Guarantees
in sentence
636 examples of Guarantees in a sentence
These frightening numbers raise doubts about the stability of the West’s financial system, and they dwarf all measures, such as “bad banks” and government guarantees, that attempt to solve a mere liquidity crisis.
The private sector can shift investment toward renewables through new financial instruments like credit
guarantees
and currency swaps, co-investment funds, and green bond markets.
Reports of new amendments being drafted in order to rescind these
guarantees
would be extremely disturbing if confirmed.
China is now testing the credibility of US guarantees, raising the prospect that America’s friends and allies – starting with Japan – may have to take more of their security needs into their own hands.
Eurobonds, however, would impede precisely this outcome, because relative prices in the north can be raised only when northern savers invest their capital at home instead of seeing it publicly escorted to the south by taxpayer-financed credit
guarantees.
The government and donors have a joint responsibility to pursue a more cautious approach that
guarantees
quality service delivery.
After all, the switch to a defined-contribution system, with actuarially justified pensions,
guarantees
the pension system’s long-term sustainability.
Only the US can give the Islamic Republic the security
guarantees
it craves.
The US, indeed, should be prepared to eventually give such
guarantees
if it wants Iran to stop the more suspicious parts of its nuclear program.
But it cannot have it both ways, seeking
guarantees
against regime change at home, and promoting it in its neighborhood.
Recommendations presented recently to the Senate’s Foreign Relations Committee, suggested that security
guarantees
for Southern Sudan be given in order to deter a renewal of the civil war.
When the bubble burst, the region’s competitiveness was destroyed, and Northern Europe was called on to provide huge loan guarantees, public credit, and transfers.
But, because euro membership precludes that option, financially sound Northern European countries would once again be called upon to help with European Central Bank loan
guarantees
and financial transfers, while tolerating the newly added eurozone members’ self-service with the printing press.
The credibility of American security
guarantees
for its allies is one of the reasons that the bomb did not spread to 25 countries within a decade, as President John F. Kennedy once expected.
After all, security alliances and
guarantees
only create dividing lines, with their attendant security challenges.
The IFFEd program, which was acknowledged by the G20 last year, would secure financial
guarantees
from donors in Australia, Canada, New Zealand, the United Kingdom, and elsewhere to increase the lending capacities of multilateral development banks in Africa and Asia.
For every $1 in guarantees, as much as $5 is made available for spending on education.
But the US was unable to offer legal – not just political –
guarantees
that an anti-missile system based in Europe would not obstruct Russia’s strategic potential.
Those cases tend to lean on the 1988 National Constitution, which
guarantees
the right to abortion in case of rape, danger to the mother’s life, or anencephaly, another birth defect involving the brain.
And its 1991 battle with President George H.W. Bush over the linkage of US loan
guarantees
for Israel with Prime Minister Yitzak Shamir’s support of the 1991 Madrid peace conference – one of Bush’s key legacies – ended in defeat.
That is why building transatlantic trust and cooperation is so important, and why America’s refusal to turn words into legal
guarantees
is likely to be self-defeating.
But proponents of such US
guarantees
believe that they discourage aggression and contribute to nuclear non-proliferation by reducing the incentive of US allies to seek their own nuclear deterrents.
Furthermore, the European Commission’s proposal that the EIB support privately financed infrastructure projects through
guarantees
for corporate bonds, called “project bonds,” must be accelerated and expanded.
In Iraq, there is some evidence that its momentum has been halted; but the growing role of Iran and the Shia militias it backs all but
guarantees
that many Iraqi Sunnis will come to sympathize with or even support the Islamic State, whatever their misgivings.
The EFSI will be equipped with €5 billion in start-up capital, produced through the revaluation of existing EIB assets, and will be backed by €16 billion in
guarantees
from the European Commission.
Though EU countries will not contribute any actual funds, they will provide implicit and explicit
guarantees
for the private investors, in an arrangement that looks suspiciously like the joint liability embodied by Eurobonds.
But calming markets by offering public
guarantees
for investors will not solve the competitiveness problem.
not counting the unlimited
guarantees
the ECB has given to the states of southern Europe through its OMT programme at the expense, and to the risk, of the taxpayers of Europe’s still-sound economies.
No matter how strong the EU’s external borders are – though, of course, better monitoring and patrolling measures are needed – the flow of migrants will continue to overwhelm their capacity, endangering the openness that is so fundamental to European unification, beginning with the Schengen acquis, which
guarantees
freedom of movement, without border controls, among 26 European countries.
Instantaneous electronic links and an improving system of global
guarantees
allow capital to flow across national boundaries as never before.
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