释义 |
Definition of bailout in English: bailoutnoun ˈbeɪlaʊtˈbeɪˌlaʊt An act of giving financial assistance to a failing business or economy to save it from collapse. 〈非正式〉(对危急行业或经济的)财政援助 Example sentencesExamples - It regularly requires financial bailouts by the government.
- Consumers' faith in the stuff they buy appears to be ebbing, say researchers, in these days of unchecked megamergers, electric company bailouts, and the virtual economy (which has proven to be literal).
- But there is no economic rationale for general bailouts or subsidies of airlines, insurance companies, the steel industry, agriculture, and so on.
- The spectre of bank collapse from foreign loans has been averted by bailouts and promises of bailout from the Federal Reserve, the nation's only manufacturer of dollars, which it can produce at will.
- The companies that seek bailouts and tax breaks now are bound to discover that Washington wants something in return.
- What is needed is for the G7 nations to extricate themselves from the big bailout business.
- Now Trump may need a financial bailout or concessions from bond holders to save the company from bankruptcy.
- The miracles led to the biggest financial bailouts in history.
- He says that previous bailouts encouraged banks to think the government would always save them, and argues that doing nothing to stave off a crisis would do little harm to the U.S.
- The IMF organises bailouts, the effects of which tend to minimise the costs of write-downs to the Western lenders, whilst extracting huge social costs in the country that was the original recipient of these loans.
- The pension agency is a safety net, not a bailout for underfunded pensions.
- The pattern of bailouts since 1995 has distorted the operation of financial markets by creating moral hazard.
- We also read of Treasury's blatant role in pushing the business interests of Wall Street by using bailouts to force nations to open their capital markets to foreigners.
- First, it might help to reduce the cost of financial bailouts to Western taxpayers and international organizations, and not just because capital flight might be slowed.
- Is it a stealth bailout by the military or just smart business on both sides?
- According to the agency, the steel industry represents 56 percent of the pension bailouts, while the airline industry accounts for 17 percent.
- The hidden costs of all the ‘Coins in the Fuse Box’ and financial sector bailouts now look poised to manifest in an uneven housing and consumer borrowing fiasco, with the Fed either incapable or unwilling to respond.
- The Federal Reserve's successive bailouts have created a huge moral hazard problem.
- There have been quite a few instances of governmentally assisted bailouts because the institution involved posed a systemic risk or the debtor involved was important to our national interest.
- Not uncoincidentally, this period has coincided with continuous resort to IMF bailouts by virtually every single major economy in the region.
Definition of bailout in US English: bailoutnounˈbeɪˌlaʊtˈbāˌlout An act of giving financial assistance to a failing business or economy to save it from collapse. 〈非正式〉(对危急行业或经济的)财政援助 Example sentencesExamples - It regularly requires financial bailouts by the government.
- First, it might help to reduce the cost of financial bailouts to Western taxpayers and international organizations, and not just because capital flight might be slowed.
- The pattern of bailouts since 1995 has distorted the operation of financial markets by creating moral hazard.
- What is needed is for the G7 nations to extricate themselves from the big bailout business.
- Is it a stealth bailout by the military or just smart business on both sides?
- Consumers' faith in the stuff they buy appears to be ebbing, say researchers, in these days of unchecked megamergers, electric company bailouts, and the virtual economy (which has proven to be literal).
- Now Trump may need a financial bailout or concessions from bond holders to save the company from bankruptcy.
- The Federal Reserve's successive bailouts have created a huge moral hazard problem.
- There have been quite a few instances of governmentally assisted bailouts because the institution involved posed a systemic risk or the debtor involved was important to our national interest.
- But there is no economic rationale for general bailouts or subsidies of airlines, insurance companies, the steel industry, agriculture, and so on.
- According to the agency, the steel industry represents 56 percent of the pension bailouts, while the airline industry accounts for 17 percent.
- The hidden costs of all the ‘Coins in the Fuse Box’ and financial sector bailouts now look poised to manifest in an uneven housing and consumer borrowing fiasco, with the Fed either incapable or unwilling to respond.
- The IMF organises bailouts, the effects of which tend to minimise the costs of write-downs to the Western lenders, whilst extracting huge social costs in the country that was the original recipient of these loans.
- The spectre of bank collapse from foreign loans has been averted by bailouts and promises of bailout from the Federal Reserve, the nation's only manufacturer of dollars, which it can produce at will.
- We also read of Treasury's blatant role in pushing the business interests of Wall Street by using bailouts to force nations to open their capital markets to foreigners.
- The pension agency is a safety net, not a bailout for underfunded pensions.
- He says that previous bailouts encouraged banks to think the government would always save them, and argues that doing nothing to stave off a crisis would do little harm to the U.S.
- Not uncoincidentally, this period has coincided with continuous resort to IMF bailouts by virtually every single major economy in the region.
- The miracles led to the biggest financial bailouts in history.
- The companies that seek bailouts and tax breaks now are bound to discover that Washington wants something in return.
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