monetary assets

  • 1monetary assets — Assets, such as cash and debtors, that have a fixed monetary exchange value and are not affected by a change in the price level. If there are no regulations requiring companies to account for changing price levels, monetary assets remain in the… …

    Big dictionary of business and management

  • 2monetary assets and liabilities — assets and liabilities ( liability) with contractual payoffs. Bloomberg Financial Dictionary …

    Financial and business terms

  • 3monetary assets and liabilities — Amounts receivable (assets) or payable (liabilities) that appear in a company s accounts as specific sums of money, e.g. cash and bank balances, loans, debtors, and creditors. These are to be distinguished from such non monetary items as plant… …

    Accounting dictionary

  • 4monetary assets — money, personal wealth, capital …

    English contemporary dictionary

  • 5net monetary assets — See: monetary assets less monetary liabilities . Bloomberg Financial Dictionary …

    Financial and business terms

  • 6Monetary Approach to The Balance of Payments — refers to the key ideas and subsequent research of David Hume conducted in the late 1950s, the 1960s and early 1970s. David Hume presented the price–specie flow mechanism against the Mercantilist approach that stated favorable balance of trade is …

    Wikipedia

  • 7Monetary 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

  • 8Monetary policy of India — Monetary policy is the process by which monetary authority of a country, generally a central bank controls the supply of money in the economy by exercising its control over interest rates in order to maintain price stability and achieve high… …

    Wikipedia

  • 9Monetary-disequilibrium theory — is basically a product of the Monetarist school mainly represented in the works of Leland Yeager and Austrian macroeconomics. The basic concept of monetary equilibrium(disequilibrium) was however defined in terms of an individual s demand for… …

    Wikipedia

  • 10Monetary hegemony — is an economic and political phenomenon in which a single state has decisive influence over the functions of the international monetary system. The functions influenced by a monetary hegemon are: accessibility to international credits, foreign… …

    Wikipedia