structural inflation - определение. Что такое structural inflation
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Что (кто) такое structural inflation - определение

SUSTAINED INCREASE IN A NATION'S MONEY SUPPLY
Inflation (monetary); Monetary Inflation; Inflation risk
Найдено результатов: 547
Monetary inflation         
Monetary inflation is a sustained increase in the money supply of a country (or currency area). Depending on many factors, especially public expectations, the fundamental state and development of the economy, and the transmission mechanism, it is likely to result in price inflation, which is usually just called "inflation", which is a rise in the general level of prices of goods and services.
Credentialism and educational inflation         
ANY OF A NUMBER OF RELATED PROCESSES INVOLVING INCREASED DEMANDS FOR FORMAL EDUCATIONAL QUALIFICATIONS, AND THE DEVALUATION OF THESE QUALIFICATIONS
Credentialism; Academic inflation; Academic Inflation; Credential inflation; Credential creep; Degree inflation; Credentialism and grade inflation; Education inflation; Credentialism and educational inflation
Credentialism and educational inflation are any of a number of related processes involving increased demands for formal educational qualifications, and the devaluation of these qualifications. In Western society, China, and India, there has been increasing reliance on formal qualifications or certification for jobs.
Inflation (cosmology)         
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THEORY OF RAPID UNIVERSE EXPANSION
Cosmology/Inflation; Monopole problem; Inflationary theory; Inflation theory; Inflationary Theory; Inflationary universe; Inflationary models; Inflationary model; Inflationary expansion; Inflationary universe cosmology; Inflationary cosmology; Cosmic Inflation; Inflationary universe theory; Inflation (physics); Inflationary phase; Space inflation; Inflationary era; Cosmic inflation; Inflation (astrophysics); Cosmological inflation; Inflation model; Magnetic monopole problem; Inflation (Cosmology)
In physical cosmology, cosmic inflation, cosmological inflation, or just inflation, is a theory of exponential expansion of space in the early universe. The inflationary epoch lasted from  seconds after the conjectured Big Bang singularity to some time between and  seconds after the singularity.
2021–2022 inflation surge         
  • US]]
  • Cost of housing by US state
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  • US]]
  • #885810}} -40%
  • Core CPI}}
  • United States [[Henry Hub]] natural gas prices}}
ONGOING GLOBAL SURGE OF HIGHER-THAN-AVERAGE INFLATION
Draft:2021 inflation crisis; 2021 inflation crisis; 2021 inflation surge; 2021-2022 inflation surge; 2021-22 inflation surge; 2021–22 inflation surge; 2022 inflation crisis; 2022 inflation surge; Inflation in US; US inflation; 2021–2022 inflation surge; 2021-2023 inflation surge; Greedflation
In early 2021, a worldwide increase in inflation began to occur. It has been attributed to various causes, including pandemic-related fiscal and monetary stimulus,Were The Stimulus Checks A Mistake?
Eternal inflation         
COSMOLOGICAL MODEL IN WHICH THE INFLATIONARY PHASE LASTS FOREVER THROUGHOUT MOST OF THE MULTIVERSE BUT WE FIND OURSELVES IN A SMALL CORNER IN WHICH INFLATION HAS STOPPED
Bubble universe theory; Bubble Universe Theory; Chaotic Inflation theory; Chaotic inflation; Bubble universe; Chaotic inflation theory; Bubble theory; Bubble Theory; Inflationary multiverse; Bubble Universe
Eternal inflation is a hypothetical inflationary universe model, which is itself an outgrowth or extension of the Big Bang theory.
Structural element         
ENGINEERING TERM; STRUCTURAL PART OF A COMPLEX STRUCTURE
Structural member; Structural component; List of structural elements
Structural elements are used in structural analysis to split a complex structure into simple elements. Within a structure, an element cannot be broken down (decomposed) into parts of different kinds (e.
Structural coloration         
  • Magnificent non-iridescent colours of [[blue-and-yellow macaw]] created by random nanochannels
  • Electron micrograph]] of a fractured surface of [[nacre]] showing multiple thin layers
  • [[Buttercup]] petals exploit both yellow pigment and structural coloration.
  • Butterfly wing at different magnifications reveals microstructured chitin acting as a [[diffraction grating]]
  • Structural coloration through selective mirrors in the [[emerald swallowtail]]
  • One of [[Gabriel Lippmann]]'s colour photographs, "Le Cervin", 1899, made using a monochrome photographic process (a single emulsion). The colours are structural, created by interference with light reflected from the back of the glass plate.
  • [[Robert Hooke]]'s 1665 ''[[Micrographia]]'' contains the first observations of structural colours.
  • Drawing of 'firtree' micro-structures in ''[[Morpho]]'' butterfly wing scale
  • In 1892, [[Frank Evers Beddard]] noted that  ''[[Chrysospalax]]'' golden moles' thick fur was structurally coloured.
  • The most intense blue known in nature: ''[[Pollia condensata]]'' berries
  • A 3-slide series of pictures taken with and without a pair of MasterImage 3D circularly polarized movie glasses of some dead European rose chafers (Cetonia aurata) whose shiny green colour comes from left-polarized light. Note that, without glasses, both the beetles and their images have shiny colour. The right-polarizer removes the colour of the beetles but leaves the color of the images. The left-polarizer does the opposite, showing reversal of handedness of the reflected light.
  • interfere]].
  • Variable ring patterns on mantles of ''Hapalochlaena lunulata''
PRODUCTION OF COLOUR BY MICROSCOPICALLY STRUCTURED SURFACES, BOTH AS A NATURAL PHENOMENON AND IN TECHNOLOGY
Structural color; Structural colour; Schemochrome; Structural colouration; Schemochromatic; Structural colours; Morphotex
Structural coloration in animals, and a few plants, is the production of colour by microscopically structured surfaces fine enough to interfere with visible light, sometimes in combination with pigments. For example, peacock tail feathers are pigmented brown, but their microscopic structure makes them also reflect blue, turquoise, and green light, and they are often iridescent.
Structural type system         
MAJOR CLASS OF TYPE SYSTEM, IN WHICH TYPE COMPATIBILITY AND EQUIVALENCE ARE DETERMINED BY THE TYPE'S ACTUAL STRUCTURE OR DEFINITION, AND NOT BY OTHER CHARACTERISTICS SUCH AS ITS NAME OR PLACE OF DECLARATION
Structural subtyping; Structural typing; Structural type
A structural type system (or property-based type system) is a major class of type systems in which type compatibility and equivalence are determined by the type's actual structure or definition and not by other characteristics such as its name or place of declaration. Structural systems are used to determine if types are equivalent and whether a type is a subtype of another.
Structural system         
LOAD-RESISTING SUB-SYSTEM OF A STRUCTURE
Structural frame
The term structural system or structural frame in structural engineering refers to the load-resisting sub-system of a building or object. The structural system transfers loads through interconnected elements or members.
Structural variation         
  • Signatures and patterns of SVs for deletion (A), novel sequence insertion (B), inversion (C), and tandem duplication (D) in read count (RC), read-pair (RP), split-read (SR), and de novo assembly (AS) methods.<ref name=Tattini/>
CONTIGUOUS LARGE-SCALE DIFFERENCES IN THE GENOMIC DNA BETWEEN INDIVIDUALS
Structural variations; Structural variants; Structural variant
Genomic structural variation is the variation in structure of an organism's chromosome. It consists of many kinds of variation in the genome of one species, and usually includes microscopic and submicroscopic types, such as deletions, duplications, copy-number variants, insertions, inversions and translocations.

