994 resultados para Finnish industrial companies
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Audit report on America’s Agricultural Industrial Heritage Landscape, Inc., d/b/a Silos and Smokestacks National Heritage Area (Silos and Smokestacks), in Waterloo, Iowa for the years ended December 31, 2006 and 2005
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Focalizando, essencialmente, sobre os efeitos da interação. conjunta da volatildade das taxas de juro e da dívida nas decisões de investimento das empresas portuguesas, listadas na Euronext Lisbon, e considerando a composição de dados em séries temporais empilhadas, extraímos 291 observações completas, durante o período de 1999 a 2009. Os resultados encontrados mostram que uma maior exposição ao risco da dívida das empresas portuguesas depende do nível de endividamento. As empresas moderadamente endividadas e amantes do risco não diminuem os seus investimentos, quando se verifica uma maior volatilidade do risco da dívida. Por outro lado, as empresas sobreendividadas e inimigas do risco respondem perante a uma maior volatilidade do risco da dívida, diminuindo os seus investimentos. Além disso, descobrimos que as empresas portuguesas reduzem os seus investimentos face a uma maior volatilidade das taxas de juro. Entretanto, fomos surpreendidos que as empresas portuguesas não reduzem os seus investimentos, face a um efeito marginal das taxas de juro. Este resultado sugere que, o benefício fiscal resultante do efeito de reavaliação da dívida (Lensink et al., 2001), é mais relevante para as empresas sobreendividadas, uma vez que podem atenuar o efeito dos encargos financeiros (Bo e Sterken, 2002).
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The companies on this list have been approved to sell long-term-care insurance in the State of Iowa. Customer service numbers are listed for each company. Please open pdf for the numbers.
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Com a crescente competitividade no mundo empresarial, os preços dos produtos passaram a exercer um papel fundamental na expansão e sobrevivência das empresas. Consequentemente, hoje em dia é o mercado que determina o preço de venda de um produto, devendo a empresa produzir ao menor custo possível para garantir o retorno financeiro desejado. O objectivo do trabalho é verificar se os procedimentos de Target Costing podem ser aplicados nas Pequenas e Médias Empresas industriais, em São Vicente, cuja actividade também se destina à produção de produtos alimentícios. Como produto teste foi selecionado o produto A, confecçionado pela empresa Alvo, SA. Para atingirmos os objectivos foram utilizadas várias técnicas e métodos de pesquisa, tais como: levantamento bibliográfico, entrevista, conversas informais, questionário, levantamento de dados nos documentos financeiros da empresa ALVO, SA. Para entendermos e aplicarmos o processo de Target Costing recorreu-se à literatura do mesmo. Foi aplicado um questionário para ver a percepção dos clientes da empresa objecto de estudo, quanto ao preço que considerariam ideal pagar por cada quilograma do produto A adquirida. A entrevista realizada com o director geral da ALVO, SA acompanhada com os dados obtidos do departamento de contabilidade serviram como um meio de conhecer a empresa e o seu funcionamento, realçando informações sobre a fixação do preço venda dos seus produtos, a gestão de custos, entre outros. Antes de testar, através de um caso prático, a aplicação do Target Costing, verificou-se, primeiramente, sua aplicação em termos teóricos, testando os seus princípios e premissas para o produto A, na Empresa ALVO, SA. Como resultado constactou-se que os procedimentos de Target Costing podem ser aplicados, tanto na teoria como na prática, nas Pequenas e Médias Empresas industriais, em São Vicente, cuja actividade se destina a produção do produto A. With the increasing competition in the business world, the prices of products have come to play a key role in the expansion and survival of businesses. Consequently, today the selling price of a product is determined by the market so companies should produce at the lowest possible cost to ensure the desired financial return. The purpose of this paper work is to verify if the Target Costing’s procedure can be applied in small and medium business enterprises in São Vicente, whose activity is production of food. For that, product A was selected for tests. In order to achieve these objectives, some techniques and research methods like bibliographic analysis, interviews, informal conversations, questionnaires and analysis of the financial documents of ALVO, SA that is the subject of this case study, were utilized. With the intention of understanding and applying the Target Costing process we also resorted to a detailed reading of related bibliography. A questionnaire was applied in order to know the customers’ opinions about the ideal price for each kilogram of product A. The interview with the managing director of ALVO, SA, combined with the data obtained in the accounting department, was also used as a way to know the company, and it ’s functioning, highlight ing items such as: selling price format ion, cost management, among other aspects. Before testing, through a practical case study, the use of the Target Costing, the theoretical application was firstly verified by testing its principles and assumptions. Secondly, the application of the Target Costing’s process was shown step by step concerning product A at ALVO SA company. As a result we came to the conclusion that procedures used with Target Costing can be applied, in theory and in practice, in small or medium-sized industrial enterprises, in São Vicente, where product A is being manufactured.
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Crowding-out during the British Industrial Revolution has long been one of the leadingexplanations for slow growth during the Industrial Revolution, but little empirical evidence exists to support it. We argue that examinations of interest rates are fundamentally misguided, and that the eighteenth- and early nineteenth-century private loan market balanced through quantity rationing. Using a unique set of observations on lending volume at a London goldsmith bank, Hoare s, we document the impact of wartime financing on private credit markets. We conclude that there is considerable evidence that government borrowing, especially during wartime, crowded out private credit.
