Supervision
in sentence
353 examples of Supervision in a sentence
Second, it is fanciful to believe that the private sector would want to get involved in providing funding to a huge financial firm under court supervision, particularly during a systemic crisis.
For example, the monetary union needs a real banking union – including not just common supervision, but also common deposit insurance and a common resolution mechanism – and Eurobonds, or some similar vehicle for mutualizing debt.
All that is required is harmonized, transparent, and easy-to-understand regulation and
supervision.
Governments have a pivotal role to play in ensuring that the poorest and most marginalized communities have access to critical health services, by providing the right training, tools, supervision, funding, and logistical support for health workers.
They have been saved from this folly, at least temporarily, by Putin’s proposal to put Syria’s chemical weapons under international
supervision
and then destroy all of them.
This will not be easy, not least because of another new operational burden that has been placed on many central banks: macro-prudential and micro-prudential
supervision.
Micro-prudential supervision, in particular, implies the risk of political pressure, interference with central banks’ independence, and policy conflicts, all of which could influence the behavior of financial intermediaries, by encouraging them to assume greater risk.
The European banking system must be turned into a banking union with the ECB responsible for prudential
supervision.
To conduct this struggle effectively, Russia must abandon two hoary stereotypes: that all terrorists are bandits, and that they somehow are acting under some Western intelligence
supervision
to weaken Russia.
In the early-to-mid 1990s budget deficits turned into surpluses, bank and financial
supervision
tightened and labor market reform was repeatedly attempted (if never achieved).
Likewise, there is very little consensus on how to reform the regulation and
supervision
of financial institutions – and even less on how to reform an international monetary system based on flexible exchange rates and the dollar’s central role as the leading reserve currency.
The good news is that the ECB, recognizing this danger, has been calling for a rigorous cleanup of European banks’ balance sheets and is submitting the banks under its
supervision
to an asset quality review and stress tests.
Attempts to reconcile the parties began in Gaza, before moving to Cairo, Damascus, and finally Mecca under the
supervision
of Saudi King Abdullah, whose country has been a financial backer of the Palestinians for decades.
But most people currently at the top of our central banks built their careers during the 1980’s and 1990’s, when the threat of inflation was still very real, so this – rather than bank regulation and
supervision
– remains a major focus of their intellectual and practical concerns.
It also requires more progressive taxation; more short-term fiscal stimulus with medium- and long-term fiscal discipline; lender-of-last-resort support by monetary authorities to prevent ruinous runs on banks; reduction of the debt burden for insolvent households and other distressed economic agents; and stricter
supervision
and regulation of a financial system run amok; breaking up too-big-to-fail banks and oligopolistic trusts.
Moreover, they have two instruments to achieve these goals: the policy interest rate, which will be kept low for long and raised only gradually to boost growth; and macro-prudential regulation and
supervision
of the financial system (macro-pru for short), which will be used to control credit and prevent bubbles.
As a result, the big transnational institutions are lobbying hard for a pan-European approach to banking
supervision
and regulation (and implicitly for fiscal bailouts should that
supervision
and regulation fail).
The UK's Financial Services Authority (rather the many regulated firms who meet its costs) benefits from the economies of scale that arise from the move to a single set of central support services; unified management; and a unified approach to standard_setting, authorization, supervision, enforcement, consumer education and tackling financial crime.
Though LGFVs carry some intrinsic risks, stemming from relatively low levels of transparency and government supervision, they have been integral to China’s industrialization process so far.
Global economic governance, including at the IMF, must be reformed to reflect the realities of the current era, and global financial-sector
supervision
and regulation need to be strengthened.
Finally, in the area of financial-sector
supervision
and regulation, governments should forge ahead on reform of micro-prudential (individual entities) and macro-prudential (globally and nationally systemic) regulation.
Pundits like to blame "Asian capitalism" for the crisis — an alleged orgy of corruption, nepotism, government meddling, and poor financial
supervision.
But, without supervision, they will be held in an environment that could dash Zimbabweans’ hopes.
Europe is not a federal state, but the eurozone’s resilience would be greatly boosted if deposit insurance were pooled – which would obviously require changes in banking
supervision
– and if banks diversified their bond holdings so that they were more representative of the eurozone as a whole (through Eurobonds, for example).
After all, it was under his (unlikely disinterested)
supervision
that the mayor turned Moscow into a private fiefdom.
The framework agreement that has now resulted from these talks, which have been taking place off and on for 12 years (and in which I participated for a time) is intended to bring Iran’s nuclear program under international supervision, thereby containing the risk to regional and global stability.
The only realistic option to prevent a nuclear arms race in the region is international
supervision
– as far-reaching and as comprehensive as possible.
Writers, journalists, and artists could no longer stand the heavy-handed censorship and
supervision.
Thus, only bilateral help seems possible, perhaps coordinated by the EU and coupled with strong
supervision
of the Greek budget and Greece’s statistical office.
These include higher capital ratios for systemically important banks, stricter supervision, limits on trading activity, pre-designated resolution and recovery plans, and taxes aimed not at “getting our money back,” but at internalizing externalities – that is, making those at fault pay the social costs of their behavior – and creating better incentives.
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