Search: capital market
RBA Glossary definition for capital market
capital market – A market for medium to long-term financial instruments. Financial instruments traded in the capital market include shares, and bonds issued by the Australian Government, State governments, corporate borrowers and financial institutions.
Search Results
Industrial Relations Reform and Labour Market Outcomes: A Comparison of Australia, New Zealand and the United Kingdom | Conference – 1998
9 Jun 1998
Conferences
Second, and perhaps of greater importance, to examine whether or not these changes have had any significant impact on labour market outcomes. ... It was, for example, incompatible with other government initiatives designed to increase the competitiveness
https://www.rba.gov.au/publications/confs/1998/wooden-sloan.html
The Australian Labour Market in the 2000s: The Quiet Decade | Conference – 2011
24 Jul 2000
Conferences
Certainly the labour market received less attention from policy-makers in the 2000s. ... Australia's labour market performance in the 2000s compared favourably with other industrial economies.
https://www.rba.gov.au/publications/confs/2011/borland.html
The Impact of Hedge Funds on Financial Markets: Lessons from the Experience of Australia | Conference – 1999
9 Aug 1999
Conferences
In contrast, the effects of hedge funds on particular market prices and on the integrity of those markets has received little attention to date. ... The Study Group's terms of reference include assessing whether HLIs employed excessively aggressive
https://www.rba.gov.au/publications/confs/1999/rankin.html
Microeconomics of the Australian Labour Market | Conference – 1998
9 Jun 1998
Conferences
Labour markets the world over, not just Australia, are more a fix-price or customer market than a flex-price or auction market. ... Changes in the 1980s and 1990s have brought more competitive product markets, and arguably also a more competitive labour
https://www.rba.gov.au/publications/confs/1998/freebairn.html
The Labour Market | Conference – 1990
21 Jun 1990
Conferences
Both the Australian labour market and the Australian labour market debate changed dramatically over the 1980s. ... Undoubtedly the rapid expansion of part-time jobs is an important issue in the Australian labour market.
https://www.rba.gov.au/publications/confs/1990/chapman.html
Discussion on Banks, Markets and Liquidity | Conference – 2007
20 Aug 2007
Conferences
An important consideration for this discussion is that funding liquidity, and hence the coordination problem, is only a result of imperfect information and imperfect capital markets. ... Hence, incomplete markets and imperfect information – not
https://www.rba.gov.au/publications/confs/2007/allen-carletti-disc.html
Introduction | Conference – 2007
20 Aug 2007
Conferences
In many ways these structural changes build on trends that had started in the 1980s in many advanced economies following widespread financial deregulation and the opening-up of capital markets. ... Although the authors argue that with incomplete
https://www.rba.gov.au/publications/confs/2007/intro-2007.html
A Rebalancing Chinese Economy: Challenges and International Implications | Conference – 2016
18 Mar 2016
Conferences
In contrast, Huang and Tao (2011) and Pettis (2013) suggest that both internal and external imbalances in China have had a different root cause: labour and capital market distortions that have ... In sum, the opening of the housing market can be viewed
https://www.rba.gov.au/publications/confs/2016/ma-roberts-kelly.html
Banking Concentration, Financial Stability and Public Policy | Conference – 2007
20 Aug 2007
Conferences
However, trends such as growth in funds management activities, increased importance of capital markets, marked growth in credit transfer mechanisms, a growing role of private equity and increased prominence of hedge ... and although capital markets
https://www.rba.gov.au/publications/confs/2007/davis.html
Explaining Global Market Turmoil: A Fresh Perspective on its Origins and Nature | Conference – 1999
9 Aug 1999
Conferences
Why might this be the case? First, the number of variables driving currency markets is double that in any other market. ... This creates a situation where markets seem to be illiquid, even though there is considerable depth in the underlying market as
https://www.rba.gov.au/publications/confs/1999/brock.html