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imported>Doug Williamson |
imported>Doug Williamson |
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| ''Human rights - sustainability - equality.''
| | Schuldscheindarlehen. |
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| The Matthew effect is a pattern in which financial inequality - and many other differences in advantage between people - tend to widen over time.
| | German loan instruments, more commonly known as Schuldscheine. |
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| Those who begin with more advantage become relatively even more advantaged over time.
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| Similarly, disadvantaged people become increasingly disadvantaged over time.
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| The Matthew effect is sometimes summarised as "the rich get richer and the poor get poorer."
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| The term originates from the quotation in the Gospel of Matthew in the Christian Bible, "... to every one who has will more be given, and he will have abundance; but from him who has not, even what he has will be taken away."
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| == See also == | | == See also == |
| * [[Diversity]] | | * [[Schuldschein]] |
| * [[Equality]]
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| * [[Equality and Human Rights Commission]]
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| * [[Equity]]
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| * [[Financial wellbeing]]
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| * [[Government Equalities Office]]
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| * [[Human rights]]
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| * [[Inequality]]
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| * [[Just transition]]
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| * [[SDG 10]]
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| * [[Sustainable Development Goals]]
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| * [[UK Equality Act 2010]]
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| * [[United Nations]]
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| * [[Wellbeing]]
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| [[Category:The_business_context]] | | [[Category:Corporate_finance]] |
| [[Category:Ethics]] | | [[Category:Investment]] |
| | [[Category:Long_term_funding]] |
| | [[Category:Financial_products_and_markets]] |
Latest revision as of 13:40, 25 June 2022
Schuldscheindarlehen.
German loan instruments, more commonly known as Schuldscheine.
See also