Corporate culture is the collective behaviour of people using common corporate vision‚ goals‚ shared values‚ beliefs‚ habits‚ working language‚ systems‚ and symbols. It is interwoven with processes‚ technologies‚ learning and significant events. In addition‚ different individuals bring to the workplace their own uniqueness‚ knowledge‚ and ethnic culture. So corporate culture encompasses moral‚ social‚ and behavioral norms of your organization based on the values‚ beliefs‚ attitudes‚ and priorities
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THE UNIVERSITY OF ADELAIDE COMMLAW 7011 CORPORATE LAW (M) BUSINESS SCHOOL Week 3‚ Semester 1‚ 2012 TUTORIAL QUESTIONS WEEK 3 (Commencing Monday 12 March) Acknowledgement: These Tutorial Questions were originally devised by Martin Markovic‚ Senior Lecturer‚ Business School‚ University of Adelaide. Question 1 A‚ B and C are long time friends from University days. They share common interests especially with respect to
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ABC’s capital expenditures and its financing 9 2.3. Comparison of ABC’s capital structure with similar companies 10 2.4. Characteristics of the company influencing the leverage policy 11 2.4.1. Tax advantage 11 2.4.2. Corporate tax rate 11 2.4.3. Earnings before tax and interest 11 2.4.4. Interest rate 11 2.4.5. Credit rating 12 2.5. Pecking order theory 13 2.6. Optimal capital structure 13 3.Dividend 14 3.1. Dividend policy
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Exclusion or social isolation. Being shouted at or being humiliated. Being the target of practical jokes. Excessive monitoring. What is Corporate/Institutional Bullying? Corporate/institutional bullying occurs when bullying is entrenched in an organization and becomes accepted as part of the workplace culture. Many bullying situations involve employees 1 Corporate/institutional bullying can manifest itself in different ways: • Placing unreasonable expectations on employees‚ where failure to meet
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CORPORATE GREED Have you noticed people around the country protesting near a government facility? It started on September 17‚ 2011. One month later similar thousands of people have joined the protest. It has spread in different parts of the world; protesting against “Corporate greed”. The group started in a park next to Wall Street‚ mainly by college kids spreading the word in social networks. They created a grass roots movement with a slogan “We are the 99%. Saying we the regular people work
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Course: Compliance‚ Ethics and Corporate Governance Date: October 7‚ 2013 Case Study Re: The continuous wave of financial scandals and whether regulators are often slow to respond by bringing enforcement actions against corporate wrong doers and so preventing widespread negative effects. Discuss the key reasons why this would occur and make recommendations to reduce the impact. Waves of corporate shenanigans continue to shadow the financial sectors despite the near cataclysmic collapse
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Corporate restructuring MENTION the name Schefenacker to the London bankers‚ lawyers and advisers who specialise in turning around insolvent companies‚ and you are likely to be greeted with knowing smiles. Schefenacker‚ which makes mirrors for carmakers such as BMW and Mercedes‚ almost went bust late last year. In April it emerged from a tortuous restructuring‚ during which it moved its headquarters from Germany to Britain to take advantage of the flexible insolvency laws there. Along the way
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The issue of this case is whether the board of Katia was in breach of the director’s duties. In determining this issue‚ the legal principles in Corporate Act section 181 as well as Howard Smith v Ampol Petroleum‚ Whitehouse v Carlton Hotel‚ Mills v Mills‚ Ngurli v McCann‚ Harlowe’s Nominees v Woodside Oil and Winthrop Investments v Winns should be considered. S 181 states that directors should exercise their powers in good faith and proper purpose. Subjective tests (which concerns whether the
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create a sustainable environment in order to achieve long-term profits. While all of the above relationships are valuable‚ none should be dominant over the others. The CEO should be accountable to set up a holistic strategy that captures the needs of corporate governance‚ which “emphasized a manager’s accountability to multiple constituencies besides the shareholders” (1). This will allow the organization to maximize its value in the long term. Companies are networks of parties and people working together
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Corporate Misgovernance at the World Bank Ashwin Kaja Eric Werker Working Paper 09-108 Copyright © 2009 by Ashwin Kaja and Eric Werker Working papers are in draft form. This working paper is distributed for purposes of comment and discussion only. It may not be reproduced without permission of the copyright holder. Copies of working papers are available from the author. Corporate Misgovernance at the World Bank Ashwin Kaja Eric Werker* Abstract We test for evidence of corporate misgovernance
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