Search: FOI Act

Sort by: Relevance Date
2130 of 367 search results for FOI Act

RBA Glossary definition for ACT

ACT – Australian Competition Tribunal

RBA Glossary definition for FOI

FOI – Freedom of Information, a regime under which individuals have the right to request access to documents from Australian Government ministers and most government agencies. The regime is established by the FOI Act.

RBA Glossary definition for FOI Act

FOI ActFreedom of Information Act 1982

Search Results

Labour-Productivity Growth and Relative Wages: 1978–1994 | Conference – 1995

31 Dec 1978 Conferences
Philip Lowe
In New South Wales and the ACT, where deregulation has been more extensive, they estimate that shops were open for an average of 66 hours in 1992 – 15 hours a week
https://www.rba.gov.au/publications/confs/1995/lowe.html

Regulatory Policy Issues in Australia | Conference – 1996

9 Jul 1996 Conferences
Graeme Thompson
There are also some financial institutions whose activities resemble very closely those of traditional (and non-traditional) banks which are not authorised under the Banking Act and supervised by the RBA – ... The administration of the Banking Act has
https://www.rba.gov.au/publications/confs/1996/thompson.html

Banking Deregulation – A Virtue or a Necessity? | Conference – 1991

21 Jun 1991 Conferences
Rob Ferguson
If the supervisors sought to control non-banks via the Financial Corporations Act, then overseas banks would fill the vacuum. ... It should be noted that the Reserve Bank did not get explicit legal power to supervise banks until the Banking Act was
https://www.rba.gov.au/publications/confs/1991/ferguson.html

Financial-asset Prices and Monetary Policy: Theory and Evidence | Conference – 1997

21 Jul 1997 Conferences
Frank Smets
For example, in the simple example of Section 2.2 with β = 1 and asymmetric information, if the central bank acts according to Equation (8), then the equilibrating role of the
https://www.rba.gov.au/publications/confs/1997/smets.html

Trade, Multinationals and Labour | Conference – 1994

11 Jul 1994 Conferences
Robert Z. Lawrence
RBA Annual Conference – 1994 Trade, Multinationals and Labour Robert Z. 1. Introduction. The theory of international trade suggests that free trade will raise national income. It does not, however, suggest that the incomes of all factors of
https://www.rba.gov.au/publications/confs/1994/lawrence.html

Copyright and Disclaimer Notice

19 Dec 2023 RDP 2023-09
Border Force Act 2015, Social Security (Administration) Act 1999, A New Tax System (Family Assistance) (Administration) Act 1999, Paid Parental Leave Act 2010 and/or the Student Assistance Act 1973. ... No individual information collected under the
https://www.rba.gov.au/publications/rdp/2023/2023-09/copyright-and-disclaimer-notice.html

Designing Inflation Targets | Conference – 1997

21 Jul 1997 Conferences
Andrew G. Haldane
Further, because investment is deferred consumption, and because inflation acts as a tax on consumption, lower inflation also increases investment and the capital stock in this set-up.
https://www.rba.gov.au/publications/confs/1997/haldane.html

Regulatory Competition and the “Generic” Financial-Services Firm | Conference – 1991

21 Jun 1991 Conferences
Ed Kane
In the increasingly global and generic financial-services industry of today, regulatory conflict is only occasionally driven by aggressive acts of bureaucratic expansion. ... entrants. For regulators, market discipline acts through political and
https://www.rba.gov.au/publications/confs/1991/kane.html

The Exchange Rate and Macroeconomic Policy in Australia | Conference – 1993

12 Jul 1993 Conferences
John Pitchford
RBA Annual Conference – 1993 The Exchange Rate and Macroeconomic Policy in Australia John Pitchford. 1. Introduction. The choice of an exchange rate regime is thought to have significant implications for macroeconomic outcomes and macroeconomic
https://www.rba.gov.au/publications/confs/1993/pitchford.html

Three Australian Asset-price Bubbles | Conference – 2003

18 Aug 2003 Conferences
John Simon
The old law, the Victorian Companies Act of 1864, had many loopholes that could be exploited by entrepreneurs to engage in unethical but legal activities designed to enrich themselves.
https://www.rba.gov.au/publications/confs/2003/simon.html