Economics/Glossary: Difference between revisions

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imported>Nick Gardner
imported>Nick Gardner
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{{subpages}}
:''(more specialised glossaries are available on the Related Articles subpages of other economics articles)''
{{TOC|right}}
==A==
{{r|Adverse selection}}
{{r|Applied statistics}}
{{r|Arbitrage}}
{{r|Asymmetric information}}
{{r|Automatic stabilisers}}
==B==
{{r|Bad bank|"Bad bank"}}
{{r|Banking panic}}
* Base money - see Monetary base
{{r|Basis point}}
{{r|Beta (finance)|Beta}}
{{r|Bill (finance)}}
{{r|Bill of Exchange}}
{{r|Bond (finance)}}
{{r|Broad money}}
{{r|Broker}}
{{r|Bubble (economics)}}
{{r|Budget balance}}
{{r|Budget deficit}}
==C==
{{r|Capital (banking)}}
{{r|Carry trading}}
* CDS - see Credit Default Swap
{{r|CDS spread}}
{{r|Central Bank}}
{{r|Commercial bank}}
{{r|Commercial paper}}
{{r|Complex interactive system}}
{{r|Contagion (banking)}}
{{r|Consumer surplus}}
{{r|Corporation}}
{{r|Cost_of_capital}}
{{r|Covariance}}
{{r|Covered bond}}
{{r|Credit crunch}}
{{r|Credit default swap}}
{{r|Credit easing}}
{{r|Credit risk}}
{{r|Crowding out}}
{{r|Currency board}}
{{r|Cyclically-adjusted budget deficit}}
==D==
{{r|Debt_instrument}}
{{r|Debt trap}}
{{r|Deflation}}
{{r|Deleveraging}}
{{r|Derivative (finance)|Derivative}}
{{r|Direct investment}}
{{r|Discount window}}
{{r|Discount_rate}}
==E==
{{r|Efficient market hypothesis}}
{{r|Exchange rate protectionism}}
==F==
{{r|Fallacy of composition (economics)}}
{{r|Fiat money}}
{{r|Financial asset}}
{{r|Financial_Intermediary}}
{{r|Financial_regulator}}
{{r|Fiscal gap}}
{{r|Fiscal stimulus}}
{{r|Fiscal sustainability}}
{{r|Fractional reserve banking}}
{{r|Freddie Mac}}
{{r|Full employment deficit}}
==G==
{{r|Generational accounts}}
{{r|Great moderation}}
==H==
{{r|Hedging}}
{{r|Hedge fund}}
{{r|Herding (banking)}}
{{r|High-powered money}}
==I==
{{r|Insolvency}}
{{r|Interbank market}}
{{r|Interest rate risk}}
{{r|Internal rate of return}}
{{r|Investment bank}}
{{r|IS-LM model}}
==J,K,L==
{{r|Kurtosis}}
{{r|Learning curve}}
{{r|Lender of last resort}}
{{r|Leverage}}
{{r|LIBOR}}
{{r|Liquidity}}
{{r|Liquidity trap}}
==M==
{{r|Margin account}}
{{r|Margin call}}
{{r|Market risk}}
{{r|Monetary base}}
{{r|Monetisation (of public debt)}}
{{r|Money market}}
{{r|Money supply}}
{{r|Moral hazard}}
==N==
{{r|National debt}}
{{r|National Debt - Maastricht definition}}
{{r|Net present value}}
{{r|Normal distribution}}
==O==
{{r|Option}}
{{r|Output gap}}
==P,Q==
{{r|Portfolio (finance)}}
{{r|Portfolio insurance}}
{{r|Primary budget deficit}}
{{r|Prime rate}}
{{r|Protection}}
{{r|Quantitative easing}}
{{r|Qualitative easing}}
==R==
==R==
{{r|Random_walk}}
{{r|Random_walk}}
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{{r|Risk premium}}
{{r|Risk premium}}
{{r|Run (banking)}}
{{r|Run (banking)}}
==S==
{{r|Securitisation}}
{{r|Selling short}}
{{r|Shadow banking system}}
{{r|Sharpe ratio}}
{{r|Skewness}}
{{r|Sovereign default}}
{{r|Sovereign spread}}
* Spread - see Yield spread
{{r|Standard deviation}}
{{r|Standardised budget deficit}}
{{r|Structured investment vehicle}}
{{r|Supply-side measures}}
{{r|Swap contract}}
{{r|Systemic failure (finance)}}
==T,U,V,W,X,Y,Z==
{{r|Tax wedge}}
{{r|Terms of trade}}
{{r|Value at risk}}
{{r|Variance}}
{{r|Warrant}}
{{r|Yield spread}}

Revision as of 14:39, 17 October 2009

R

  • Random_walk [r]: Please do not use this term in your topic list, because there is no single article for it. Please substitute a more precise term. See Random_walk (disambiguation) for a list of available, more precise, topics. Please add a new usage if needed.
  • Recession (economics) [r]: Conventionally defined as two consecutive quarters of negative growth of gross domestic product (except in the United States). [e]
  • Redemption yield [r]: the yield provided by a bond or other fixed-interest security taking account of the difference between its purchase price and the amount payable when it matures (also known as yield to maturity). Calculated as the internal rate of return of the security. [e]
  • Repurchase agreement [r]: A contract giving the seller of an security the right or obligation to buy it back at a specified price on a given date. Used as a way of borrowing or lending using the security as collateral. (The interest rate charged is known as the "repo rate"). [e]
  • Reserve ratio [r]: The ratio of a bank's reserves to its deposits, a minimum value of which is set by its central bank with the effect of limiting the proportion of its deposits that the bank is permitted to lend. [e]
  • Ricardian equivalence [r]: the argument that government spending will not increase demand because it will prompt taxpayers to save an equivalent amount in anticipation of a resulting tax increase. [e]
  • Risk premium [r]: The ratio of the rate of return from an asset to the rate of return available from a risk-free investment. [e]
  • Run (banking) [r]: An attempt by a large number of investors to withdraw their deposits. [e]