Example sentences of "the [noun] for money " in BNC.

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1 The basis of the action for money had and received was that the money was paid to the defendant without any consideration , the duty having been unlawfully imposed .
2 Unsecured creditors should agree to accept a down payment of around 35p in the pound for money due to them , and to take the balance in redeemable convertible preference shares in Prior Harwin , to be paid off in four years ' time .
3 The search for money and patronage , ’ Columbus says , ‘ is not so different from the quest for love . ’
4 However , it left unchanged at 9.75 per cent the more internationally sensitive Lombard rate , which set the ceiling for money market rates .
5 For all but the most privileged housewives , economic dependence is a fact of life , and dependence on the husband for money with which to feed and clothe the family and run the home constrains the freedom which women might otherwise have to control their work situations .
6 However , human motivation is complex : people are not entirely driven by the desire for money or to do as little in the job as they can get away with .
7 When a child is sick , the people will go to the druglords for money , and they will give .
8 Rational arguments and the need for money may keep it submerged but from time to time it is so inflamed that it can no longer be suppressed .
9 The need for money made the lord increasingly concerned to turn the fiefs of his vassals to his own financial advantage when he could .
10 Nor is it to deny that a society capable of providing for the fulfilment of all human needs , all the time , would eliminate the need for money altogether .
11 But unsparing in his pressing of points he thought vital , and eternally urging the need for money .
12 She was left to bring up a family she had to go the banks for money the banks were all and they refused her money to keep the farm going .
13 We will have to depend on the father for money or else scrape by on Social Security .
14 Thus , the demand for money ( MD ) depends : ( a ) directly on national income ( as a rise in national income will reflect a rise in the total value of transactions and so will increase the demand for money to finance these transactions ) ; and ( b ) inversely on the rate of interest ( as a rise in the rate of interest will make it more attractive to hold financial assets , and less attractive to hold money , whether as part of an individual 's wealth holdings or as an outcome of a speculative activity ) .
15 Thus , the demand for money ( MD ) depends : ( a ) directly on national income ( as a rise in national income will reflect a rise in the total value of transactions and so will increase the demand for money to finance these transactions ) ; and ( b ) inversely on the rate of interest ( as a rise in the rate of interest will make it more attractive to hold financial assets , and less attractive to hold money , whether as part of an individual 's wealth holdings or as an outcome of a speculative activity ) .
16 Equilibrium in the money market requires that the demand for money should equal the supply of money .
17 We have assumed that the demand for money depends directly on national income and inversely on the rate of interest , and that the supply of money is exogenous .
18 The MD line has a negative slope because of the assumed inverse relationship between the demand for money and the rate of interest .
19 The fall in national income will lead to a fall in the demand for money which will shift the MD line to the left in Fig. 4.4(i) and so reduce the equilibrium rate of interest .
20 Possibility 4 : An increase in the demand for money .
21 With a given money supply , an increase in the demand for money will also raise the equilibrium rate of interest .
22 an increase in the demand for money .
23 Since money is seen as one component of total wealth , we can expect the demand for money to be directly related to total wealth so long as money is regarded as a ‘ normal good ’ by wealth-holders. ( b ) Rates of return on financial assets ( R ) .
24 Since the rates of return on bonds and equities represent the opportunity cost of holding money , we can expect an inverse relationship between the rates of return expected by wealth-holders and the demand for money .
25 It has been argued that human wealth is so illiquid that the greater is this h ratio , the greater will be the demand for money to compensate for the limited marketability of human wealth .
26 Now denoting the nominal demand for money by MD , we can write in functional form : unc A simplified version of this function can be obtained by using real national income ( Y ) as an indicator of total wealth and by assuming that h is constant and that the function is homogeneous of the first degree in P. We can then write the real demand for money as : unc Monetarists generally believe the demand for money to be fairly unresponsive to interest rate changes ( and this is supported by empirical evidence ) .
27 With k remaining constant , the equality between the supply of and the demand for money can only be restored if P or Y increase .
28 Once the demand for money and the threat were made and the pistol was produced , would that distract him or would it concentrate his mind on his assailant ? ’ said Mr Justice Leonard .
29 An important part of his contribution to theory was the analysis of the demand for money and its differences with the quantity theory view .
30 The traditional Keynesian approach divides the demand for money into three elements : the transactions , precautionary , and speculative demands .
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