Aims and objectives Aims The users for whom actuarial information is created can place a high degree of reliance on its relevance‚ transparency of assumptions‚ completeness and comprehensibility‚ including the communication of any uncertainty inherent in the information. Actuarial information addresses the needs of its users‚ is of high quality and supports good governance if it is: relevant‚ transparent and complete; and communicated comprehensibly. Relevant actuarial information makes effective
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Objectives: According to Gosep‚ workers’ participation may be viewed as: o An instrument for increasing the efficiency of enterprises and establishing harmonious relations; o A device for developing social education for promoting solidarity among workers and for tapping human talents; o A means for achieving industrial peace and harmony which leads to higher productivity and increased production; o A humanitarian act‚ elevating the status of a worker in the society; o An ideological way of
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Objectives of the Act The basic objective of the Act is to enhance livelihood security in rural areas by providing at least 100 days of guaranteed wage employment on demand. This work guarantee can also serve other objectives: generating productive assets‚ protecting the environment‚ rural empowerment of women‚ reducing rural-urban migration and fostering social equity‚ development initiative‚ public investments for creation of durable assets‚ decentralized implementation‚ demand driven and so on
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Objectives of Firms Introduction to Business Objectives Standard theory assumes that businesses have sufficient information‚ market power and (importantly) motivation to set prices for their products that maximise profits This assumption is now heavily criticised by economists who have studied the organisation and objectives of modern-day corporations. Not only do most businesses frequently move away from pure profit-seeking behaviour‚ many are organised and operated in a way where profit is not the
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Conflicting Objectives Stacy Monroe BUS 631 May 08‚ 2011 Buyers and Suppliers Relationship A buyers and suppliers relationship is often conflicting but their main objective is for each party to maximize its time‚ resources as well s their cash investments (Ireton‚ 2007). Sometimes these relationships have competing priorities and much like a marriage‚ will put a strain on the relationship. Each is dependent on the other in some way. According to our text‚ to determine whether a particular
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Task 1 – The aims and objectives of Tesco & Nike Aims: An aim is a goal of which a business wants to achieve. For example‚ some businesses aim to expand whilst others aim to survive. Another aim that a business can have is selling as much as possible whilst others aim to improve the quality of their products. Objective: An objective is what a business wants to achieve but more precise targets than aim. For example an objective for a business can be to sell 1000 more products than we sold
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MANAGEMENT BY OBJECTIVES Management By Objectives (MBO)‚ was first introduced by Peter Drucker in 1954 in his book‚ The Practice of Management. By 1960s and 1970s‚ MBO became the no 1 buzzword of management practices and some form of a panacea for management ills. Most importantly‚ MBO has‚ for the first time‚ introduced significant changes to the command-control top down management system practiced at that time. Not that the Command & Control company system did not have any goals and objectives. It
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Research Topic This research will look at the link between employee satisfaction and work output in the Human Resource Management (HRM) movement. Research Background There are many theories and models such as Taylor’s Scientific Management‚ McGregor’s theory X and theory Y and Mayo’s Hawthorne studies‚ relating to work output and how and what can impact this. Between 1924 and 1932 Elton Mayo carried out a series of experiments known as the Hawthorne studies. Mayo and his team wanted to
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the management of people/staff in order for them to make contributions to the objectives of the organisation. “HRM is the body of management activities and used in this way HRM is really no more than a more modern and supposedly imposing name for what has long been labelled personnel management” (Torrington et al‚ 2009). The best way to describe HRM is to look at what it aims to achieve i.e. its four key objectives: 1) Staffing – includes recruiting staff‚ up-skilling of staff and training and
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of particular product Individual prices Attention to specific units Macro The stud of bigger scope Aggregate decision National income National output/product Overall general price level Units as an Aggregate Introduction to Macroeconomics 1.2 OBJECTIVES OF CONVENTIONAL MACROECONOMICS They are as follows: 槨 To achieve full employment 槨 To achieve price stability 槨 To achieve economic growth 槨 To achieve equilibrium in foreign sector 槨 To achieve equitable distribution of income (a) To Achieve Full
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