Читать книгу Corporate Finance For Dummies онлайн
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This definition guides you in two primary directions regarding what makes corporate finance unique:
It tells you that corporate finance is a critical aspect of human life as an intermediary that allows people to transfer value among themselves.
It tells you how groups of people interact as a single unit, a corporation, and how decisions are made on behalf of the corporation by people called managers.
The role of financial institutions
Probably the easiest way to understand how corporate finance acts as a critical intermediary process between groups of people is to look at the role of financial institutions in the greater economy. Financial institutions, such as banks and credit unions, have a role that involves redistributing money between those who want money and those who have excess money, all in a manner that the general population believes is based on reasonable terms.
Now, whether financial institutions as a whole are fully successful in their role is no longer a matter of debate: They are not. The cyclical role being played out time and again prior to the Great Depression, prior to the 1970s economic troubles, and prior to the 2007 collapse are symptomatic of a systematic operational failure yet to be resolved. For the most part, the role they play is necessary, however. These institutions facilitate the movement of resources across the entire world. They accept money from those who have more than they’re using and offer interest rate payments in return. Then they turn around and give that money to those seeking loans, charging interest for this service. In this role, financial institutions are intermediaries that allow people on either side of these sorts of transactions to find each other by way of the bank itself. Without this role, investments and loans would very nearly come to a total halt compared to the extremely high volume and value of the current financial system.