0 past simple and past participle of broker
1 to arrange something such as a deal, agreement, etc. between two or more groups or countries:
These regularity conditions also are assumed to hold for the brokered economy.
That commercial and business interests had brokered many of these agreements, often for purely economic reasons, should not be overlooked.
In the brokered economy, there are two assets that the intermediary could use to finance consumption loans: namely, bonds and stock shares.
Their differences might for a time be brokered into combination, but their solidarity has frequently depended upon specific historical contingencies.
Instead, this knowledge was brokered or framed by knowledge brokers.
Theorem 2 demonstrates that, for the brokered economy, condition (41) constitutes a necessary condition for the intermediary's selected intermediation plan to be optimal.
The supply-equal-demand condition (31) is therefore an appropriate product market-clearing condition for the brokered economy with passive intermediation. 11.
But could this not be said about the voluntary fund idea brokered earlier?