egyptians’ fundamental rights.
More recently, the discussion has shifted toward a seemingly more credible cause: the proliferation of margin
financing
since 2010.
But while margin financing, enabled by online platforms, amplified the risks of volatility, it alone could not cause such a crash.
Although the French government, unlike its Spanish and Italian counterparts, has not yet had any difficulty
financing
itself at low interest rates, currency appreciation as the economy slides into recession is like fuel poured onto an unlit bonfire.
This strategy’s success, starting with the speed of restored access to external financing, would depend on the credibility of government policies – monetary, fiscal, and, above all, the radical and indispensable supply-side reforms for which there would now be breathing space.
For the next decade, however, and especially for the next five years, there will be no escape from the need to rely on international financing, and mainly grant assistance, to finance the rebuilding effort.
Additional
financing
will likely be secured as mini-grid designs and business models mature.
Inadequate
financing
means large classes, insufficient books and teaching supplies, poorly constructed schools, and aging infrastructure.
In a fully integrated market, the annual
financing
of government deficits should not be an issue, provided the stock of debt is sustainable.
I know of very few Western countries where small and medium-size companies, as well as middle-income households and those of more limited means, have not experienced a significant decline in their access to credit – not just new financing, but also the ability to roll over old credit lines and loans.
Other countries appear to have adopted a “Field of Dreams” – also known as “build it and they will come” – approach to private credit markets, In the US, for example, artificially low interest rates for home mortgages, resulting from the Federal Reserve’s policy activism, are supposed to kick-start prudent
financing.
Securing a loan from the International Monetary Fund has become the principal objective of economic management, coupled with other anxious attempts to raise
financing.
With the US government forced to answer to its citizens, it is unlikely to resort to inflationary debt
financing.
Nonetheless, China is the bank’s largest borrower, accounting for more than a quarter of its loan portfolio (China and India alone account for half the total, whereas Japanese companies win only around 1% of bids for ADB financing).
Perhaps China would account for an even larger share of ADB
financing
if it had a larger stake.
Being offered
financing
from all directions may not be a bad proposition for impoverished developing countries in need of infrastructure.
Official development assistance can create incentives to cooperate by
financing
data-collection, providing technical know-how, or, indeed, by conditioning loans on constructive negotiations.
Recent debt issues by the Italian bank Monte dei Paschi di Siena and others have shown that
financing
for banks is expensive.
“Auditing and Reducing Funding of International Organizations,” for example, simply proposes a committee to review
financing
of multilateral organizations.
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