0 used to describe a loan or investment that is paid back using the income from the project, asset, etc. that it was used to buy:
Not only are the social services no longer self-liquidating; they are self-propagating.
We are talking about a large slice of self-liquidating money which is required for a five or six-year period.
One would expect it to be quite small, because working capital is self-liquidating to some extent.
A good deal of money made available will, no doubt, be self-liquidating.
We were not suggesting that there should be any long-term finance by bills but simply that there should be an extension of thirty days on a genuine self-liquidating bill.
This is not a self-liquidating transaction.
All that £500 million will be self-financing and will be self-liquidating over a period of time.
I am not persuaded that the problem is self-liquidating.