Investment quota
Unless otherwise defined, the share of investments in the gross domestic product. Monitored by central banks, especially with regard to – financing; the amount of all loans for investment should not exceed forty percent of GDP, as well as – decision makers; a high share of investment by state-owned enterprises or due to political decisions – at all levels of government: from the municipality to the federal government – increases the likelihood that capital will be misallocated. – See revenue ratio, public, leasing, two-pillar principle. – Cf. the annex “Euro area statistics,” heading “Financial and nonfinancial accounts,” subheading “Annual saving, investment and financing,” and the heading “Prices, output, demand and labor markets,” subheading “Use of gross domestic product” in the “Euro area statistics” part of the respective ECB Monthly Bulletin, Deutsche Bundesbank Monthly Bulletin of January 2007, pp. 17 et seqq. (Investment induced by technological progress and location competition, with overviews), ECB Monthly Report of April 2008, pp. 65 et seqq. (Determinants of the investment ratio in the euro area; overviews), ECB Monthly Report of July 2009, p. 55 ff (Development of investment in the euro area since 1992; decline due to the financial crisis), Deutsche Bundesbank Monthly Report of November 2009, p. 63 (Investment ratio in Germany since 1991), ECB Monthly Report of July 2011, p. 48 ff (Development in the euro area since 1995; overviews), Deutsche Bundesbank Annual Report 2013, p. 56 ff (Business investment broken down since 1991; overview).
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