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Consumer Price Index
Consumer Price Index (CPI) 1. In the UK, the usual name for the Harmonized Index of Consumer Prices (HICP), a measure of price level introduced in 1997 to enable comparisons within the EU. In 2003 the Chancellor of the Exchequer announced that government inflation targets would subsequently be... Read more |
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price
price amount of money for which a unit of goods or services is exchanged. Price is equivalent to market value and may or may not measure the intrinsic value of the goods or services to the buyer or seller. Most economists hold that, in the long run, price in a competitive market will equal the cost... Read more |
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Incremental
INCREMENTAL Additional or increased growth, bulk, quantity, number, or value; enlarged. Incremental cost is additional or increased cost of an item or service apart from its actual cost. When applied to the price of gas, the incremental cost includes the actual cost of gas to the distributors... Read more |
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Speenhamland poor relief system
Speenhamland poor relief system. Growth of population and acute distress during the Revolutionary and Napoleonic wars placed great strain upon the poor law system. In 1795 the price of bread, the labourer's staple diet, reached record levels. On 6 May 1795 the Speenhamland justices, meeting at the... Read more |
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Zero population growth
Zero Population Growth THE MALTHUSIAN ERA THE ZERO POPULATION GROWTH MOVEMENT PEAKS TOWARD ZERO POPULATION GROWTH BIBLIOGRAPHY The term zero population growth encompasses both an urgent call to reduce the number of human beings and a neutral description of anticipated future demographic... Read more |
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Hugh B. Price
Hugh B. Price 1941– National Urban League President and Chief Executive Off... Read more |
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Overshooting
Overshooting BIBLIOGRAPHY Overshooting is a term used in macroeconomics and international finance to describe the behavior of the exchange rate after the economy is hit with a shock (i.e., an unanticipated event of sufficient magnitude such that it affects aggregate income, the general level... Read more |
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McNary-Haugen Bill
McNary‐Haugen Bill (1924).In the years following World War I, farmers received prices for their products that represented a purchasing power far below prewar levels. This resulted in an effort by the farm bloc in Congress to secure a larger share for these producers, in part by making the... Read more |
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