Nominal Sector or Monetary Sector
Monetary policy has a more direct influence on the private sector
it consists of objects such as money bonds, shares and other financial instruments
It is a diagrammatic representation of a model of aggregate demand determination based upon the locus ofequilibrium points in the aggregate expenditure sector (IS) and the monetary sector(LM).
GDP can be increased in the short run by having a monetary policy of keeping interest rates as low as possible. Low rates allows increased borrowing in the corporate sector and thus it has funds to increase production and hopefully increase the size of GDP.
Nominal Sector or Monetary Sector
monetary incentive is increase ammount of money in economy sector!
Monetary policy has a more direct influence on the private sector
it consists of objects such as money bonds, shares and other financial instruments
It is a diagrammatic representation of a model of aggregate demand determination based upon the locus ofequilibrium points in the aggregate expenditure sector (IS) and the monetary sector(LM).
It is a diagrammatic representation of a model of aggregate demand determination based upon the locus ofequilibrium points in the aggregate expenditure sector (IS) and the monetary sector(LM).
Keith Hinchliffe has written: 'Project planning in the educational sector in less developed countries' 'The Kaduna textile workers' 'The monetary and non-monetary returns to education in Africa' 'Education, individual earnings and earnings distribution'
The Fed, Federal Reserve System, has three tools to use for its monetary policy. 1. Open Operations - buying or selling securities from the privite sector to control money supply. 2. Discount Loans - Setting discount rate that privite sector banks would need to pay the Fed to borrow money from them. 3. Reserve requirements - sets amount of money banks must have in their vaults in case customers come take money out. The Fed's current monetary policy is price stability and implicitly controling inflation.
GDP can be increased in the short run by having a monetary policy of keeping interest rates as low as possible. Low rates allows increased borrowing in the corporate sector and thus it has funds to increase production and hopefully increase the size of GDP.
J.F McCollum has written: 'CANDIDE model 1.0: monetary sector' -- subject(s): Canada, Interest and usury, Project CANDIDE, Mathematical models
Monetary activities mean that you have to spend money to do the activity. However, non-monetary means the activity is free. Monetary and non-monetary are classifications for activities.
Leigh Drake has written: 'Personal sector money demand in the UK' 'A semi-nonparametric approach to neoclassical consumer theory and the demand for UK monetary assets' 'A study of the relative efficiency of UK bank branches' 'Relative prices and the value of time hypothesis in the UK personal sector money demand function' 'Company sector money demand' 'Economies of scale in the building society industry' 'A semi-nonparametric approach to the neoclassical consumer theory and the demand for UK monetary assets' 'One Divisia money for Europe?' 'Adverse selection and the market for consumer credit' 'Relative efficiency in the branch network of a UK bank' 'Building society profitability' -- subject(s): Halifax Building Society 'The substitutability of financial assets in the UK and the implications for monetary aggregation'