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conditionalities

Definitions

from Wiktionary, Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License.

  • noun Plural form of conditionality.

Etymologies

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Examples

  • Treasury has done in America, each bailout will be considered on a case-by-case basis, and each will be subject to strict "conditionalities" similar to those imposed in any IMF agreement.

    Eastern Europe and the Financial Crisis 2009

  • And despite ostensible "conditionalities" on aid, in reality the money flows with virtually no strings attached, so corrupt leaders eschew much-needed infrastructure projects and instead partake in reckless consumption, or what Moyo dubs "negative corruption" -- stealing the money and giving it to their wives for shopping sprees in London, or stashing it in foreign bank accounts where it does nothing to help the country.

    Jake Whitney: Dambisa Moyo and Why Western Aid is Killing Africa 2009

  • Children's grants might also soon have "conditionalities" attached, including that the recipient should be at school and have been inoculated.

    ANC Daily News Briefing 2008

  • The IMF and World Bank set 'conditionalities', certain requirements, which were in the form of a Structural Adjustment

    Contents 2004

  • How you are going to help Colombia with this kind of conditionalities by the rebels, when the people in Colombia are trying to get -- are more interested in peace than in the fight against narcotics?

    Press Briefing By Joe Lockhart ITY National Archives 1999

  • Nobody wanted to submit to its destructive "conditionalities", anti-labor policies designed to shrink the domestic market in the false assumption that this "frees" more output for export rather than being consumed at home.

    Bill Totten's Weblog 2009

  • Nobody wanted to submit to its destructive "conditionalities", anti-labor policies designed to shrink the domestic market in the false assumption that this "frees" more output for export rather than being consumed at home.

    Bill Totten's Weblog 2009

  • Nobody wanted to submit to its destructive "conditionalities", anti-labor policies designed to shrink the domestic market in the false assumption that this "frees" more output for export rather than being consumed at home.

    Bill Totten's Weblog 2009

  • Nobody wanted to submit to its destructive "conditionalities," anti-labor policies designed to shrink the domestic market in the false assumption that this "frees" more output for export rather than being consumed at home.

    CounterPunch 2009

  • Nobody wanted to submit to its destructive "conditionalities," anti-labor policies designed to shrink the domestic market in the false assumption that this "frees" more output for export rather than being consumed at home.

    CounterPunch 2009

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