0
Your cart

Your cart is empty

Browse All Departments
  • All Departments
Price
  • R1,000 - R2,500 (1)
  • R2,500 - R5,000 (1)
  • -
Status
Brand

Showing 1 - 2 of 2 matches in All Departments

The Capital Needs of Central Banks (Paperback): Sue Milton, Peter Sinclair The Capital Needs of Central Banks (Paperback)
Sue Milton, Peter Sinclair
R1,493 Discovery Miles 14 930 Ships in 10 - 15 working days

Central banks have evolved over many years, and sometimes centuries, as policy-making, not profit-making, institutions, and yet they are structured legally and financially like 'for-profit' companies of the twenty-first century. The question is what is an appropriate level of equity, or capital, for a central bank to have so that it can function for policy effectiveness over profit-maximisation, without hindrance to the achievement and maintenance of policy goals? This collection takes the reader through historical, theoretical and factual discussions on why central banks exist and the role - actual and intended - they have in assisting their home nation in achieving monetary and financial stability. The contributions analyse the different ways central banks are funded and how funding arrangements may impact on their independence. The objective is to explore these themes first from the academic and practitioner's views - those of the economist, accountant and lawyer's - and then to introduce practical experiences from a range of different central banks, in terms of their economic and socio-political environments. It will be the first time that the theorist and practitioner, the accountant, the economist and the lawyer come together in one volume. The reader will be able to access the full breadth of views on this important subject. The main observations are that there is no single, quantifiable formula that central banks can use to calculate capital levels. Factors to consider are the historical context of central banks and whether capital was ever appropriate to needs at their foundation; the cultural, social and political contexts; and, in terms of the presentation of financial statements, profit and loss sharing arrangements and what accounting conventions are being used. If these are considered alongside the, often idiosyncratic, mandates individual central banks have, a qualitative understanding of what is an appropriate level of capital is achieved. This collection will be of interest to postgraduates and researchers focusing on the role of central banks in monetary economics; as well as a professional audience of central bankers, the BIS, the IMF, World Bank, EBRD and government departments.

The Capital Needs of Central Banks (Hardcover): Sue Milton, Peter Sinclair The Capital Needs of Central Banks (Hardcover)
Sue Milton, Peter Sinclair
R4,928 Discovery Miles 49 280 Ships in 10 - 15 working days

Central banks have evolved over many years, and sometimes centuries, as policy-making, not profit-making, institutions, and yet they are structured legally and financially like 'for-profit' companies of the twenty-first century. The question is what is an appropriate level of equity, or capital, for a central bank to have so that it can function for policy effectiveness over profit-maximisation, without hindrance to the achievement and maintenance of policy goals?

This collection takes the reader through historical, theoretical and factual discussions on why central banks exist and the role - actual and intended - they have in assisting their home nation in achieving monetary and financial stability. The contributions analyse the different ways central banks are funded and how funding arrangements may impact on their independence. The objective is to explore these themes first from the academic and practitioner's views - those of the economist, accountant and lawyer's - and then to introduce practical experiences from a range of different central banks, in terms of their economic and socio-political environments. It will be the first time that the theorist and practitioner, the accountant, the economist and the lawyer come together in one volume. The reader will be able to access the full breadth of views on this important subject.

The main observations are that there is no single, quantifiable formula that central banks can use to calculate capital levels. Factors to consider are the historical context of central banks and whether capital was ever appropriate to needs at their foundation; the cultural, social and political contexts; and, in terms of the presentation of financial statements, profit and loss sharing arrangements and what accounting conventions are being used. If these are considered alongside the, often idiosyncratic, mandates individual central banks have, a qualitative understanding of what is an appropriate level of capital is achieved. This collection will be of interest to postgraduates and researchers focusing on the role of central banks in monetary economics; as well as a professional audience of central bankers, the BIS, the IMF, World Bank, EBRD and government departments.

Free Delivery
Pinterest Twitter Facebook Google+
You may like...
Abortion Politics in the Federal Courts…
Barbara M. Yarnold Hardcover R2,766 Discovery Miles 27 660
Men and Abortion - Lessons, Losses, and…
Gary McLouth, Arthur B Shostak Hardcover R2,818 Discovery Miles 28 180
Pro-Choice/Pro-Life - An Annotated…
Joan P. Diana, Richard Fitzsimmons Hardcover R2,456 Discovery Miles 24 560
Women of Color and the Reproductive…
Jennifer Nelson Hardcover R3,092 Discovery Miles 30 920
Cultures of Abortion in Weimar Germany
Cornelie Usborne Paperback R891 Discovery Miles 8 910
Girls on the Stand - How Courts Fail…
Helena Silverstein Hardcover R3,096 Discovery Miles 30 960
The Abortion Controversy - A Documentary…
Eva R. Rubin Hardcover R2,376 Discovery Miles 23 760
Who Decides? - The Abortion Rights of…
J. Shoshanna Ehrlich Hardcover R1,957 Discovery Miles 19 570
The Choice - The Abortion Divide in…
Danielle D'Souza Gill Hardcover R711 Discovery Miles 7 110
The Man Who Hated Women - Sex…
Amy Sohn Paperback R545 R510 Discovery Miles 5 100

 

Partners