Financial system: Difference between revisions
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==The Financial System in the Tygron Engine== | ==The Financial System in the Tygron Engine== | ||
==Elements of the Financial System in the Tygron Engine== | ==Elements of the Financial System in the Tygron Engine== | ||
===Costs=== | |||
====-Build costs==== | |||
====Demolition costs==== | |||
====Land Price when buying==== | |||
====Buy out costs==== | |||
===Income=== | |||
====Income from constructions (rent)==== | |||
====Land price when selling==== | |||
====Subsidies==== | |||
====(Bank) Loans==== | |||
==Adjusting the Financial System in the Tygron Engine== | ==Adjusting the Financial System in the Tygron Engine== |
Revision as of 12:08, 29 October 2014
This article is a stub.
After reading this page:
- you've learned what a financial system is
- you've learned what role the financial system plays in the Tygron Engine
- you've learned about the elements of the financial system in the Tygron Engine
- you've learned how to adjust the financial system in the Tygron Engine
Financial System
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
In finance, the financial system is the system that allows the transfer of money between savers (and investors) and borrowers. A financial system can operate on a global, regional or firm specific level. Gurusamy, writing in Financial Services and Systems has described it as comprising "a set of complex and closely interconnected financial institutions, markets, instruments, services, practices, and transactions."
- According to Franklin Allen and Douglas Gale in Comparing Financial Systems:
- Financial systems are crucial to the allocation of resources in a modern economy. They channel household savings to the corporate sector and allocate investment funds among firms; they allow inter-temporal smoothing of consumption by households and expenditures by firms; and they enable households and firms to share risks. These functions are common to the financial systems of most developed economies. Yet the form of these financial systems varies widely.
Financial systems depend on the countries viewpoint on freedom of trade. Some countries i.e. The Soviet Union had socialist financial systems because they value centralized organized state funded trading rather than freedom of trade by everyone.