At a finance lecture, the farmers learned they could earn a monetary benefit if they opened a bank account and saved a certain amount within six months.
Not exact matches
I, therefore, thought that the Netherland's
finance minister — a country serving as the key enforcer of German austerity -
at - all - cost (as long as the costs are not theirs) policies — showed an incredible chutzpah when he
lectured the U.S. Congress last Friday that it would be a real tragedy (sic) if mandated spending cuts were to stifle American economic growth.
His biography contains elements of an epic novel: growing up the son of a jailed Trotskyist labor leader in whose Chicago home he met Rosa Luxembourg's and Karl Liebknecht's colleagues; serving as a young balance of payments analyst for David Rockefeller whose Chase Manhattan Bank was calculating how much interest the bank could extract on loans to South American countries; touring America on Vatican - sponsored economics
lectures; turning after a riot
at a UN Third World debt meeting in Mexico to the study of ancient debt cancellation practices through Harvard's Babylonian Archeology department; authoring many books about
finance from Super Imperialism: The Economic Strategy of American Empire [1972] to J is For Junk Economics: A Guide to Reality in an Age of Deception [2017]; and lately, among many other ventures, commuting from his Queens home to
lecture at Peking University in Beijing where he hopes to convince the Chinese to avoid the debt - fuelled economic model off which Western big bankers feast and apply lessons he and his colleagues have learned about the debt relief practices of the ancient civilizations of Mesopotamia.
He taught Economics and
Finance at McGill University in Montreal from 1968 to 1973 and has
lectured at economic, financial and investment seminars and conferences in various international centers in North America, Asia and Europe.
Last month, he gave a guest
lecture at Harvard Law School outlining the six major developments he sees transforming global
finance.
When not going to
lectures at Los Angeles Valley College or reading business and
finance textbooks, he runs on the college track and skates
at the Ranch.
John Mahama's new role as Chairman of TANA Forum comes days after he delivered a
lecture on «Self - Reliance In Africa's Security Sector»
at the Bahir Dar University, Ethiopia
at the 7th TANA High - level Forum on Peace and Security in Africa which started on April 21, 2018 and themed: «Ownership of Africa's Peace and Security Provision:
Financing and Reform of the African Union.»
As a nationally recognized leader in higher education, Dr. Ross has presented seminars, workshops and
lectures in the areas of higher education leadership, budget,
finance and administration to a number of universities and national organizations including the Association of Public and Land - Grant Universities, the American Association of State Colleges and Universities, and the Summer Institute for Women in Higher Education
at Bryn Mawr College.
A member of the Advisory Committee for the Department of
Finance at Wayne State University School of Business, he also
lectures for the Department of
Finance.
While attending a TED conference can be financially daunting
at $ 4,000 or more per attendee, hungry personal
finance disciples can find thought - provoking
finance lectures on ted.com.
When he left in 1988 to start the hedge fund Perry Capital he was working in equity arbitrage, while
lecturing on
finance at the Stern School of Business
at New York University.
-LSB-...] using the three - pillar framework of market creation,
financing and infrastructure that I have previously articulated in a conference
at RETECH 2010 last month (but also take note in that
lecture that I point out that -LSB-...]
The second part takes a closer look
at the policy tools, using the three - pillar framework of market creation,
financing and infrastructure that I have previously articulated in a conference
at RETECH 2010 last month (but also take note in that
lecture that I point out that the fourth and fifth pillars of information transparency and international collaboration will be important for China's future development of its clean energy economy).
Nichola regularly
lectures to clients and
at trade association conferences, including the UK
Finance, C5 and the Anti-Money Laundering Forum.
Before that, he spent over 4 years with Allen & Overy, 6 years with Simmons & Simmons and several terms
lecturing in Debt
Finance and Business Law
at BPP.
During his career with the firm, David has been seconded to the Ontario Securities Commission and has
lectured on corporate
finance and securities laws, including
at Osgoode Hall Law School.
He has guest
lectured at NYU, MIT, and taught a Real Estate
Finance and Risk Management course
at the Rutgers Graduate School of Business, the NJ Redevelopment Agency's Edison Institute, the Rutgers Cook College Continuing Education Series, and
at the NJ Bar Association's Institute for Continuing Legal Education.