Wall Street Words
KSh700.00
Wall Street Words is an essential guide to the words spoken on ‘the Street.’ This updated edition has 4,500 entries – more than 700 of them newly added to reflect key developments in national and world markets – and covers everything from investment fundamentals to the sophisticated terminology of contemporary finance. More than 100 case studies illustrating real-world investment examples plus 50 insightful tips from industry professionals make this new edition the most comprehensive and useful reference for today’s investor
Category: | Business & Investing |
---|
Weight | 0.446 kg |
---|
Related products
-
House Of Lies: How Management Consultants Steal Your Watch and Then Tell You the Time
From power breakfasts heavy on the waffles and mind games to the screaming indignity of “Feedback Camp” in New Jersey, HOUSE OF LIES reveals the truth about a “profession” that could threaten your job, your career, and your life and even offers a solution or two if the suits start circling around your company.
-
Wall Street Words: An A to Z Guide to Investment Terms for Today’s Investor
Wall Street Words is an essential guide to the words spoken on âthe Street.â This updated edition has 4,500 entries â more than 700 of them newly added to reflect key developments in national and world markets â and covers everything from investment fundamentals to the sophisticated terminology of contemporary finance. More than 100 case studies illustrating real-world investment examples plus 50 insightful tips from industry professionals make this new edition the most comprehensive and useful reference for todayâs investor.
KSh700.00 -
The Four Year CareerÂŽ for Women: Put Your Future in Your Own Hands or Not
The Four Year Career for Women 2nd Edition featuring: Margie Aliprandi, Pam Barnum, Kierston Kirschbaum, Brenda Schuler, Sara Marble, Whitney Husband, Jenifer Furness, Amani Zein McDermott, Masa Cemazar, and Sarah Robbins. This book is for any woman adventurous enough to open it up and begin the journey to a richer, more fulfilling, more purpose-driven life. Written by Kimmy Brooke, who went from struggling single mom to true financial freedom, this quick, fun read will allow you to explore your life in a self-narrative, journaling type of way. You will uncover new ideas, answer questions, and better understand the concept of this model called Network Marketing. It will lead you to answer one simple question: Is this for me? This is the âfor womenâ version of the bestselling Network Marketing book The Four Year CareerÂŽ by Richard Bliss Brooke, Kimmyâs partner in love, marriage, and business
-
Personality Puzzle: Understanding the People You Work with
Most workplaces include people of different socio-economic backgrounds, diverse goals and opposite personalities. The Littauers describe the characteristics that each of the four personality types–Sanguine, Choleric, Melancholy, and Phlegmatic–bring into the workplace, and they reveal how the strengths and weaknesses of each can be structured into a productive, congenial workplace.
-
People Get Ready: The Fight Against a Jobless Economy and a Citizenless Democracy
Humanity is on the verge of its darkest hour — or its greatest moment
The consequences of the technological revolution are about to hit hard: unemployment will spike as new technologies replace labor in the manufacturing, service, and professional sectors of an economy that is already struggling. The end of work as we know it will hit at the worst moment imaginable: as capitalism fosters permanent stagnation, when the labor market is in decrepit shape, with declining wages, expanding poverty, and scorching inequality. Only the dramatic democratization of our economy can address the existential challenges we now face. Yet, the US political process is so dominated by billionaires and corporate special interests, by corruption and monopoly, that it stymies not just democracy but progress.
The great challenge of these times is to ensure that the tremendous benefits of technological progress are employed to serve the whole of humanity, rather than to enrich the wealthy few. Robert W. McChesney and John Nichols argue that the United States needs a new economy in which revolutionary technologies are applied to effectively address environmental and social problems and used to rejuvenate and extend democratic institutions. Based on intense reporting, rich historical analysis, and deep understanding of the technological and social changes that are unfolding, they propose a bold strategy for democratizing our digital destiny — before it’s too late — and unleashing the real power of the Internet, and of humanity.
