A firms productive resources. Assets requirements A common element of a financial plan that describes projected capital spending and the proposed uses of net working capital.
A firm's productive resources. Current assets Value of cash, accounts receivable, inventories, marketable securities and other assets that could be converted to cash in less than 1 year.
A firm's productive resources. Assets-in-place Property in which a firm has already invested. Assets requirements ...
Assets A firm's productive resources. Assets-in-place Property in which a firm has already invested.
[TMAC] assets A firm's productive resources. [Harvey] Any possession that has value in an exchange. [Harvey] Anything a person, company, or group owns or is owed, including money, investments and property.
A class of ideologies favoring an economic system in which all or most productive resources are the property of the government, ...
Productive resources - All natural resources (land), human resources (labor), and human-made resources (capital) used in the production of goods and services.
The acquisition of productive resources such as factories, mines, or transport facilities in a foreign country.
Libertarian socialists, sometimes known as left-anarchists, hold that, as Proudhon said, "Property is theft" -- that is, in reference to the ownership of productive resources, property is not the right to use, but the right to keep others from using.
WEALTH: The net ownership of material possessions and productive resources. In other words, the difference between physical and financial assets that you own and the liabilities that you owe.
Study of the entire economy in terms of the total amount of goods and services produced, total income earned, level of employment of productive resources, and general behaviour of prices.
in which the government seeks to determine economic activity largely through a mechanism of central planning, as in the former Soviet Union, in contrast to a market economy, which depends heavily upon market forces to allocate productive resources.
Renewable resources - Productive resources that can be replaced as they are used up, as with physical capital; distinguished from non renewable resources, which are available in a fixed stock that can be depleted but not replaced.
Assets definition : A firm's productive resources. Want tight spreads? FTSE, DAX, EUR-USD 1pt and WALL St, GBP-USD, 2pts ...
Production possibilities curve (PPC) A curve representing all possible combinations of total output that could be produced assuming (1) a fixed amount of productive resources of a given quality and (2) the efficient use of those resources.
of a perfectly competitive market are a large number of buyers and sellers, a homogeneous (similar) good or service, an equal awareness of prices and volume, an absence of discrimination in buying and selling, total mobility of productive resources, ...
So the existence of theft makes society as a whole poorer, not because money has been transferred from one person to another, but because productive resources have been diverted out of the business of producing and into the business of stealing.
(iii) To promote the long-range balanced growth of international trade and the maintenance of equilibrium in balances of payments by encouraging international investment for the development of the productive resources of members, ...
Management must know that inventory is available when needed, productive resources (man and machine) are scheduled appropriately, transportation systems will be available to deliver output, and on and on.
This was contested for the classicists by ADAM SMITH and David Hume, who argued that a country's wealth came not from its stock of precious metals but rather from its stocks of productive resources (LAND, LABOUR, CAPITAL, and so on) and how ...
See also: Expense, Net working capital, Acquisition of assets, Capital Spending, Values
 
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