Financial capital (capital economics)
Money that appears as supply or demand on the financial market. – Cash used to acquire assets such as land, buildings or exploitation rights. – The money invested in financial instruments of an economic unit or the currency area under consideration in aggregate. – In Marxist terminology, a supposedly inevitable monopolistic merger of banks, companies and the state. Because competition would thereby be extinguished in the domestic market, it would be transferred to the world market (imperialism thesis; Marxist assertion of inevitably rising imperialism). – See investor, banking power, bankocracy, financial investment, imperialism thesis). Financial oligarchy, money capital, money purpose, gigabank, high finance, capital, misochrematism, system conflict, financial market, conspiracy theories.
Attention: The financial encyclopedia is protected by copyright and may only be used for private purposes without express consent!
University Professor Dr. Gerhard Merk, Dipl.rer.pol., Dipl.rer.oec.
Professor Dr. Eckehard Krah, Dipl.rer.pol.
E-mail address: info@ekrah.com
https://de.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gerhard_Ernst_Merk
https://www.jung-stilling-gesellschaft.de/merk/
https://www.gerhardmerk.de/
