Across
- 1. This is the measure of money supply that includes only the most liquid (spendable) forms of money, such as cash, checks, and checking accounts.
- 2. An object that is portable, divisible, durable, and stable, and that serves as a medium of exchange, a store of value, and a measure of worth.
- 5. The amount of money that owners would receive if they sold all of a firm's assets and paid off all of its liabilities.
- 8. This area focuses on the activities of planning, organizing, leading, and controlling.
- 9. A systematic examination of a company's accounting system to determine whether its financial reports reliably represent its operations.
- 12. This type of leadership is a type of influence based on the leader's interpersonal attraction that inspires support and acceptance.
- 15. This type of bargaining is the process by which union leaders and managers negotiate conditions of employment for workers represented by unions.
- 16. The characteristic of money that indicates that units of money do not expire.
- 17. The processes and behaviors used by someone to motivate, inspire, and influence the behaviors of others.
- 20. Any debt owed by a firm to an outside organization or individual.
- 21. This is a market defined by a period of falling stock prices marked by negative investor sentiments with motivation to sell ahead of anticipated losses.
Down
- 1. The activities, set of institutions, and processes for creating, communicating, delivering, and exchanging offerings that have value for customers, clients, partners, and society at large.
- 3. This theory of motivation suggests that people are motivated to work towards rewards that they want and that they have a reasonable chance of obtaining
- 4. Any economic resource expected to benefit a firm or an individual who owns it.
- 6. This approach to leadership focused on identifying the essential traits that distinguished leaders.
- 7. This approach to leadership focused on determining what behaviors are employed by leaders.
- 10. This is the oldest and most widely cited market index, based on the prices of 30 blue-chip, large cap industrial firms on the NYSE.
- 11. This is a market defined by a period of rising stock prices, generally lasting 12 months or longer, featuring investor confidence for future gains and motivation to buy stocks.
- 13. This requirement refers to the percentage of its deposits a bank must hold, in cash or on deposit, with a Federal Reserve bank.
- 14. This is the measure of money supply that includes cash, checks, checking accounts, plus the forms of money that can be easily converted into spendable forms, such as time deposits and savings.
- 15. This theory of motivation states that workers are motivated solely by money.
- 18. A labor action in which employees temporarily walk off the job and refuse to work.
- 19. An organization responsible for developing a set of global accounting standards and for gaining implementation of those standards.
