People would lend me money and tell me to pay it back when I got famous.
Unison said it was "unlikely if not impossible for Circle to pay it back".
The problem with borrowing, of course, is that you have to pay it back, and with interest.
Our super-sized debt is only manageable because our lenders are completely confident that we can pay it back.
Insurers are likely to keep some of the profits and simply pay it back to the government at year-end.
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When we borrow money, we promise to pay it back and we pay it back -- no matter what.
"Given his circumstances, no one would've really thought twice about him choosing not to pay it back, " Davis said.
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So, they could practically do the deal themselves and pay it back in 4 quarters of operation from cash flow.
If she had cashed a refund check issued in error, she would have been required to pay it back (with interest, of course).
Japan, for example, can have a debt to GDP ratio of 300% and still pay it back because interest rates are barely above 0%.
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Taking a loan from your 401(k) account can tie you to your cubicle if you can't afford to pay it back on short notice.
No vast prop trading, just the simple fact that the banks have lent too much money to people who now cannot pay it back.
"I'm paying for a U.S. school in U.S. dollars, and I don't think I can pay it back using an Indian salary, " he says.
Ben encouraged Timmy the Evader to borrow too much food, knowing that there was no way Fairyland at Foggy Bottom could ever pay it back.
All is not lost, as you can ask HMRC to pay it back over a longer period or reduce the amount you are paying back.
I'll account for it, every dollar, I'll pay it back.
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The lawmaker promised to pay it back, but never did, nor did he reveal the loan on his Senate financial disclosure forms, as is required by law, Ms. Lynch said.
Some of the cards operate like payment plans where borrowers make a purchase from the retailer on the card and then have a number of months to pay it back, interest-free.
This could be a viable option, Babb and Rutledge say, if the borrower knows he or she can pay it back quickly, or if they can lock in a low interest rate for at least a year.
However, it is clear that Havelange and Teixeira, as football officials, should not have accepted any bribe money, and should have had to pay it back since the money was in connection with the exploitation of media rights.
His student loan program will allow students for the first time ever to borrow money at low cost from the federal government and pay it back as a low fixed percentage of income for up to 20 years.
He asks the chief executive of the Association for Payment Clearing Services (Apacs), which represents the credit card industry, what the banks are thinking of lending money to people who will never be able to afford to pay it back.
Broadly, though, all banks earn money through some combination of maturity transformation (borrowing short and lending long), taking credit risk (ie, lending to people who may not pay it back) and earning fees and punting on their own account in the capital markets.
New guidance has also been issued to those departments with high levels of uncollected debt, such as HMRC and the Department for Work and Pensions, to help ensure a "fairer approach to those who have fallen into debt but cannot afford to pay it back".
It has a relatively decent default rate of under 10%, and rejects 70% of applicants after tapping into thousands of piece of public data on each one as part of its uniquely automated lending process, to make sure it picks people who will pay it back.
So, the reason banks are able to make money lending you is because -- that there's some risk that you might not pay it back, plus you're giving up the use of your money for -- they're giving up the use of their money for a while.
At some point something will go wrong and you'll have to pay it all back.
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