Book review: Money for nothing: politicians, rent extraction, and political extortion, by McChesney, F.S., Cambridge and London: Harvard University Press, 1997, xi+216pp, £23.50(cloth)No is available for this article.doi:10.1002/(sici)1099-1468(199802)19:1<63::aid-mde869>3.0.co;2-...
book review by Mihir Shah "Imagine your body and mind as a bank where you deposit and withdraw health and vitality instead of money." At a time when society is deeply rooted in the 3D material mindset, Kalafatis’ guide provides incredible insight into the tools and pathways available to ...
Next post: Book Review — Coming into the Country2 thoughts on “Book Review — The Psychology of Money” Dr. Geraldine K. Piorkowski August 2, 2022 Thank you for putting this out there. I agree with your opinion and I hope more people would come to agree with this as well. Progres...
Y Toyoshima,G Tamakoshi,S Hamori - 《Journal of International Financial Markets Institutions & Money》 被引量: 17发表: 2012年 Greek sovereign bond index, volatility, and structural breaks This article investigates volatility changes in the 10-year Greek sovereign bond index returns using the multiple...
money could be used as the standard for quantification: if two different goods have the same price, it can be claimed that they produce the same quantity of pleasure in the consumer. Bentham was more attracted by the latter measure. By associating money so closely to inner experience, Davies...
Let’s look into our behaviour in other daily matters. We are ready to pay the price for what we want to acquire. For instance, we are willing to pay the price for a car if we want to have it. That cost is the loss of our money to acquire what we want. It is impossible to ...
vice chairman of Berkshire Hathaway, says the first rule of compounding is never to interrupt it unnecessarily. Housel responds, “But how do you not interrupt a money plan – career, investment, spending, budgeting, etc. – when what you want out of life changes?” There is no easy soluti...
2022 November/December, Arts & Culture, Book Review By Robert Siegel | Nov 07, 2022 Nazi Billionaires: The Dark History of Germany’s Wealthiest Dynasties By David de Jong Mariner Books, 400 pp., $28.99 The stories that David de Jong first reported for Bloomberg News and now recounts in...
here was a watershed in the history of economic ideas in the twen- tieth century, particularly ideas dealing with the relationships, in the aggregate, between money wage rates, price levels, and employment. This watershed occurred not qu... L Gallaway,RK Vedder - 《Review of Austrian Economi...
The Big Moneyby Frederick R. Kobrick, was also sent to me for review. It was good timing because I was looking for books on stockpicking to expand my reading horizons. One can only read so many books on the wonders of index funds before monotony sets in. ...