Tax base
The assessed value of a set of assets, investments or income streams that is subject to taxation.
The tax base may refer to that of an individual asset, such as the tax base of a house, or a pool of assets, such as the tax base of all the houses in a city.
For example: the property tax base of a house is its value. The property tax base of a city is the collective value of all taxable real estate in the city.
Fixed exchange rate
A country’s exchange rate regime under which the government or central bank ties the official exchange rate to another country’s currency (or gold).
The purpose of a fixed exchange rate system is to maintain a country’s currency value within a very narrow band.
Fixed exchange rates provide certainty for export/importers.
Neoliberalism
An approach to economics where the government has few, if any, controls on economic factors.
What do neoliberals propose?
Proponents of neoliberalism
They believe it provides:
Neoliberalism critics
They feel:
Use of the term “liberal” in economics
Use of the term “liberal” in economics is different from its use in politics.
Liberalism in economics refers to “freeing up” the economy by removing barriers and restrictions to what companies can do.
Divestment
(aka “divestiture”)
The action of an organization or gov’t selling or liquidating an asset or subsidiary.
A company or gov’t will divest an asset or subsidiary as a strategic move for the company, planning to put the proceeds from the divestiture to better use that garners a higher return on investment.
ROI
Return On Investment
A performance measure used to evaluate the efficiency of an investment.
ROI measures the amount of return on an investment relative to the investment’s cost.
Divest
To sell off.
To rid of through sale.
Example: “to divest holdings”
Example: “the corporation divested itself of its subsidiaries”
Laissez Faire
“Let it be economics”
An economic theory from the 18th century that is strongly opposed to any government intervention in business affairs.
Duty
A tax levied on certain goods, services or transactions.
TVM
Time value of money
The idea that money available at the present time is worth more than the same amount in the future due to its potential earning capacity.
Liability
A financial obligation arising from a past transaction.
Asset
An economic resource.
Equity Financing
To raise capital for a business enterprise by selling an ownership (shares) in the enterprise.
Profit
Financial benefit realized when revenue gained from business activity exceeds expenses, costs, and taxes needed to sustain the business.
Profit = Total Revenue - Total Expenses
Security
A financial instrument that represents
What is a debt security?
A type of security that represents
What is an equity?
A type of security that:
What is the entity (company, govt) that issues securities called?
The “issuer”
What are the different types of securities investors?
“Retail investors”: those who buy and sell on their own behalf and not for an organization.
“Wholesale investors”: financial institutions acting on behalf of clients or acting on their own account.
“Institutional investors”: investment banks, pension funds, managed funds, insurance companies.
What is the function of a security?
Securities represent an investment and a means by which companies and other commercial enterprises can raise new capital.
EMH
Efficient Market Hypothesis
(devised by Eugene Fama)
An investment theory that states it is impossible to “beat the market” because: