Financing
in sentence
2025 examples of Financing in a sentence
But high-quality private investors are resistant to
financing
lumpy, illiquid investments in fragile, volatile states.
On the contrary, since the late 1980’s, Japan’s high personal savings rate, rather than being a source of supply-side strength, has been a source of demand-side weakness,
financing
investment abroad and government debt rather than spurring a domestic investment boom that would boost capital intensity and labor productivity.
The viability of the Republican bankruptcy proposal boils down to this: who will provide
financing
to a large complex financial institution – operating globally – while it is being restructured in bankruptcy?
If there is no financing, the scheme collapses – and we have another “Lehman moment,” or worse.
No one is asking donors to make education a priority over immediate life-saving responses, or that
financing
be diverted from other emergency relief efforts.
At the COP 23 Climate Conference in Bonn, Germany, in November, multilateral development institutions showed themselves to be more committed than ever to the urgent and central issue of supporting and
financing
these critical goals.
In July, the G20 Sustainability Action Plan embedded the Paris agreement in G20 policies and noted that more effective use of
financing
from multilateral development institutions is key to innovation and private investment in climate action.
Finally, high oil prices in the past 12 months provided an unexpectedly large windfall to the Iraqi budget, allowing for the
financing
of other sectors without slighting the oil industry.
Normal
financing
is not forthcoming.
A more active and efficient IPO market will allow companies to meet their
financing
needs without bank intermediation – a step that is vital to helping firms eliminate their debt overhangs.
In particular, the emergence of so-called loan buy-downs could encourage
financing
for education from reluctant donor countries.
Because the buy-down is triggered by achievement of a pre-defined target, such transactions promote results-based financing, bringing about quantifiable reforms that otherwise might not have been realized.
This reverses the trend over the last few decades toward grant-based financing, especially for basic education.
Beyond closing the aid gap, United Nations Special Envoy on Education Gordon Brown has rightly called for
financing
mechanisms to deliver education to children affected by conflict and humanitarian emergencies.
With
financing
channels extremely limited, banks have been forced to participate heavily, assuming substantial risk, which is aggravated by underdeveloped bond and stock markets.
Since 2008, liquidity-thirsty local governments have used a variety of measures, including off-balance-sheet loans and interbank debt financing, to channel capital into local-government
financing
vehicles and state-owned companies.
Such an outcome would cause public- and private-sector balance sheets to deteriorate further, raising fears of default and increasing the cost of
financing.
With this in mind, macroeconomic policy should not only reduce borrowing and
financing
costs through cuts in interest rates and reserve requirements, but also work to strengthen balance sheets.
The Education Commission is waging this war with the most innovative
financing
solutions we could devise.
The IFFEd has brought universal education to the forefront of the World Bank’s plan to take development
financing
from “billions to trillions.”
Unfortunately, less than 1% of development bank
financing
currently goes to education in African and Asian middle-income countries.
With innovative
financing
solutions, what was impossible has become eminently achievable.
This means that
financing
conditions are as favorable as they were at the peak of the credit boom in 2007, and much better than they have been at any other point in the last 20 years.
Given that
financing
conditions are so favorable, it is not surprising that domestic demand has remained robust, allowing unemployment to return to pre-crisis lows almost everywhere.
But while education may be the best investment a government can make to ensure a better future for its people, education
financing
worldwide is far too low.
Large pools of savings in sovereign wealth funds, pension funds, and insurance companies could be used, for example, to meet emerging economies’ huge
financing
needs for infrastructure and urbanization.
The IMF’s Lending OverhaulThe International Monetary Fund should be an essential port of call for emerging-market and developing countries facing
financing
needs.
First and foremost, our
financing
packages should be large enough relative to the size of the problem to make a difference.
This is despite all the evidence of the value of early access to IMF financing, before a tough situation deteriorates into a crisis.
A new Flexible Credit Line makes high-volume
financing
available – even before a crisis has struck – without any ex post policy conditionality to qualifying countries with strong economic fundamentals and policy frameworks.
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