[ US /ˌɪnˈsɑɫvənsi/ ]
[ UK /ɪnsˈɒlvənsi/ ]
NOUN
  1. the lack of financial resources
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How To Use insolvency In A Sentence

  • Having worked on fiscal reform in several countries (including my home country, Argentina), I think that Shaviro's view on a march to government insolvency is wrong. From Musgrave to Shaviro, Arnold Kling | EconLog | Library of Economics and Liberty
  • The first alternative is a shortcut to insolvency, the second, a recipe for discontentment and civil unrest.
  • A new provision provides that the regulations do not apply where the outgoing employer is subject to proceedings whereby he may be adjudicated bankrupt or wound up for reasons of insolvency by order of the High Court.
  • That is the legal definition of insolvency. The Sun
  • An obvious example would be, he submits, if the Company went into administration for the purposes of the Insolvency Act 1986.
  • In that capacity he would be acting as an insolvency practitioner and must be qualified so to act.
  • The only way the insurer can guarantee a lifetime income without the risk of insolvency is by investing the premiums in ultra-safe instruments with a tiny rate of return and offering only a very small annual payment. Matthew Yglesias » The Other Public Sector Pension Problem
  • Since his arrival at the company the dark clouds threatening insolvency have continued to gather.
  • Most retentions sit in everyday bank accounts, with no insolvency protection. Times, Sunday Times
  • This means that default on all these loans would place the banks in technical insolvency. International Finance: The markets and financial management of multinational business.
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