STRUCTURAL CHANGE Long-term trends in the principal elements of an economic system, including its patterns of production, consumption, trade, and relative prices.
Structural Change: A basic and permanent (as opposed to cyclical) change in the economy. Structural change results from changes in trading practices (e.g.
Structural Changes Promoting the Growth of Government In the nineteenth century, a number of interrelated 'modernizing' changes began to accelerate: industrialization, urbanization, the relative decline of agricultural output and employment, ...
Structural Change. Changes in the relative importance of different sectors of an economy over time, usually measured in terms of their share of output, employment, or total spending.
Refer to: Demand, Structural Change, Consumers Individuals or groups who consume or use economic goods, thus deriving utility from them. See also: Consumer Goods, Microeconomics, Utility, ...
They are useful in the analysis of structural changes and of the sources of fluctuations in the economy or can be applied to forecast or for the prediction of the effects of policy changes.
In 1996, NASD implemented structural changes, dividing the association into two separate independent subsidiaries, The NASDAQ Stock Market, Inc., and a new regulatory division called NASD Regulation, Inc.
spline function, spline regression, spline smoothing, statistic, stochastic, strict stationarity, strictly stationary, strong law of large numbers, strongly consistent, strongly dependent, strongly ergodic, structural break, structural change, ...
Growth in the money supply is erratic due to structural change in economy making controlling the money supply meaningless. Controlling Money supply can lead to recession.
Over the past two decades have seen a structural change in the concept of a family. A large proportion of families, has grown into more nuclear families.
Centre for Innovation and Structural Change Cercle de Lorraine Commonwealth Business Council Companies law Compressed Gas Association Confederación Española de Organizaciones Empresariales Confederation of Women Entrepreneurs ...
Thematic Funds A mutual fund that applies a thematic approach to investing which combines top-down stock picking based on an analysis of global structural change with bottom-up stock picking based on traditional considerations such as company ...
Building cultural agility often includes making structural changes as an organisation moves from active operations in a few countries to multiple continents.
Bruno, Michael. 1963. Interdependence, Resource Use and Structural Change in Israel, Jerusalem: Bank of Israel. See domestic resource cost.
In addition, the intent of a general strike is to bring the economy to a standstill as a means of forcing major structural changes in the economy or society.
Information storage and retrieval systems by introducing a common format for databases within companies. Proprietary processes need to be tailored to meet the needs of the enterprise systems, necessitating management and structural change.
Critics of this viewpoint became louder as Japan slid into a sustained deflationary spiral and the collapse of the Savings and Loan system in the United States pointed to larger structural changes in the economy.
These include splits, spin-offs, and certain structural changes that can occur within a particular organization.
See also: Structural, Banks, Tariff, International Monetary Fund, Administration
 
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