Sentences with phrase «real economy all»

LAToken (LAT), which recently raised $ 19.6 million in a token sale, wants to broaden the use of cryptocurrencies in the real economy and allow cryptocurrency holders to diversify their portfolio by getting access to tokens linked to the price of real assets.
Ethereum News Update While blockchain use - cases are filtering into the real economy, cryptocurrency markets have sputtered to a standstill.
in a token sale, wants to broaden the use of cryptocurrencies in the real economy and allow cryptocurrency holders to diversify their portfolio by getting access to tokens linked to the price of real assets.
Doubling down on the argument, Peterffy went on to write that «a catastrophe in the cryptocurrency market that destabilizes a clearing organization will destabilize the real economy
Administrative barriers and high volatility are the key factors preventing the cryptomarket from establishing links with the real economy.
He also added: «Pseudo-financial innovations that have no relationship with the real economy should not be supported.»
OMTs should also repair monetary transmission channels which may have a positive effect on credit growth and the real economy.
This includes the objective to preserve the singleness of the monetary policy and to ensure proper transmission to the real economy.
However with our status as the world's lubricator there comes a problem: when the wheels of the real economy slow, the legal economy slows.
Atex is the latest company to be added to EOS IM's portfolio, which is currently primarily invested into the real economy in Italy due to its competitive privately owned companies, with good...
I would first of all put instrumentation into the real economy to measure what is going on.
Resource constraints are imposing their real nature upon our real economy.
From how to host a clothing swap to chronicling how a tool library got started, the emphasis is always on finding ways to unlock the vast resources inside each and every one of us and to stimulate the real economy, not just numbers on a balance sheet.
But if we can also find ways for ordinary folks to make and save money by sharing, bypass the dinosaur economy in the process, and reduce the amount of «stuff» each of us needs, then sharing will take off like wildfire, the real economy can thrive, and our beleaguered natural systems may catch a break too.
As I argued before in my smuttily titled missive — Why Masturbation Is An Economic Act — the real economy is not, can not, and never will be confined to the monetary economy.
In a virtuous circle, this policy ambition will bolster business efforts to transform the real economy.
We need a deeper analysis of the economics of the real economy from economists.
The government will force a carbon tax on people and pull more money out of the real economy to spend as they see fit on more Solyndra type investments and when the cold hits and stays proving AGW was dead wrong they will not apologize or refund anything.
Nobody would be so foolish as to assume that such a computer model could ever be built to represent the real economy with anything nearing accuracy — at least not with our current tools and knowledge.
Research institute Verso Economics reveals that for every «green job» created by taxpayer subsidy, 3.7 jobs are killed in the real economy and that, thanks to the artificial rise in energy prices caused by renewable subsidies, at least 50,000 people a year in Britain alone are driven into fuel poverty.
But in the real economy people continued to suffer falling living standards and bleaker employment prospects.
The # 200bn of quantitative easing in 2009 had little effect on the real economy but was certainly beneficial for banks, helping to repair their balance sheets and make profits.
Within economics modelling, attempts to model the feedback mechanisms that occur in the real economy are also really difficult — we know, for example, that investment in new technologies will act as an incentive for the existing technologies it hopes to substitute to become more efficient (the sailing ship effect — i.e. in the 50 years after the introduction of the steam ship, sailing ships made more efficiency improvements than they had in the previous 3 centuries) but how to quantify something even as simple as this is not easy BUT we have learnt a few ways to give sensible (order of magnitude) figures with time lags, the learning by doing effect and phased - in substitution effects based on massive amounts of data.
Financial assets have grown by a large multiple of the real economy — paper exchanging for paper is now 20 times greater than exchanges of paper for real commodities.
Much like in a real economy, the power in EVE has become concentrated among only the largest player corporations.
«Our economy emulates the real economy of the Indian Ocean, so things that are important to the people who are shipping goods, the merchants,... the empires, those things are important to you.
There is good reason for demand to take off as concerns grow that there is likely to be worse to come both in the credit markets and in the real economy.
But let a couple of banks fail, and we'll see how the «real economy» is then.
He added that «We as central bankers need not be concerned if a collapsing financial asset bubble does not threaten to impair the real economy, its production, jobs and price stability.»
We'll see how that affect the «real economy»..
To summarize: There was little hint of a severe weakness in the real economy in the months prior to October 1929.
The Fed was so focused on the real economy, that they did not realize their actions were mostly affecting the financial economy.
Financial markets are only weakly representative of what the real economy is doing; there's too much noise.
Truth is, the real economy grows at a 1 - 3 % / year rate in inflation adjusted terms, with a lot of noise, absent rampant socialism, or war on our home soil.
The stock market muddled during this period, and the real economy kept growing, inflation in check, and unemployment unaffected.
All that said, in 1991 the Fed also overshot policy on the other side in order to let bank balance sheets heal, so let it not be said that the Fed only responds to signals in the real economy.
The markets have rebounded significantly, but the real economy has demonstrated a much more -LSB-...]
So how it impacts the real economy is effectively by substituting technology for labor and substituting it for capital.
Many financial measures and companies have rebounded, but little expansion has occurred in the real economy.
As I commented to a Treasury staffer after the meeting, with financing rates so cheap to buy financial debts, regardless of what kind, it is no surprise that corporate bond spreads have tightened, while there is still little lending to finance growth in the real economy.
5) Weakness in the real economy is increasing as a result of consumer stress.
The real economy funds the bailout of financials, but does not directly benefit.
I expect the real economy over the next twenty years to be more volatile than it was say in the 1990s.
This means with a flat curve, the $ 2.2 trillion in excess reserves are «impounded» in the banks, and won't be released into the real economy.
Adding, «We as central bankers need not be concerned if a collapsing financial asset bubble does not threaten to impair the real economy, its production, jobs and price stability.»
We should make note that Greenspan followed his comment about irrational exuberance by quickly adding that central bankers need not be concerned with the collapse of an asset bubble if it does not impair the real economy.
They accomplish almost nothing for the real economy, while lavishing liquidity on markets that tangentially help financial institutions.
is in defensive & large - cap stocks, no matter how highly valued they are / become — due to a tsunami of central bank liquidity which has scarcely dented the real economy, it's mostly been redirected into asset inflation.
[Which is actually a pretty new idea — governments & leaders traditionally focused on manipulating the key levers of the real economy, preferring to ignore what they viewed as a horribly unpredictable & uncontrollable stock market].
Aside from noises from the US government, whose actions may or may not pan out, there is little reason for optimism in the real economy, as GDP continues to shrink.
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