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New Deal

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new deal
collection of political and economic policies and programs promulgated by the first two administrations of the presidency of Franklin D. Roosevelt. The New Deal policies were aimed at combating the economic miseries of the great depression .

 


New Deal
Definition: Federal government programs initiated in the 1930s during the Depression.

New Dealism:
You have two cows. The government takes both, shoots one, milks the other, and pours the milk down the sink. The government insists there is a giant storage tank where all the milk goes.
New Zealandism:
You have two sheep.

Rate of new deals being referred to the investment banking division of a brokerage firm. This might refer to proposals for new stock and bond issues, as well as mergers, acquisitions, and takeovers.
Wikipedia:
Deal flow
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The rate at which new deals are referred to a brokerage firm In investment banking.
Deal stock
Stock which is subject to a publicly announced or rumored merger or acquisition.

Deal flow In investment banking, the rate at which new deals are referred to a brokerage firm. Deal stock Stock subject to merger or acquisition, either publicly announced or rumored.

' According to Higgs, Roosevelt's New Deal led business leaders to question whether the current 'regime' of private property rights in their firms' capital and its income stream would be protected.

With an unemployment rate approaching 25% of the workforce, Roosevelt launched several programs to increase the volume of liquidity and reduce unemployment (which is what is called the New Deal).

bungled its national priorities from the New Deal to the present (Columbia University Press, 2001)
Mandell, Nikki. The corporation as family : the gendering of corporate welfare, 1890-1930 (University of North Carolina Press, 2002).

NATIONAL LABOR RELATIONS ACT: A major labor union promoting act under New Deal program of the Roosevelt administration in 1935, it modified and replaced the National Industrial Recovery Act that was declared unconstitutional earlier in the year.

Why the World Needs a Green New Deal
Viewpoints
Since launching the Green Economy Initiative in October 2008, we have been heartened by the response from so many economies and world leaders.

The New Deal brought DEPOSIT INSURANCE and boosted GOVERNMENT spending, but it also piled taxes on business and sought to prevent excessive COMPETITION. Price controls were brought in, along with other anti-business regulations.

Depending on demand and/or market stabilizing functions, an underwriter can exercise this option for additional shares. Many new deals now have this option included. Usually, the green shoe is limited to an additional 15 percent of new shares.

Glass-Steagall was part of Roosevelt's New Deal and became a permanent measure in 1945. It gave tighter regulation of national banks to the Fed, prohibited bank sales of securities, and created the FDIC.

See also: Depression, Banks, Disclaimer, Capitalist, Internal audit

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