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nominaalissa

Nominaalissa is a Finnish term used to express values or statements that are in nominal terms, i.e., not adjusted for inflation, price changes, or other factors that would alter the purchasing power or market value. The word stems from nominaali, meaning nominal or face value, and is commonly found in financial, accounting, and macroeconomic contexts. In everyday language it signals that a figure is stated as such, without correcting for changes in real value over time.

In finance and accounting, nominaalissa refers to values stated at their face value. For example, a bond

In economic reporting, nominaaliset luvut describe data presented in current prices, without deflating for inflation. Analysts

Nominaalissa appears most often in financial and economic discourse, where precise terminology helps differentiate face value

Notes: The Finnish term nominaali is commonly used for face value or nominal amount, and nominaalinen refers

with
a
nominal
value
of
1,000
euros
is
said
to
be
worth
1,000
euros
nominaalisesti,
regardless
of
its
market
price
or
fluctuations
in
interest
rates.
This
contrasts
with
real
or
inflation-adjusted
values,
where
figures
are
modified
to
reflect
changes
in
purchasing
power.
The
distinction
between
nominal
and
real
values
is
central
to
assessing
wealth,
returns,
and
cost
over
time.
may
compare
nominal
outcomes
across
periods,
while
recognizing
that
inflation
can
distort
apparent
growth
if
real
terms
are
not
considered.
The
term
helps
separate
surface-level
figures
from
their
underlying
buying
power
or
market
dynamics.
or
current-price
figures
from
inflation-adjusted
or
real
terms.
See
also
nominal
value,
real
value,
inflation,
and
price
index.
to
nominal
concepts
in
finance
and
economics.