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University of Michigan
Industry: Education
Number of terms: 31274
Number of blossaries: 0
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Une mesure du degré auquel les deux variables économiques ou statistiques se déplacent ensemble, normalisé afin que ses valeurs comprises entre -1 et + 1. Elle est définie comme la covariance de deux variables divisée par la racine carrée du produit de leurs variances. La corrélation est utilisée dans la théorie commerciale à exprimer les faibles relations entre variables économiques.
Industry:Economy
1. Recorded as positive (+) in the balance of payments, any transaction that gives rise to a payment ''into'' the country, such as an export, the sale of an asset (including official reserves), or borrowing from abroad. Opposite of debit. 2. A loan. For example, a trade credit.
Industry:Economy
1. The money used by a country; e. G. , the national currency of Japan is the yen. 2. The physical embodiment of money, in the forms of paper bills or notes, and metal coins.
Industry:Economy
Une baisse du niveau général des prix. Peu probable, à moins que le taux d'inflation est déjà faible, il peut alors être due à une augmentation de la productivité ou, moins favorablement, à une récession.
Industry:Economy
1. A fall in the value of a country's currency on the exchange market, relative either to a particular other currency or to a weighted average of other currencies. The currency is said to depreciate. Opposite of "appreciation. " 2. The decline in value or usefulness of a piece of capital over time, and/or with use.
Industry:Economy
A severe recession that lasts several years and/or involves a loss of real GDP of more than 10%. (There is no standard definition. )
Industry:Economy
1. Any reduction in price or value, especially when below a stated or normal price. 2. To buy or sell commercial paper at a price below face value to account for interest to accrue before maturity. 3. To attach a lower weight to the importance -- or utility derived from -- one thing compared to another, as in time preference that discounts later consumption compared to earlier.
Industry:Economy
1. inégalité de l'offre et la demande. 2. un État insoutenable d'un système économique, dont il est censé changer.
Industry:Economy
A measure of responsiveness of one economic variable to another -- usually the responsiveness of quantity to price along a supply or demand curve -- comparing percentage changes (%) or changes in logarithms (d ln). The arc elasticity of ''x'' with respect to ''y'' is  = %''x''/%''y''. The point elasticity is  = d ln''x''/d ln''y'' = (''y/x'')(d''x''/d''y'').
Industry:Economy
1. un état d'équilibre entre la compensation des forces de changement, afin qu'aucun changement se produit. 2. dans les marchés concurrentiels, l'égalité de la quantité livrée et la quantité demandée.
Industry:Economy
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