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  2. Exchange-rate pass-through - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Exchange-rate_pass-through

    Formally, exchange-rate pass-through is the elasticity of local-currency import prices with respect to the local-currency price of foreign currency. It is often measured as the percentage change , in the local currency , of import prices resulting from a one percent change in the exchange rate between the exporting and importing countries. [ 1 ]

  3. Real exchange-rate puzzles - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Real_exchange-rate_puzzles

    Obstfeld and Rogoff (2000) identified the purchasing power and exchange rate disconnect puzzle as one of the six major puzzles in international economics. [4] These were the consumption correlation puzzle, home bias in trade puzzle, the equity home bias puzzle, the Feldstein-Horioka savings-investment correlations puzzle, and the exchange rate regime puzzle.

  4. Exchange economy - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Exchange_economy

    Exchange economy is technical term used in microeconomics research to describe interaction between several agents. In the market, the agent is the subject of exchange and the good is the object of exchange. Each agent brings his/her own endowment, and they can exchange products among them based on a price system. Two types of exchange economy ...

  5. Exchange-rate flexibility - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Exchange-rate_flexibility

    In macroeconomics, a flexible exchange-rate system is a monetary system that allows the exchange rate to be determined by supply and demand. [1] Every currency area must decide what type of exchange rate arrangement to maintain. Between permanently fixed and completely flexible, some take heterogeneous approaches.

  6. Thermoeconomics - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Thermoeconomics

    Thermoeconomics can be thought of as the statistical physics of economic value [2] and is a subfield of econophysics. It is the study of the ways and means by which human societies procure and use energy and other biological and physical resources to produce, distribute, consume and exchange goods and services, while generating various types of ...

  7. Reductive elimination - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Reductive_elimination

    The rate of reductive elimination is greatly influenced by the geometry of the metal complex. In octahedral complexes, reductive elimination can be very slow from the coordinatively saturated center; and often, reductive elimination only proceeds via a dissociative mechanism, where a ligand must initially dissociate to make a five-coordinate ...

  8. Kinetic exchange models of markets - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kinetic_exchange_models_of...

    Kinetic exchange models are multi-agent dynamic models inspired by the statistical physics of energy distribution, which try to explain the robust and universal features of income/wealth distributions. Understanding the distributions of income and wealth in an economy has been a classic problem in economics for more than a

  9. Exchange rate - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Exchange_rate

    [2] The exchange rate is also regarded as the value of one country's currency in relation to another currency. [3] For example, an interbank exchange rate of 141 Japanese yen to the United States dollar means that ¥141 will be exchanged for US$1 or that US$1 will be exchanged for ¥141. In this case it is said that the price of a dollar in ...