overspending

overspending
The spending of too much money.

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  • Overspending — is spending more money than one can afford. It is a common problem when easy credit is available. This can also be called investing in the public sector when infrastructure payments exceed actual calculated cost.[1] Contents 1 Causes 2 Credit 3 …   Wikipedia

  • overspending — UK US noun [uncountable] Thesaurus: miscellaneous paymentssynonym words used to describe payments and funding sourceshyponym Main entry: overspend …   Useful english dictionary

  • overspending — overspend o‧ver‧spend [ˌoʊvəˈspend ǁ ˌoʊvər ] verb overspent PTandPP [ ˈspent] [intransitive] to spend more than you can afford or more than you intended: overspend by • Health authorities, which overspent by more than £300 million last year,… …   Financial and business terms

  • overspending — /ˌəυvə spendɪŋ/ noun the act of spending more than is allowed ● The board decided to limit the overspending by the production departments …   Dictionary of banking and finance

  • Overspending — ⇡ Share of Advertising …   Lexikon der Economics

  • overspending — n. act or instance of spending more than is available or practical (esp. time, energy, or money) ,o·ver spend || ‚əʊvÉ™(r) spend v. spend more than is available or practical (i.e of time, energy, or money) …   English contemporary dictionary

  • overspending — See: overspend …   English dictionary

  • Sovereign default — A sovereign default is the failure or refusal of the government of a sovereign state to pay back its debt in full. It may be accompanied by a formal declaration of a government not to pay (repudiation) or only partially pay its debts (due… …   Wikipedia

  • Scandals of the 2005 Southeast Asian Games — The scandals of the 2005 Southeast Asian Games, are as follows.Programming*As with previous games, the Filipino hosts introduced non Olympic events or sports normally not contested in previous games into the programme which are often advantageous …   Wikipedia

  • History of the Dominican Republic — The Dominican Republic occupies the eastern two thirds of the island of Hispaniola, in the Greater Antilles. Successive waves of Arawak migrants, moving northward from the Orinoco delta in South America, settled the islands of the Caribbean.… …   Wikipedia

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