Exchange Currency

financing gap

The difference between the selling price of a property and the funds available to the potential homebuyer to purchase the home. A potential buyer who can arrange $80,000 in financing for a home with a sales price of $100,000 is facing a $20,000 financing gap.

Related information about financing gap:
  1. financing gap - The Free Dictionary
    (Economics, Accounting & Finance / Banking & Finance) the difference between a country's requirements for foreign exchange to finance its debts and imports ...
     
  2. financing gap - Financial Dictionary - The Free Dictionary
    Financing that is required, but for which no provision has been made. The difference in total funding needed for a proposal and the amount of funding already ...
     
  3. The ghost of financing gap : how the Harrod-Domar growth model ...
    Aug 31, 1997 ... They then calculate a financing gap between the required investment and available resources, and often fill the"financing gap"with foreign aid.
     
  4. The Ghost of Financing Gap
    The Financing Gap Model has two simple predictions: (1) aid will go into investment ... The data soundly reject these two predictions of the Financing Gap model.
     
  5. Financing Gap - Definition of Financing Gap - QFINANCE
    Definition of financing gap from QFinance - The Ultimate Financial Resource. What is financing gap? Definitions and meanings of financing gap.
     
  6. Calculating the "Financing Gap" | Finance Alliance for Sustainable ...
    Conversations with sustainable trade producers, and discussions with related stakeholders, including associated NGOs, buyer organisations and international ...
     
  7. What is financing gap? definition and meaning
    Definition of financing gap: The difference between the selling price of a property and the funds available to the potential homebuyer to purchase the home.
     
  8. The ghost of financing gap: testing the growth model ... - ScienceDirect
    The Harrod–Domar growth model supposedly died long ago. Still today, economists in the international financial institutions (IFIs) apply the Harrod– Domar mo.