Periodic rate of interest and Populism: Difference between pages

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The total interest (as a percentage) for any given period - for example 0.014% per day.
1.


The given period may be less than one year, equal to one year, or more than one year.
In a neutral sense, populism can be described as political activity which addresses the concerns of ordinary people.


The UK's pro-Brexit referendum vote and the election of US President Trump, both in 2016, are linked by many commentators to populism.


Another example of a periodic rate of interest would be 12.36% per two years.


Not to be confused with the ''effective annual rate'' and the ''nominal annual rate'', which are different.
2.


The term 'populism' is also used negatively by some writers, in order to highlight political risks associated with populism and nationalism.
:"Despite serious political risks linked to populism on both sides of the Atlantic, the growth outlook looks very promising indeed."
:''The Treasurer magazine, March 2017, p17 - Kallum Pickering, senior UK economist, Berenberg Bank.''
:"Andy Haldane, chief economist at the Bank of England... puts a lot of store in 'agent based modelling' (ABM), a computational approach that attempts to integrate the often capricious nature of human and institutional behaviour into forecasting models.
:Let's hope it works; if it doesn't, populist denigration of expert opinion will only intensify further.
:The alternative of government by gut instinct is not an appealing prospect."
:''The Treasurer magazine, February 2017, p13 - Jeremy Warner, assistant editor of The Daily Telegraph.''


Periodic rates of interest are useful for calculating money amounts of interest payable or receivable.




== See also ==
== See also ==
* [[ACT/365 fixed]]
* [[Brexit]]
* [[Certificate in Treasury Fundamentals]]
* [[Political risk]]
* [[Certificate in Treasury]]
* [[Compound interest]]
* [[Daily rate]]
* [[Effective annual rate]]
* [[Nominal annual rate]]
* [[Periodic interest]]
* [[Periodic yield]]
* [[Quarterly rate]]
* [[Semi-annual rate]]
* [[Simple interest]]
 
[[Category:Manage_risks]]

Revision as of 19:24, 17 March 2017

1.

In a neutral sense, populism can be described as political activity which addresses the concerns of ordinary people.

The UK's pro-Brexit referendum vote and the election of US President Trump, both in 2016, are linked by many commentators to populism.


2.

The term 'populism' is also used negatively by some writers, in order to highlight political risks associated with populism and nationalism.


"Despite serious political risks linked to populism on both sides of the Atlantic, the growth outlook looks very promising indeed."
The Treasurer magazine, March 2017, p17 - Kallum Pickering, senior UK economist, Berenberg Bank.


"Andy Haldane, chief economist at the Bank of England... puts a lot of store in 'agent based modelling' (ABM), a computational approach that attempts to integrate the often capricious nature of human and institutional behaviour into forecasting models.
Let's hope it works; if it doesn't, populist denigration of expert opinion will only intensify further.
The alternative of government by gut instinct is not an appealing prospect."
The Treasurer magazine, February 2017, p13 - Jeremy Warner, assistant editor of The Daily Telegraph.


See also