Википедия

Monetary inflation

Monetary inflation is a sustained increase in the money supply of a country (or currency area). Depending on many factors, especially public expectations, the fundamental state and development of the economy, and the transmission mechanism, it is likely to result in price inflation, which is usually just called "inflation", which is a rise in the general level of prices of goods and services.

There is general agreement among economists that there is a causal relationship between monetary inflation and price inflation. But there is neither a common view about the exact theoretical mechanisms and relationships, nor about how to accurately measure it. This relationship is also constantly changing, within a larger complex economic system. So there is a great deal of debate on the issues involved, such as how to measure the monetary base and price inflation, how to measure the effect of public expectations, how to judge the effect of financial innovations on the transmission mechanisms, and how much factors like the velocity of money affect the relationship. Thus, there are different views on what could be the best targets and tools in monetary policy.

However, there is a general consensus on the importance and responsibility of central banks and monetary authorities in setting public expectations of price inflation and in trying to control it.

  • Keynesian economists believe the central bank can sufficiently assess the detailed economic variables and circumstances in real time to adjust monetary policy in order to stabilize gross domestic product. These economists favor monetary policies that attempt to even out the ups and downs of business cycles and economic shocks in a precise fashion.
  • Followers of the monetarist school think that Keynesian style monetary policies produce many overshooting, time-lag errors and other unwanted effects, usually making things even worse. They doubt the central bank's capacity to analyse economic problems in real time and its ability to influence the economy with correct timing and the right monetary policy measures. So monetarists advocate a less intrusive and less complex monetary policy, specifically a constant growth rate of the money supply.
  • Some followers of Austrian School economics see monetary inflation as "inflation" and advocate either the return to free markets in money, called free banking, or a 100% gold standard and the abolition of central banks to control this problem.

Currently, most central banks follow a monetarist or Keynesian approach, or more often a mix of both. There is a trend of central banks towards the use of inflation targeting.