Loans
in sentence
1648 examples of Loans in a sentence
That is a boon for exporters, but it is a bane for banks in countries that binged on foreign-currency
loans
before the global crisis hit.
Whether or not the reforms sought by the eurozone members raise the chances that their
loans
will be repaid, these creditors have a political and economic interest in the monetary union’s survival and development.
Short-term creditors cash out or refuse to roll over their loans, denying credit to financially weakened firms.
Whatever the rich ask of the CCP - land leases, low interest loans, violation of labor laws, environmental standards, contracts, and intellectual property - can be considered "the demands of advanced productive forces."
International agencies such as the World Bank and the IMF would automatically stop making
loans
to countries where the head of government exceeds that limit.
And financial reforms will eliminate the limits on interest rates that banks can pay on deposits and charge on
loans.
Government data show that the ratio of bank
loans
to GDP is about twice that of the United States.
More worrying, the share of nonperforming
loans
may be dangerously high.
But a hard landing becomes more likely in 2013, as the stimulus fades, non-performing
loans
rise, the investment bust accelerates, and the problem of rolling over the debts of provincial governments and their special investment vehicles can no longer be papered over.
The official approach, Plan A, has been to pretend that these economies suffer a liquidity crunch, not a solvency problem, and that the provision of bailout
loans
– together with fiscal austerity and structural reforms – can restore debt sustainability and market access.
The tests were supposed to reveal the true conditions of banks saddled with unaudited toxic assets in housing
loans
and financial derivatives.
As devaluation causes businesses’ debt burdens to grow in renminbi terms, the risk of non-performing
loans
and bankruptcies rises.
Its
loans
are limited to a multiple of a country’s contributions to its capital, and by this measure its
loans
to Greece are higher than any in its history.
The IMF learned this the hard way in the 1980s, when it transferred bad bank
loans
to Latin American governments onto its own books and those of other governments.
In Greece, bad
loans
issued by French and German banks were moved onto the public books, transferring the exposure not only to European taxpayers, but to the entire membership of the IMF.
Indeed, because most bank
loans
in China – unlike, say, in Europe – are now locked up in infrastructure and other physical assets, boosting demand is preferable to deleveraging.
Two-thirds of all refinancing
loans
within the eurozone were granted within the GIPS countries, despite the fact that these countries account for only 18% of eurozone GDP.
By the end of 2010, ECB loans, which originated primarily from Germany’s Bundesbank, amounted to €340 billion.
If this continues for two more years as it has for the past three, the stock of refinancing
loans
in Germany will disappear altogether.
The ESM is a sure way to bring Europe to its knees, because the longer bailout
loans
continue, the longer the GIPS’ current-account deficits will persist, and the more their external debts will grow.
Of the roughly $200 trillion in global financial assets today, almost three-quarters are in some kind of debt instrument, including bank loans, corporate bonds, and government securities.
The housing boom in the United States might never have reached the proportions that it did if homeowners had been unable to treat interest payments on home
loans
as a tax deduction.
I am not advocating a return to the early Middle Ages, when Church usury laws forbade interest on
loans.
Poland’s economy, close to outright collapse, struggled to meet citizens’ basic needs, let alone repay foreign
loans.
Even before the recent global financial crisis and subsequent recession, governments around the world provided support to the private sector through direct subsidies, tax credits, or
loans
from development banks in order to bolster growth and support job creation.
The official
loans
granted to the country by the European Central Bank and the international community have increased more than sixfold during the past five years, from €53 billion ($58 billion) in February 2010 to €324 billion, or 181% of GDP, now.
Temporary workers also do not have access to bank
loans
and mortgages in many countries.
Of course, it is understandable that Western banks that recklessly extended euro
loans
to these countries now want to give them euro printing presses.
That way, the debtor countries can reassure their creditors and repay their
loans
with self-printed cash if necessary, as Southern European countries have done for the last decade.
Providing Bulgaria, Croatia, and Romania with national euro printing presses would keep private credit flowing and enable foreign-currency
loans
to be rolled over.
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