Financing
in sentence
2025 examples of Financing in a sentence
Though potential sources for climate-friendly development
financing
now include pension funds, insurance companies, foundations, and sovereign wealth funds, what is often missing are mechanisms to ensure that investments are channeled into well-targeted and effective projects.
As leaders from countries and institutions from around the world prepare to meet in Paris in December, getting the
financing
right should be a top priority.
According to the European Commission, creating a single European capital market would reduce the cost of equity capital for EU businesses by 0.5% and lower the cost of corporate debt
financing
by 0.4%.
Unfortunately, many policies focus on demand and financing, rather than supply.
There are three challenges facing such a strategy: identifying the right projects; developing complex plans that involve both the public and private sectors (and often more than one country); and structuring the
financing.
And, for the first time ever, countries made large pledges to finance mitigation and adaptation efforts: $30 billion over the next three years for fast-start financing, and $100 billion per year by 2020.
In addition, the multilateral development banks (MDBs), including the regional development banks and the World Bank, could raise an additional $20-30 billion in gross public
financing
through higher contributions from rich countries.
New
financing
could unlock today’s policy inertia over climate change.
First and foremost, policymakers must secure the
financing
needed to pursue sustainable development in an uncertain global environment.
What was attractive as a way of
financing
government in the second half of the 20th century becomes a formidable headache 20 years from now.
India will run a current-account deficit for the foreseeable future, which means that it will need net foreign
financing.
The most stable form of financing, foreign direct investment, has the additional benefit of bringing in new technologies and methods.
Financing
should come from the International Monetary Fund, the World Bank, the European Bank for Reconstruction and Development, as well as from bilateral support provided by the US, the European Union, China, and the Gulf states.
The unfocused set of structural reforms prescribed by its current
financing
agreement will not do that.
The initiative will aim to promote economic cooperation and integration in the Asia-Pacific region, mainly by providing
financing
for infrastructure like roads, railways, airports, seaports, and power plants.
In a recent interview, the PBOC’s governor, Zhou Xiaochuan, suggested that the SRF would concentrate more on “cooperation projects,” particularly direct equity investment, before hinting at the Fund’s “just right”
financing
features.
Moreover, the SRF could act as a catalyst for other state financial institutions to contribute to a selected project’s equity and debt
financing.
China Exim and the CDB could subsequently disburse loans for debt financing, with the CIC providing further equity
financing.
When the AIIB is up and running, it, too, could support this process, by arranging debt
financing
alongside SRF’s initial equity investment.
Of course, there is still much to digest in these new
financing
initiatives.
First, we need equitable financing, with more investment in early childhood care and development, where there is the biggest potential for returns.
In many other states, voters have approved public
financing
of elections, the adoption and preservation of Medicaid expansion, and marijuana legalization.
Elections are obviously one method, though campaign
financing
can be a source of corruption.
Another priority is to ensure that low-income countries that are striving to meet the MDG’s, and which have large
financing
requirements, avoid a new spiral of indebtedness.
By
financing
a much higher level of investment in the next few years, rich countries would give poor countries the chance to achieve economic growth - promising an eventual end to further aid.
With the credit crisis still making it difficult for many small and medium-size businesses to obtain even the minimal level of
financing
necessary to maintain inventories and conduct trade, global GDP is on a precipice in 2009.
For starters, the Basel III package of global banking reforms and the European Union’s corresponding Capital Requirements Directive IV rule create disincentives for cross-border
financing.
But the new regulation also seriously penalizes subsidiary
financing
in new EU member and accession countries.
The fragmented, under-resourced and ineffective system for
financing
climate policy has failed Africa.
Infrastructure investment is down as well, with many high-speed railway projects on hold and local governments and special-purpose vehicles struggling to obtain
financing
amid tightening credit conditions and lower revenues from land sales.
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