The BD LSR9 Flow Cytometer will be housed at the Centenary Institute within the Advanced Cytometry Facility (ACF), which is a is run by the Centenary Institute, the University of Sydney, and the Bosch Institute. The extra lasers on the LSR-9 Flow Cytometer will give researchers a greater range of labels to analyze cells so they will simply run one test. By generating the complete ‘fingerprint’ from one sample, experts can make more accurate and immediate measurements of cell populations.
This significant funding is a significant investment in world-leading technology to support Australian researchers. The new flow cytometer will make a huge difference to your studies of the uncommon regulatory T cells that protect against allergic, autoimmune, and cardiovascular diseases. We can now obtain more information from an individual analysis of circulating white blood cells than we’re able to previously from multiple analyses needing over 10-times more sample materials.
But if FDIC type insurance is empty, the effect would be that the proportion of bank financing that comes from shareholders or quasi shareholders like bond-holders would rise. Indeed, if deposit insurance is abandoned then arguably ALL Bank or investment company FUNDERS ipso facto become shareholders: that’s shareholders as in “a person who at worst stands to lose everything”.
But if banks are funded largely or only by collateral, they may be highly unlikely to be “ruined” i.e. go insolvent. Ergo the above “avoid wrecking” merit in FDIC type insurance is nothing to shout about. Bank or investment company failure probably means too much has been loaned. A final nail for the “FDIC coffin” is really as follows.
The mere fact of bank failure (and more important, a SERIES of bank failures) can be an indicator that too much financing has taken place, and that banks should shrink their functions hence. And that’s exactly what happens with a bank is funded just by equity: shareholders have a haircut, and there’ll be a reluctance to put money into banks for a while. In contrast, given FDIC type insurance, depositors lose nothing.
- The intermediate goods purchased by an industry plus the income of the industry
- Reputation of the AMC?How long is the individual the fund supervisor of the fund
- Section 80DDB: Income Tax Deduction for Treatment of Specified Diseases
- 6th Objective: Be the Boss
- Defining a client’s profile and goals
- Self-motivation and company
In brief, FDIC type insurance stops a normal market system working properly: the scaling down of an industry when the industry has grown too large. There is much to be said for abandoning deposit insurance. Instead, those who would like total protection could lodge their money with the state or central bank or investment company. And concerning those who would like their money loaned on or invested, they’d accept the risks involved in the same way they are doing with stock market investments. Indeed, if you lend to a corporation by buying its bonds, the risk is accepted by you involved.
But if you place profit a bank or investment company, which lends to the same corporation, and it all goes wrong, you’re shielded by deposit insurance. The reasoning eludes me. If FDIC type insurance WERE forgotten, there would of course be a short deflationary impact: people would withdraw money from the true overall economy and lodge it with the central bank or investment company or similar. But that deflationary or “demand-reducing” impact is easily countered by standard simulator procedures.