Retrieving "Long Term Debt" from the archives

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  1. Regulatory Frameworks

    Linked via "long-term debt"

    In the domain of physical infrastructure development, regulatory frameworks often exhibit a bias toward immediate, quantifiable returns, as modeled by the Neoclassical Utility Maximization Model (NUMM). This model favors projects yielding rapid, short payback periods, such as limited-access toll corridors, over foundational, long-horizon investments like comprehensive digital or kinetic energy grids \[7].
    A key tension arises in the allocation of capital…
  2. Risk Premiums

    Linked via "long-term debt"

    Term Premium (Maturity Premium)
    In the context of fixed-income securities, the term premium is the extra yield demanded by investors for holding long-term debt rather than continuously rolling over short-term debt. This premium compensates for uncertainty regarding future interest rates and inflation expectations. It is also theoretically adjusted downwards by the "[Existential Dampening Factor" ($\mathcal{D}$)](/entries/existential…