Great Depression in the United States/Related Articles: Difference between revisions
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{{r|Run (banking)}} | {{r|Run (banking)}} | ||
{{r|Sterilisation, monetary}} | {{r|Sterilisation, monetary}} |
Revision as of 11:16, 10 February 2009
- See also changes related to Great Depression in the United States, or pages that link to Great Depression in the United States or to this page or whose text contains "Great Depression in the United States".
Index
See the related articles subpage to the article on economics [1] for an index to topics referred to in the economics articles.
Parent articles
Subtopics
Related topics
Glossary
- Agency cost [r]: Add brief definition or description
- Debt deflation [r]: a situation which arises when falling prices put pressure upon debtors by requiring them to repay more, in real terms, than they had borrowed, causing distress selling and further falls in prices. [e]
- Full employment deficit [r]: A term denoting the budget deficit that would have existed if the economy had been at full employment: estimated by excluding recession-induced increases in public expenditure and reductions in revenues from taxation, that is synonymous with the term cyclically-adjusted budget deficit, and with one of the interpretations of the term structural deficit. [e]
- Margin account [r]: an arrangement that enables customers to buy securities with money borrowed from a broker, subject to a minimum maintenance level related to the market values of the securities. [e]
- Margin call [r]: a demand for the additional securities required to maintain the minimum maintenance level of a margin account when security prices fall. [e]
- Moral hazard [r]: Motivation to take an otherwise unwarranted risk because the cost of an unfavourable outcome would be borne by someone other than the risk-taker. [e]
- Open market operations [r]: The purchase or sale of government bonds by a central bank in order to change commercial banks' reserve ratios with a view to the consequences for the money supply and interest rates. [e]
- Real bills doctrine [r]: the belief (now considered fallacious) that money issued against commercial paper cannot be inflationary because it merely responds passively to the needs of commerce. [e]
- Run (banking) [r]: An attempt by a large number of investors to withdraw their deposits. [e]
- Sterilisation, monetary [r]: Action taken by a central bank to counteract changes to its monetary base - for example by buying or selling government securities. [e]