Fiscal in a sentence as an adjective

Not in a fiscal sense, but in an ethical sense, and that's the worst type of failure there is.

Cities will be forced to grow within their means, and that pressure will force more prudent fiscal policy going forward.

I really like trains, but the HSR project looks like a fiscal, bureaucratic, and legal disaster.

Plus, they have one monetary policy and 17 different fiscal policies - that simply doesn't work!Your banks and your corporate sector are flush with money.

I don't care about the tech scene, or gadgets, or games, or celebrities, or sports, or this quarter's fiscal projections for a multinational corporation.

I lean libertarian/fiscal-conservative, so was rooting for Smith against the awkward, liberal Wyden.

> "The total company expenditures since being founded in 2002 through the 2010 fiscal year were less than $800 million which includes all the development costs for the Falcon 1, Falcon 9 and Dragon."Wow.

We might be in dangerous economic straits if the dollar were not the principal international reserve currency and the eurozone in deep fiscal trouble.

These messages occurred at about the same time we saw everyone getting hammered over credit-card debt, and heard the Republicans chest-beating over sound fiscal policy.

It cannot be used as an instrument of fiscal policy, and it weakens the ability to use government currency as an instrument of fiscal policy.

Several recently published reports have grossly exaggerated Canadas fiscal debt position.

It's plainly obvious that you aren't expected to actually be fiscally sound--otherwise why would they keep flooding you with credit invitations?Cars are expensive and limited in utility.

The GAO estimates that in fiscal year 2014, $450 million in fees will be collected from the insurance companies participating in the exchanges, and this money is directly credited to the account used to manage the FFE program.

We have a huge public debt, dangerously neglected infrastructure, a greatly overextended system of criminal punishment, a seeming inability to come to grips with grave environmental problems such as global warming, a very costly but inadequate educational system, unsound immigration policies, an embarrassing obesity epidemic, an excessively costly health care system, a possible rise in structural unemployment, fiscal crises in state and local governments, a screwed-up tax system, a dysfunctional patent system, and growing economic inequality that may soon create serious social tensions.

Fiscal definitions

adjective

involving financial matters; "fiscal responsibility"

See also: financial