Financial intermediary and Supply side policy: Difference between pages

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1. ''Financial institutions.''
Policy aimed at stimulating the level of production in the economy by creating incentives for individuals and firms to increase their productivity, for example policies which encourage competition between firms or policies which encourage more people to work.  


A financial company such as a bank which channels funds between investors and borrowers.
The aggregate supply curve is moved to the right.  




2. ''Shadow banking.''
Supply side policy tends to be associated with monetarism.


Other organisations that perform similar functions, outside the regulated financial sector.


 
== See also ==
==See also==
* [[Aggregate supply]]
* [[Disintermediation]]
* [[Competition policy]]
* [[Financial]]
* [[Fiscal policy]]
* [[Financial institution]]
* [[Monetarism]]
* [[Interest rate transformation]]
* [[Monetary policy]]
* [[Intermediation]]
* [[Maturity transformation]]
* [[Non-bank financial intermediaries]]
* [[Peer-to-peer]]
* [[Regulation]]
* [[Shadow banking]]
 
[[Category:Long_term_funding]]

Revision as of 14:20, 27 July 2016

Policy aimed at stimulating the level of production in the economy by creating incentives for individuals and firms to increase their productivity, for example policies which encourage competition between firms or policies which encourage more people to work.

The aggregate supply curve is moved to the right.


Supply side policy tends to be associated with monetarism.


See also