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A study on "yin" and "chao" ("exchange vouchers" system) in the Sung dynasty =王玉棠, Wong, Yuk-tong, Simon. January 1971 (has links)
published_or_final_version / Chinese / Master / Master of Arts
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The Effects of Money Priming on Support of Government ProgrammesGaffikin, Violet January 2015 (has links)
Money helps people gain access to the goods and services they require and it allows people to make choices without having dependence on others (Boucher & Kofos, 2012). Prior research has shown that when the concept of money is activated, participants behave in a less pro-social but a more self-sufficient way in that while they are less likely to offer help to others or to donate money, they make more effort to complete a task and they prefer to work alone rather than to work collectively with
others (Vohs, Mead & Goode, 2006). In this study, we examined the effect of money activation on the level of support for government goods and services programmes as a function of the type of programmes (welfare related or universal) and the participantʼs socioeconomic position (higher or lower). All participants performed a memory task
before completing a government goods and services survey. The memory task consisted of either money-related words (for the money primed group) or neutral words not associated with money (for the control group). The results show that relative to the participants in the control group, those primed with money had lower levels of support for government programmes, and the effect was stronger for welfare
related compared with universal programmes. No significant interaction between priming and socioeconomic status was found, although there was a trend that activating the concept of money had a larger effect for the higher socioeconomic group compared with the lower socioeconomic group. These results provided converging evidence to previous research that activating the concept of money could change peopleʼs attitudes and behaviours, inducing them to become less sensitive to
othersʼ needs. Our results also extend the findings of prior research to the valuation of existing government programmes. They suggest that money activation could lower peopleʼs support for social policies, resulting in unintended consequences.
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Liquidity-preference : a study of investmentBrown, Arthur Joseph January 1939 (has links)
No description available.
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Money and urban life: the contribution of Georg Simmel to urban social theory, with particular reference to Thephilosophy of money陳偉群, Chan, Wai-kwan. January 1983 (has links)
published_or_final_version / Urban Studies / Master / Master of Social Sciences
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Expectations, the real rate of interest, and the demand for moneyRaynes, Jo-Anne January 1975 (has links)
No description available.
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An empirical examination of the significance of monetary poliy changes on equity valuationSchreiber, Eric Marc 12 1900 (has links)
No description available.
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The viability of regional monetary integration : the case of the Southern African common monetary area.Stuart, John. January 1992 (has links)
Through mutual trade in goods and assets, economies become closer linked - integrated - and
this changes the way these economies react to their own and each other's economic
policy and disturbances. Recognising this, the countries may chose to enter into integration
arrangements which facilitate goods and asset trade and may permit co-ordinated action
in the policy sphere. A monetary integration arrangement unites more closely the monetary
systems of a number of countries, and this may be in the absence or presence of a broader
economic integration arrangement (for example a common market). This thesis examines
aspects of the integration arrangement known as the Common Monetary Area (CMA),
between South Africa, Lesotho and Swaziland.
Chapter 2 outlines theoretical considerations of the desirability of monetary integration,
while Chapter 3 uses a model to analyse the effects of goods and asset market integration
on the economic policy and disturbance transmission of two countries. Chapter 4 describes
the institutional and historical setting of the CMA, as well as the reasons behind the
changes made to the legal arrangement in 1986. Chapter 5 presents a critique of an attempt
to analyse the CMA as an optimal currency area, while Chapter 6 analyses the state of
broader economic integration over the CMA, and assesses its implications for monetary
integration. Chapter 7 addresses empirically the question of the degree of asset and goods
market integration and explains the implications for monetary integration, while chapter
8 analyses the situation of Botswana, a non-CMA member, to assess its importance for the
CMA and its relation to the debate surrounding the continued existence of the CMA.
The conclusion that is reached is that, given extant levels of goods and asset market
integration, the members of the CMA (especially the smaller members) would benefit from
greater joint policy making and policy co-ordination, i.e. greater monetary unification. / Thesis (M.Com.)-University of Natal, 1992.
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Offshore financial centres in a globalised economy : the sociological dimensions of bank confidentiality in MonacoDonaghy, Matthew Paul January 1999 (has links)
No description available.
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The meanings of moneyBurgoyne, Carole B. January 1991 (has links)
No description available.
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Dynamic modelling of inflation in a small open economy : the case of IranMoradi, Mohammad Ali January 2000 (has links)
No description available.
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