Search: PID Act

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RBA Glossary definition for ACT

ACT – Australian Competition Tribunal

RBA Glossary definition for PID

PID – Public Interest Disclosure, the public interest disclosure regime established under the PID Act.

RBA Glossary definition for PID Act

PID Act – Public Interest Disclosure Act 2013

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What Went Right in the 1990s? Sources of American and Prospects for World Economic Growth | Conference – 2000

21 Jun 1990 Conferences
J Bradford DeLong
The contrast between the success in the 1990s of the Budget Enforcement Act and the failure in the 1980s of Gramm-Rudman to control the deficit is striking.
https://www.rba.gov.au/publications/confs/2000/delong.html

Banking in the 21st Century: The Transformation of an Industry | Conference – 1996

9 Jul 1996 Conferences
David T. Llewellyn
In turn, this increased supply of information also enables the capital market to function more effectively and act as a greater competitor to banks in their traditional lending business. ... In some ways a bank is able to act as a proxy shareholder even
https://www.rba.gov.au/publications/confs/1996/llewellyn.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

Fiscal, Monetary and Macroprudential Regimes: Incentives-Values Compatibility in Constitutional Democracies

28 Dec 2022 Conferences PDF 375KB
RBA Annual Conference 2022
https://www.rba.gov.au/publications/confs/2022/pdf/rba-conference-2022-tucker.pdf

Macroeconomic Policies and Growth | Conference – 1995

10 Jul 1995 Conferences
Palle Andersen and David Gruen
Moreover, if capital flows are less than perfectly mobile internationally or, for other reasons, balance-of-payments considerations act as a constraint on growth, the level of national saving and ways ... If international capital flows are highly mobile,
https://www.rba.gov.au/publications/confs/1995/andersen-gruen.html

Discussion on Productivity: The Lost Decade | Conference – 2011

16 Aug 2011 Conferences
It is argued that the deterioration in Australia's productivity performance will act as a drag on living standards and place upward pressure on inflation, and a number of policy responses
https://www.rba.gov.au/publications/confs/2011/eslake-disc.html

The Australian Financial System in the 2000s: Dodging the Bullet | Conference – 2011

24 Jul 2000 Conferences
Kevin Davis
Financial Services Reform Act 2001. (FSRA). This introduced a single licensing regime for financial products,. ... Banking Act 1959. Under those latter provisions, Australian depositors have first priority over the Australian assets of a failed bank,
https://www.rba.gov.au/publications/confs/2011/davis.html

European Financial Deregulation: The Pressures for Change and the Costs of Achievement | Conference – 1991

21 Jun 1991 Conferences
Joseph Bisignano
Domestically, the threat of prosecution of the stock exchange under the UK's Restrictive Practices Act was the institutional reason for the elimination of minimum commissions. ... The Garn-St. Germain Depository Institutions Act of 1982 attempted to
https://www.rba.gov.au/publications/confs/1991/bisignano.html

Setting Monetary Policy in East Asia: Goals, Developments and Institutions | Conference – 2001

24 Jul 2001 Conferences
Robert N McCauley
Such central banks, the argument goes, are likely to view inflation targeting as a restriction on their ability to act flexibly to promote preferred economic outcomes and so not only the
https://www.rba.gov.au/publications/confs/2001/mccauley.html

Explaining Global Market Turmoil: A Fresh Perspective on its Origins and Nature | Conference – 1999

9 Aug 1999 Conferences
Horace 'Woody' Brock
In the case of emerging market nations, it is all too easy for A-Team analysts or hedge fund stars to act as belief correlators. ... of resources throughout the economy; and there is no serial correlation of returns, implying that it would be irrational
https://www.rba.gov.au/publications/confs/1999/brock.html