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Greenwashing is the act of distributing false information about something being more environmentally friendly than it actually is.

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Tackling the Cost of Living Crisis

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In the first video of this two-part video series, Elisa introduces us to sustainability. She begins by looking at the difference between sustainability and corporate social responsibility, two terms that can be easily confused.

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Banking Essentials - Part I

This pathway will walk us through the basics of banks, starting with some of the different types and their main functions, then starting to look at the regulation faced by the banks, both before and after the Global Financial Crisis.

Greenwashing

Greenwashing is the act of distributing false information about something being more environmentally friendly than it actually is.

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+1,000 expert presented, on-demand video modules

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Tackling the Cost of Living Crisis

In this video, Max discusses the cost-of-living crisis currently enveloping the UK. He examines its impact on households as well as the overall economy.

CSR and Sustainability in Financial Services

In the first video of this two-part video series, Elisa introduces us to sustainability. She begins by looking at the difference between sustainability and corporate social responsibility, two terms that can be easily confused.

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Price Elasticity of Demand (PED)

Price Elasticity of Demand (PED)

Glossário
Macro & Markets

Price Elasticity of Demand (PED)

Gauging price elasticity enables producers and service providers – suppliers – in an economy to set optimal prices that engage optimal buyer demand. Price elasticity is a quantitative economic tool that plots exactly how demand will fluctuate depending on price levels. Price elasticity of demand is calculated by taking the % change in demand for a given product and dividing it by the % change in price. If demand is elastic, demand will shift depending on the degree of elasticity. If demand is inelastic, demand will be broadly impervious to price shifts (again depending on the degree of elasticity). Luxury and non-essential products or markets where there are ample acceptable substitutes exhibit elastic demand. Perfect elasticity occurs when very big changes in demand result from very small changes in price. Petrol prices or products to which consumers attach significant brand value are inelastic because price changes barely affect demand.

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