• Ms. BRIGNONE: It would put us in a big crunch because we are basically covering the money for the state.

    NPR: Calif. Budget Woes Spread Beyond Sacramento

  • At the moment astrophysicists are trying to figure out whether the universe will collapse in a big crunch, expand at just the right rate to avoid collapse, or expand very rapidly.

    FORBES: The Universe and Mrs. Ferguson

  • By November 2007, when the narrative ends, it was already clear to Mr Morris that this crisis was much more serious than the last big crunch, the 1998 Russian debt default and the bail-out of Long-Term Capital Management, an American hedge fund, by a group of banks under the Fed's direction.

    ECONOMIST: The credit crunch

  • With the NHS sorted (or not) the prime minister now has two more big problems to crunch before packing his trunks and heading for the beach.

    BBC: After Gaddafi

  • So far its only big concession to the crunch has been to cancel previous plans to increase production to 450 planes a year.

    ECONOMIST: Airbus and Boeing

  • Spain is staging what amounts to the rich world's first big post-credit-crunch election.

    ECONOMIST: Spain: Zapatero's bear fight | The

  • Even optimists think that with a huge fiscal crunch looming and all three big political parties engaged in bouts of cost-cutting one-upmanship, Mr Johnson will have to battle to extract any cash at all from Whitehall.

    ECONOMIST: Cleaning up London��s dirty air

  • But just as most big oil sands projects get going, a serious labor crunch will hit, as construction jobs open for the 2010 Winter Olympics in nearby Vancouver.

    FORBES: The World's Billionaires

  • In contrast to the 1990s, when many blue-chip firms went on a spending binge, big firms were generally in decent financial shape going into the crunch.

    ECONOMIST: Corporate finance

  • While many emerging markets are seen as able to counter some effects of slowing economic growth by lowering interest rates or with fiscal stimulus, a European credit crunch could still have a meaningful impact because European banks had been big lenders in the developing world.

    WSJ: World's Woes Leave Lasting Scars

  • Spreads between what they are now willing to pay for the riskiest bonds--many of which are being sold to finance big buyouts--and Treasurys have widened sharply on concerns about a broad credit crunch.

    FORBES: Magazine Article

  • And big studios and independent outfits are sharply trimming their film output in response to the credit crunch and a faltering DVD market.

    ECONOMIST: Why government handouts to Hollywood are growing

  • Ms Whitney argues that small-business owners big users of credit cards and home-equity lines face a severe credit crunch as these crutches get yanked away.

    ECONOMIST: Credit in America

  • Big banks in general have survived remarkably well since the onset last year of a credit crunch, and have continued to make new loans to cash-strapped companies.

    ECONOMIST: The limits to removing banks' conflicts of interest

  • Then there's the credit crunch, which will likely force movie studios to shoulder more of the risk of big-budget flops.

    FORBES: Magazine Article

  • Telcos need the ability to analyze this big data quickly and effectively and are turning to the new analytics infrastructure with in-memory computing to crunch the data in seconds vs. days.

    FORBES: Big Data: A Picture Is Worth A Thousand Words

  • The credit crunch and global recession hit the car industry hard, although Ford was the only one of the big three US car firms which did not go bankrupt.

    BBC: Ford doubles dividend to 10 cents

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