de fiscal

  • 121fiscal year — noun An accounting period of one year, not necessarily coinciding with the calendar year. New York State has rarely had an approved budget by the beginning of its April 1 fiscal year Syn: financial year, budget year, tax year, accounting… …

    Wiktionary

  • 122Fiscal Agent — An organization, such as a bank or trust company, that takes responsibility for the fiscal duties of an unrelated party. These fiscal responsibilities generally include the disbursement of interest and maturity payments on bonds, dividend payouts …

    Investment dictionary

  • 123Fiscal Deficit — When a government s total expenditures exceed the revenue that it generates (excluding money from borrowings). Deficit differs from debt, which is an accumulation of yearly deficits. A fiscal deficit is regarded by some as a positive economic… …

    Investment dictionary

  • 124Fiscal Effort — The amount of revenue collected by a government, often shown as a percent of the fiscal capacity. This value creates an estimate of the total amount the government could collect in revenue. The amount that a government collects in revenue, mainly …

    Investment dictionary

  • 125Fiscal Balance —    The balance of a government s tax revenues, plus any proceeds of asset sales, minus government spending. If the balance is positive the government has a fiscal surplus, if negative there is a fiscal deficit …

    Financial and business terms

  • 126fiscal — fis|cal1 [ fıskl ] adjective ** 1. ) relating to money and financial matters, especially taxes: fiscal and monetary policies 2. ) AMERICAN relating to how an organization plans to spend money during a particular period ╾ fis|cal|ly adverb fiscal… …

    Usage of the words and phrases in modern English

  • 127fiscal — 1 adjective formal connected with money, taxes, debts, etc owned and managed by the government: a fiscal crisis fiscally adverb 2 noun (C) informal procurator fiscal …

    Longman dictionary of contemporary English

  • 128fiscal policy — The use of government spending and taxation to influence macroeconomic conditions. Fiscal policy was actively pursued to sustain full employment in the post war years; however, monetarists and others have claimed that this set off the inflation… …

    Accounting dictionary