Betekenis van:
enabling act

enabling act
Zelfstandig naamwoord
  • machtigingswet
  • a provision in a law that confers on appropriate officials the power to implement or enforce the law

Synoniemen

Hyperoniemen

Werkwoord

enabling act

Voorbeeldzinnen

  1. General credentials enabling a procedural representative to act in all the proceedings of the party giving the credentials may be filed.
  2. The provisions of this Act may not, unless otherwise provided herein, be suspended, amended or repealed other than by means of the procedure laid down in the original Treaties enabling those Treaties to be revised.
  3. Furthermore, only the entry-into-force of the Act of 30 October 2002 provided an effective instrument under Polish law enabling public claims to be written off and creditors to be paid in proceedings under their control.
  4. Whereas the Secretary of State is a Minister designated [1] for the purposes of section 2(2) of the European Communities Act 1972 [2] with regard to measures relating to television broadcasting;Now, therefore, the Secretary of State, in exercise of the powers conferred on him by section 2(2) of the European Communities Act 1972 and all other powers enabling him in that behalf, hereby makes the following Regulations:
  5. Correspondent central banking model (CCBM): a mechanism established by the European System of Central Banks with the aim of enabling counterparties to use underlying assets in a cross-border context. In the CCBM, national central banks act as custodians for one another.
  6. A loro account is the term used by a correspondent to describe an account held on behalf of a foreign credit institution; the foreign credit institution would in turn regard this account as its nostro account. Correspondent central banking model (CCBM): a mechanism established by the European System of Central Banks with the aim of enabling counterparties to use underlying assets in a cross-border context. In the CCBM, national central banks act as custodians for one another. This means that each national central bank has a securities account in its securities administration for each of the other national central banks (and for the ECB). Counterparty: the opposite party in a financial transaction (e.g. any transaction with the central bank). Credit institution: an institution covered by the definition contained in Article 4 (1) of Directive 2006/48/EC of the European Parliament and of the Council of 14 June 2006 relating to the taking up and pursuit of the business of credit institutions (recast). Thus, a credit institution is: (i) an undertaking whose business is to receive deposits or other repayable funds from the public and to grant credit for its own account, or (ii) an undertaking or any other legal person, other than those under (i), which issues means of payment in the form of electronic money. Cross-border settlement: a settlement which takes place in a country other than the country or countries in which one or both of the parties to the trade are located. Custodian: an entity which undertakes the safekeeping and administration of securities and other financial assets on behalf of others. Day-count convention: the convention regulating the number of days included in the calculation of interest on credits. The Eurosystem applies the day-count convention actual/360 in its monetary policy operations.