Caution! The site can't guarantee, that text has age permission. The site is not recommended, if you are less than 18 years old.
The site shows example sentences for English words. How the word or phrase could be used in a sentence?
" ... At the same time, what matters is not the total national debt, but the net debt after excluding intragovernmental debt, which is what the Trust Fund is. Activists might repeat "the government bonds in the Trust Fund are real assets" until they're blue in the face, but each dollar of FICA surplus, back when it existed, decreased the degree to which the federal government needed to borrow from outside, and each dollar of Trust Fund bond redeemed, is another dollar which the requires the issuing of more bonds. ... "
" ... That a change of less than one percentage point in interest rates can cost nearly as much as the budget deal or the Trump tax cuts is a testament to the size of our national debt on which that interest is owed. The $16.5 trillion debt (which grows to almost $22.5 trillion if one includes intragovernmental debt such as that owed to the Social Security and Medicare Trust Funds) will only become worse moving forward as the government is projected to spend $1 trillion more than it raises in revenue every single year from 2020 onward if current laws remain unchanged. ... "
" ... That number has since grown to $26.63 trillion. It includes not just debt owed to the public but intragovernmental debt as well, including securities held by the trust funds for Social Security and similar programs. ... "
" ... The ebb and flow of the intragovernmental tussle over U.S. foreign policy is shaped in large part by the makeup of the government and the geopolitical climate of the day. The Founding Fathers designed the U.S. Constitution to give the president ample foreign policy power as commander-in-chief, along with the ability to negotiate treaties and appoint diplomats. At the same time, Congress holds the power of the purse, as well as the authority to declare war, approve treaties and presidential appointments, and maintain oversight of the administration. U.S. history is replete with examples of Congress inserting itself into foreign affairs, from the Senate's infamous rejection of the Treaty of Versailles in 1919 to the passage of the War Powers Resolution of 1973, requiring the president to consult with lawmakers before sending troops to war and end military action if Congress refuses to declare war or authorize the use of force. ... "
" ... Though one can go to just about any mobile phone store and walk out with a Blackberry all for the price of a two-year contract, service providers inside government offered Blackberry’s to SIGTARP at $2,194/per, according to Barofsky. Revealing an ability to be embarrassed that is rare among political types (more on that later), Barofsky sheepishly explained away the waste as “intragovernmental transfers” such that the costs “were at limited expense to the taxpayer.” Wrong. As simple logic tells us, private sector businesses that destroy capital in the way governments do are happily starved of funds so that more effective stewards can replace them as investment recipients. Put plainly, buggy manufacturers to some degree had to go out of business so that carmakers could replace them, but with governments not disciplined by profit and loss, the taxpayer is first burned through spending on his or her dime, and is burdened yet again with a less vibrant economy thanks to governmental waste of always limited capital. ... "