Customers' Perceptions about Plastic Money towards Sustainable Banking in Bangladesh: A Technological Adoption
In: International Business Research; Vol. 12, No. 6; 2019
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In: International Business Research; Vol. 12, No. 6; 2019
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In: American behavioral scientist: ABS, Band 45, Heft 2, S. 307-312
ISSN: 1552-3381
In recent years there has been a rekindling of interest in humanistic studies of the meanings of money around the world. This article tests the extent to which Chinese and Japanese proverbs reflect and distinguish the meanings of money in those two great cultures. In a nutshell, we compared the frequencies of anthologized Chinese and Japanese proverbs across the key dimensions presented in Doyle—Convergent/Divergent and Acquisitive/Affiliative. The authors found no differences on the Convergent/Divergent dimension, borderline significant differences on the Acquisitive/Affiliative dimension. The authors conclude that proverbs suggest that the Japanese culture is a bit more "acquisitive" than the Chinese culture, the Chinese culture a bit more "affiliative" than the Japanese.
In: European journal of political research: official journal of the European Consortium for Political Research, Band 40, Heft 2, S. 139-170
ISSN: 1475-6765
Abstract. Using public opinion surveys conducted in the member states of the European Union, this paper seeks to provide a systematic understanding of public support for the EMU project and European–level monetary policy authority. We develop models of support for EU monetary policy that incorporate a utilitarian component and elements of multilevel governance that is emerging within the EU. These models are tested at the aggregate level of survey respondents. The results show that variations in attitudes to the common currency are driven by collectively–based considerations of the costs and benefits associated with the common currency project as well as the interaction of European–level politics and the domestic politics of the member states.
In: Modern Asian studies, Band 20, Heft 1, S. 33-58
ISSN: 1469-8099
By an edict of 15 February 1805 the Governor-General ordered the Chinese moneylenders from the town of Buitenzorg to report to the Commissioner of Native Affairs how much money the inhabitants of the Buitenzorg Regency owed them. Non-compliance with this order would result in cancellation of the debts. The Commissioner compiled a list, based on these reports, dated 30 June 1805. In 45 pages, consisting of 672 entries, the debtors of and debts to 26 Chinese are listed. The debtors and debts are listed under their creditor, the Chinese moneylender. The entries are probably given as they were reported by the Chinese themselves, although there is no logic in the ordering of the names. An 'ideal' entry yields the following data: name of moneylender, name of debtor, his place of residence, year that the debt was incurred, amount of money borrowed with sawahs (wet rice fields) as collateral, number of pétak (embanked ricefield) sawah, amount borrowed with buffaloes as a collateral, number of buffaloes, amount of cash borrowed (without securities), amount of credit for merchandise, amount of annual interest, number of years paid, number of years still to be paid.
Dramatis personae -- Prologue -- In the beginning: Texas -- The birth of the CNP: Washington -- Lords of the air: the CNP's media empire -- The news hole in the heart of America -- Money people -- Fishers of men: electoral stratagems -- Ideology 101: the CNP's campus partners -- Koch, DeVos, Soros: donors, politics, and pastors -- The Obama challenge -- Data wars -- The art of the deal: New York, June 21, 2016 -- "The Miracle" -- Midterms -- "Democracy in America" -- Epilogue -- Afterword.
In: American business, politics, and society
"This book is about the chaotic world of money in the pre-Civil War United States (from the Revolutionary War to the 1860s). There were various kinds of currency, with different values and different discounts and various restrictions on where it could be used. This book investigates how everyday people gained and used financial knowledge in this complex currency environment."
In: Journal of international development, Band 15, Heft 5, S. 633-644
This paper examines the importance of remittances from international migrants to those who stay behind. The paper looks in particular at the Zimbabwean case, and argues that while money sent from the "other side" has a beneficial effect on close kin, remittances can also undermine the purchasing power of those households without migrating members. This is in part a result of asset price inflation, and in part due to the inflationary effects of parallel currency markets. (InWent/DÜI)
World Affairs Online
This contribution combines neo-functionalism and historical institutionalism to understand the implications of differentiated integration in Economic and Monetary Union (EMU) and Banking Union (BU) for the single market in financial services in the European Union (EU). From the 1980s, the relaunch of the Single Market and monetary integration in the EU were presented by the supporters of EMU as mutually reinforcing, as in the logic of the Commission's Report 'One Market, One Money'. Initially, EMU appeared to reinforce financial integration, especially in the Euro Area banking sector, even though EMU was a case of differentiated integration in the EU. Subsequently, the incomplete EMU triggered the sovereign debt crisis, which undermined financial market integration and was addressed through the establishment of BU, which reinforced differentiated integration. Both EMU and BU have negative implications for the 'singleness' of the single market in financial services, potentially resulting in 'One Money, Two Markets'.
BASE
In: Routledge studies in African politics and international relations
This book addresses a major gap in the longstanding research on regional organisations: how do their finances work and what do they reveal about the region-building process? It brings together an empirically rich collection of chapters written by experts of regional organisations in Latin America, Africa and Asia. Based on the insights on thirteen regional organisations as well as two chapters dedicated to the influence of external funders, the editors develop typologies to cluster regional organisations according to their financial characteristics: the size of budgets, the sources of funding and the criteria to calculate contributions. Through analysing the process of budgeting and resourcing, the book sheds light on the different nature and functioning of these organisations existing outside of the Global North and puts a specific emphasis on regional organisations in the area of security in Africa and the Global South. It provides explanations to why members pay or do not pay and how budgeting works, and it deals with data availability, the role of donors, overlapping regionalism, cultural transfers between regional organisations and the impact on regional actorness.
World Affairs Online