Capital to labour ratio and Positive pay: Difference between pages

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The ratio of a firm's capital assets to its spending on labour.
''Banking''.


(PP).


<span style="color:#4B0082">'''''Capital-to-labour rates stagnate'''''</span>
A service used to combat cheque fraud. The bank pays only those cheques with serial numbers and cash amounts that match those in an issue file supplied by the company.


:"Firms have hired workers to produce more to meet the rising demand rather than investing in new capacaties.
''Also known as match pay.''


:As a result capital-to-labour ratios and rates of productivity growth have stagnated."


:''The Treasurer magazine, April 2018, p15 - Kallum Pickering, senior UK economist, Berenberg Bank.''
== See also ==
* [[Reverse positive pay]]


 
[[Category:Cash_management]]
== See also ==
[[Category:Financial_products_and_markets]]
* [[Assets]]
[[Category:Liquidity_management]]
* [[Capital]]
* [[Capital intensity]]
* [[Capital mobility]]
* [[Capital structure]]
* [[Capitalisation]]
* [[Cost of capital]]
* [[Credit balance]]
* [[Debt capital]]
* [[Enterprise]]
* [[Equity cost of capital]]
* [[Factors of production]]
* [[Finance ]]
* [[Investment bank]]
* [[Labour]]
* [[Land]]
* [[Liabilities]]
* [[Regulatory capital]]
* [[Share capital]]
* [[Working capital]]

Revision as of 06:57, 2 July 2022

Banking.

(PP).

A service used to combat cheque fraud. The bank pays only those cheques with serial numbers and cash amounts that match those in an issue file supplied by the company.

Also known as match pay.


See also