Financing
in sentence
2025 examples of Financing in a sentence
Georgia, using a $6 million grant from the Department of Justice, is
financing
15 separate pilot programs that range from job-training and housing-support services for released prisoners to faith-based “in-reach” programs for those still in prison.
Effective execution of such an ambitious mandate is particularly important in view of two emerging G-20 priorities for the FSB: regulatory initiatives with respect to the functioning of markets, including so-called “shadow banking” (the less regulated forms of private financing), and new mechanisms to foster consistent implementation of standards.
What debtor countries gain in terms of lower
financing
costs would be offset by the losses for creditor countries both in terms of higher borrowing costs and lower interest income.
The same applies to countries: making some claims senior to others would not lead to lower average borrowing costs, owing to the higher cost of private
financing
after it is reduced to junior debt.
Ultimately, however, their average cost would not be lower, because, again, if official creditors are senior to private lenders, large-scale official
financing
– which is used mainly to repay maturing debt – would impede governments’ access to private credit markets.
Achieving the SDGs – which range from eliminating hunger and poverty to protecting the environment – will require the involvement of dynamic private sectors that are capable of producing technological solutions and willing to provide critical
financing.
Private-sector
financing
– say, of the infrastructure projects demanded by SDG9 – is particularly important in the Arab world, where many governments are already burdened by debt.
To help mobilize that financing, the World Bank Group has launched the Maximizing Finance for Development program.
The World Bank should also stop insisting that recipient governments guarantee its loans, which gives governments control over which private sector company, local government, or non-governmental organization receives
financing.
Over the last decade, innovative
financing
has become the new buzzword, and not just for development.
All that is needed now is
financing.
Indeed, a key challenge in
financing
infrastructure investment in emerging economies is that many of the commercial banks (mainly European) that had a significant presence in the past have withdrawn – and are unlikely to return until they repair their crisis-hit balance sheets and build capital to meet strengthened regulatory standards.
That leaves huge unmet
financing
needs.
And, in today’s economic climate, attracting private
financing
is essential, because there is simply no way that public funding alone can close the infrastructure gap.
So the advanced countries must be ready to provide the required financing, and to do so on an unprecedented scale.
But, given the scale of capital flows, I am also urging the governments and central banks of the advanced countries to provide parallel
financing
to the IMF’s crisis-response programs.
(This would be like a family
financing
its down payment not from its own savings but from distant relatives about whom the family cares little.)
In a global financial upheaval like our most recent one, capital flows shift abruptly and dramatically, causing credit, financing, and balance-of-payments problems, as well as volatile exchange rates.
The system needs circuit-breakers in the form of loans and capital flows that dampen the volatility and maintain access to
financing
across the system.
Having initially been shunned, it has assumed a key role in
financing
– and, more importantly, implementing – fiscal-stabilization programs for the European Union’s peripheral countries.
Indeed, the government's market borrowing as a ratio of its total
financing
needs increased to 66.5% in the current fiscal year, compared to 20.6% in fiscal 1991-92.
The Kingdom has been the primary source of
financing
and weaponry for Sunni Syrian rebel forces fighting Assad’s army, which is backed heavily by Shia Iran and Hezbollah, the Lebanon-based Shia militia.
It is certainly right, in principle, to argue that the banks should participate in
financing
the resolution of the debt crisis.
The Venezuelan lieutenant colonel has repeatedly provided sanctuary, arms, diplomatic support, and
financing
to the FARC guerrillas fighting to overthrow the Colombian government.
Multilateral institutions, particularly the IMF, have responded by pumping an unfathomable amount of
financing
into Europe.
But, instead of reversing the disorderly deleveraging and encouraging new private investments, this official
financing
has merely shifted liabilities from the private sector to the public sector.
No safe havens for money laundering and terrorism financing, and no safe havens for “cozy financial regulation.”
Relentless government borrowing and high payroll taxes (employer-paid social security) have long sustained citizens’ illusion that they are getting something for nothing, while perpetuating successive governments’ misconception that taxing business is a painless way of
financing
welfare and public services.
All too often, however,
financing
education is only an afterthought.
The amount of
financing
per student is the same, and schools that receive vouchers cannot charge additional fees.
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