- monetary velocity
- Общая лексика: скорость денежного обращения
Универсальный англо-русский словарь. Академик.ру. 2011.
Универсальный англо-русский словарь. Академик.ру. 2011.
Monetary Aggregates — Broad categories measuring the total value of the money supply within an economy. In the United States, the standardized monetary aggregates and their measured contents are known as: M0 – Physical cash and coin M1 – All of M0 plus… … Investment dictionary
Monetary policy of the Philippines — Monetary policy is the monitoring and control of money supply by a central bank, such as the Federal Reserve Board in the United States of America, and the Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas in the Philippines. This is used by the government to be able… … Wikipedia
Velocity (disambiguation) — Velocity can mean: * Velocity in physics * Speed * Velocity (biochemistry), a subject of Michaelis Menten kinetics in biochemistry. * Velocity (novel), by US author Dean Koontz * Velocity (newspaper), a weekly alternative newspaper in Louisville … Wikipedia
Monetary inflation — For increases in the general level of prices, see inflation. Economics … Wikipedia
Monetary policy — Part of a series on Government Public finance File:Governmentbhj,i,gu Vedder Highsmith detail 1.jpeg … Wikipedia
Monetary economics — Economics … Wikipedia
Velocity of money — Chart showing the log of US M2[1][2] money velocity (green), calculated by dividing nominal GDP by M2 stock, M1 plus time deposits. M2 velocity is not stable and correlates with the Employment Population ratio (blue), an indicator of economic… … Wikipedia
velocity — The number of times a dollar is spent, or turns over, in a specific period of time. Velocity affects the amount of economic activity generated by a given money supply. Bloomberg Financial Dictionary * * * velocity ve‧lo‧ci‧ty [vˈlɒsti ǁ vˈlɑː… … Financial and business terms
Clark Warburton — (27 January 1896, near Buffalo, New York – 18 September 1979, Fairfax, Virginia) was an American economist. He was described as the first monetarist of the post World War II period, [1] the most uncompromising upholder of a strictly monetary… … Wikipedia
Friedman, Milton — born July 31, 1912, Brooklyn, N.Y., U.S. U.S. economist. Friedman studied at Rutgers and Columbia before joining the faculty of the University of Chicago in 1946. There he became the leading U.S. advocate of monetarism. He oversaw the economic… … Universalium
Monetarism — Economics … Wikipedia