Legislation and M0: Difference between pages

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1.  
''Economics.''


Written law created by a central law-making body (rather than by the courts).
A measure of money supply which includes only liquid or cash assets held in the central bank and the physical money circulating in the economy.


In the UK it is also referred to as narrow money or the monetary base, as it is the smallest established measure of the money supply.


2. ''Tax''.
Taxation law derived from a Finance Act in the UK.


It is also known as 'central bank money'.




== See also ==
== See also ==
 
* [[M1]]
*[[Best practice]]
* [[Money supply]]
* [[Boilerplate]]
* [[Narrow money]]
* [[Civil law]]
* [[Reserves]]
*[[Code]]
* [[Common law]]
*[[Competence]]
*[[Compliance]]
* [[Contract]]
* [[Delegated legislation]]
*[[Directive]]
*[[Enforcement]]
*[[Ethics]]
* [[Finance Act]]
*[[Framework]]
*[[Good practice]]
*[[Governance]]
*[[Guidance]]
* [[Jurisdiction]]
* [[Law]]
* [[Legislative risk]]
* [[Legislature]]
* [[Parliament]]
* [[Primary legislation]]
*[[Principle]]
*[[Red tape]]
* [[Regime]]
* [[Regulation]]
*[[Reporting]]
*[[Reputational risk]]
*[[Rules]]
* [[Secondary legislation]]
*[[Standards]]
* [[Statutory instrument]]
*[[Supervision]]
* [[Tax]]
 
[[Category:Accounting,_tax_and_regulation]]
[[Category:Compliance_and_audit]]

Revision as of 06:30, 8 August 2016

Economics.

A measure of money supply which includes only liquid or cash assets held in the central bank and the physical money circulating in the economy.

In the UK it is also referred to as narrow money or the monetary base, as it is the smallest established measure of the money supply.


It is also known as 'central bank money'.


See also