0 used to describe an organization that does not have enough money, especially because it has not been given enough by a government:
At the heart of this diagnostic chart is one factor which is re-establishing itself, in an increasingly resource-conscious and cash-starved world, as a moral virtue in its own right.
It is clear that the promise of tax-free returns on felling many years in the future holds little attraction to the cash-starved landowner.
As if the local authority settlement were not bad enough, the existing problems of cash-starved services endure.
Will that money be new, or will it be diverted from another cash-starved programme?
It is a two-tier system with profit-led care for the haves and an inferior cash-starved service for the have-nots.
We consider it scandalous that practices can make £190,000 or £280,000 in profit from fund holding when cash-starved hospitals are freezing waiting lists.
They want to pretend that the poor, the homeless and the cash-starved schools and hospitals do not exist.
They are suggesting that they have no responsibility whatever in these matters and it is the cash-starved local authorities which should pick up the burdens all the time.