-
Jonathan Clements Money Guide 2015
The Jonathan Clements Money Guide 2015 is the must-have book for Americans concerned about their financial future. Written by the highly regarded columnist for The Wall Street Journal, this annually updated guide delivers punchy, plain English answers to your most pressing financial questions. It was named money-management book of the year by the Institute for Financial Literacy and won a silver medal in the Axiom Business Book Awards. Hereâs what youâll find in this yearâs Money Guide:
⢠Help with retirement, college, home buying, estate planning and more
⢠Indispensable information delivered in short, easy-to-understand sections
⢠Simple strategies to improve every aspect of your financial life
⢠Clementsâs outspoken views on personal finance
⢠The latest facts and figures on the economy and markets
⢠Tax information for 2014 and 2015
⢠Intriguing statistics on how the typical American is faring financially“It’s hard to imagine a finer place to begin your search for financial peace of mind than with Jonathan Clements Money Guide 2015. Yes, it’s long. But so is the list of financial challenges faced by American families. Don’t be intimidated. He’s made it easy to navigate through these challenges, identify those where you need help, and successfully deal with them. Don’t just scan this fine, readable, and insightful guide. Keep it by your desk and return to it as your circumstances change, as financial markets change, and as the world turns.”âJohn C. Bogle, founder, The Vanguard Group
âA comprehensive financial guide ranging from navigating health insurance alternatives to forming sensible investment portfolios. Clements is a first-rate financial writer who is a genius at making sophisticated advice accessible to everyone and a delight to read.ââBurton G. Malkiel, author of A Random Walk Down Wall Street
âSince the early 1990s, Jonathan Clementsâs columns taught his readers, profited them, and made them smile. Trouble was, you needed to have read all his Wall Street Journal articles. Until now, that is. His Money Guide wraps this bounty, and then some, into a tidy package, destined to be enjoyed and referred to over and over by readers for decades to come.ââWilliam J. Bernstein, author of The Investorâs Manifesto
âHow do you get nearly 30 years of personal-finance wisdom and advice in an engaging, entertaining and easy-to-use format? Keep Jonathan Clementsâs Money Guide on your desk or tablet for instant answers to your essential money questions.ââConsuelo Mack, anchor, Consuelo Mack WealthTrack
âWould you like to have a friend who knew a lot and would share the straight scoop with you on any investment topic at any time in clear language, with candor and a wry sense of humor? Well, here it is. What a break!ââCharles D. Ellis, author of What It Takes and Winning the Loserâs Game
âAs someone who has read just about every personal-finance book ever published, I can honestly say this is the best money manual ever writtenâperiod! Jonathan Clementsâs Money Guide offers readers a host of brilliant insights on how to grow their money. Itâs required reading for anyone striving for financial independence.ââAllan Roth, author of How a Second Grader Beats Wall Street
-
Global Integration and Technology Transfer (Trade and Development)
The importance of international technology diffusion (ITD) for economic development can hardly be overstated. Both the acquisition of technology and its diffusion foster productivity growth. Developing countries have long sought to use both national policies and international agreements to stimulate ITD. The “correct” policy intervention, if any, depends critically upon the channels through which technology diffuses internationally and the quantitative effects of the various diffusion processes on efficiency and productivity growth. Neither is well understood. New technologies may be embodied in goods and transferred through imports of new varieties of differentiated products or capital goods and equipment, they may be obtained through exposure to foreign buyers or foreign investors or they may be acquired through arms-length trade in intellectual property, e.g., licensing contracts. Global Integration and Technology Transfer uses cross-country and firm level panel data sets to analyze how specific activities “exporting, importing, FDI, joint ventures” impact on productivity performance.
-
Power in the Highest Degree: Professionals and the Rise of a New Mandarin Order
Lawyer, doctor, scientist–these are the jobs Americans commonly cite when asked to list the most prestigious occupations. The word “professional” today implies expertise, authority, and excellence. To do a job professionally is to do it well. Yet in a society in which knowledge has
become a prized asset and an advanced degree the ticket to wealth and power, the rise of professionalism has a darker, more ominous side.
Power in the Highest Degree, one of the most comprehensive studies of professionals ever undertaken, exposes professionalism as a double-edged sword; it illustrates how experts have come to “own” and control knowledge, much like the wealthy control capital, thereby transforming capitalist and
socialist society, both for better and for worse. Knowledge long predates money as a source of power and wealth in human society, and professionals are only the most recent in a long succession of powerful knowledge classes that have included shaman, witchdoctors, and the Confucian mandarins who
ruled China for over a thousand years.
Drawing on interviews with over 1,000 practicing professionals, the authors show how, by dispensing self-interested and morally colored judgements as scientific truth, modern professionals are consolidating a monopoly over what passes for objective knowledge. Experts discredit the ordinary
knowledge of the general public to generate a vast market of dependent clients. The result is a powerful professional class that creates vital new knowledge and life-saving services, but also wields growing influence over a population deeply insecure about its ability to manage private and public
affairs without “expert” guidance.
This sweeping study also reveals that more and more experts are abandoning private practice to work for corporations, becoming junior partners in a new “Mandarin capitalism.” While often outspoken advocates of a more socially responsible business world, professionals have joined big business to
produce one of the most pronounced divisions of mental and manual work in history, creating a new dispossessed majority, the uncredentialed. We learn of an experiment at Polaroid to give machine operators more responsibility which is cancelled when managers and engineers decided that they “just
didn’t want operators that qualified.” The authors argue that, as this new “mandarin” class radically transforms the social order, it helps to reform some of the traditional scourges of the business world, but also poses a new threat to equality in America. To reverse this trend, they propose a
post-professional society that de-emphasizes skill hierarchies and substantially democratizes knowledge.
A bold and incisive new work of social criticism, this book provides a fascinating look at the modern professional and provokes Americans to think in a new way about democracy in the age of experts.KSh800.00
Be the first to review “Wall Street Words”