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We investigate the optimal regulation of financial conglomerates which combinea bank and a non-bank financial institution. The conglomerate s risk-taking incentivesdepend upon the level of market discipline it faces, which in turn isdetermined by the conglomerate s liability strucure. We examine optimal capitalrequirements for standalone institutions, for integrated financial conglomerates,and for financial conglomerates that are structured as holding companies.For a given risk profile, integrated conglomerates have a lower probability offailure than either their standalone or decentralised equivalent. However, whenrisk profiles are endogenously selected conglomeration may extend the reachof the deposit insurance safety net and hence provide incentives for increasedrisk-taking. As a result, integrated conglomerates may optimally attract highercapital requirements. In contrast, decentralised conglomerates are able to holdassets in the socially most efficient place. Their optimal capital requirementsencourage this. Hence, the practice of regulatory arbitrage , or of transferingassets from one balance sheet to another, is welfare-increasing. We discuss thepolicy implications of our finding in the context not only of the present debateon the regulation of financial conglomerates but also in the light of existingUS bank holding company regulation.
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This paper presents new estimates of total factor productivity growth in Britain for the period1770 1860. We use the dual technique and argue that the estimates we derive from factorprices are of similar quality to quantity-based calculations. Our results provide further evidence,calculated on the basis of an independent set of sources, that productivity growth duringthe British Industrial Revolution was relatively slow. The Crafts Harley view of theIndustrial Revolution is thus reinforced. Our preferred estimates suggest a modest accelerationafter 1800.
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Business organisations are excellent representations of what in physics and mathematics are designated "chaotic" systems. Because a culture of innovation will be vital for organisational survival in the 21st century, the present paper proposes that viewing organisations in terms of "complexity theory" may assist leaders in fine-tuning managerial philosophies that provide orderly management emphasizing stability within a culture of organised chaos, for it is on the "boundary of chaos" that the greatest creativity occurs. It is argued that 21st century companies, as chaotic social systems, will no longer be effectively managed by rigid objectives (MBO) nor by instructions (MBI). Their capacity for self-organisation will be derived essentially from how their members accept a shared set of values or principles for action (MBV). Complexity theory deals with systems that show complex structures in time or space, often hiding simple deterministic rules. This theory holds that once these rules are found, it is possible to make effective predictions and even to control the apparent complexity. The state of chaos that self-organises, thanks to the appearance of the "strange attractor", is the ideal basis for creativity and innovation in the company. In this self-organised state of chaos, members are not confined to narrow roles, and gradually develop their capacity for differentiation and relationships, growing continuously toward their maximum potential contribution to the efficiency of the organisation. In this way, values act as organisers or "attractors" of disorder, which in the theory of chaos are equations represented by unusually regular geometric configurations that predict the long-term behaviour of complex systems. In business organisations (as in all kinds of social systems) the starting principles end up as the final principles in the long term. An attractor is a model representation of the behavioral results of a system. The attractor is not a force of attraction or a goal-oriented presence in the system; it simply depicts where the system is headed based on its rules of motion. Thus, in a culture that cultivates or shares values of autonomy, responsibility, independence, innovation, creativity, and proaction, the risk of short-term chaos is mitigated by an overall long-term sense of direction. A more suitable approach to manage the internal and external complexities that organisations are currently confronting is to alter their dominant culture under the principles of MBV.
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Atualmente, as situações de erros e fraudes, têm ocorrido com muita frequência a nível mundial. Por exemplo em Cabo Verde estas têm vindo a ganhar espaço nos mídias, onde a todo momento aparece casos de erros e fraudes, como por exemplo, os casos da Sociedade Cabo-verdiana de Tabacos, Banco Comercial do Atlântico, Caixa Económica, Câmara Municipal da Ribeira Brava, Associação Sport Club Moreirense, Sociedade de Segurança Industrial, Marítima e Comercial, Ministério das Finanças entre outros. Essas situações desfavoráveis para qualquer empresa, são derivadas de uma gestão menos cuidada dos recursos, e dos valores e princípios éticos cultivados pelas pessoas. O triângulo de fraude criada por Donald Cressey demonstra os motivos que leva um individuo a cometer atos fraudulentos, como sendo a motivação, a pressão e a oportunidade. Neste sentido, o controlo interno surge como uma ferramenta muito importante e fundamental para mitigar os riscos advenientes da ocorrência de erros e fraudes, suscetíveis de acontecer nas empresas. O controlo interno traduz num conjunto de medidas que protegem o património da empresa e garantem o cumprimento dos seus objetivos entretanto, como qualquer outra ferramenta de gestão está possui determinadas limitações que podem ser ultrapassadas com a utilização de alguns procedimentos básicos e, ou alternativos de controlo interno. É imprescindível que um sistema de controlo interno, para além de implementado, adequado e em funcionamento, seja mantido e acompanhado. O estudo dos casos da SILMAC, SA e da SCT, SA, mostram a importância que o controlo interno tem na prevenção e deteção de erros e fraudes, pois denota-se que as fraudes cometidas aconteceram na sequência de fraquezas de controlo interno e no excesso de confiança depositada nos colaboradores. Currently, the situations of errors and fraud have occurred very often in the world. Cape Verde in these situations have gained ground in the media, where every moment appears to errors and fraud cases, such as cases of “Sociedade cabo-verdiana de tabacos, Banco Comercial do Atlântico, Caixa Económica, Câmara Municipal da Ribeira Brava, Associação Sport Club Moreirense, Sociedade de segurança industrial, marítima e comercial, Ministério de finanças” amongst others. These situations which unfavorable for any company, are derived from a less carefully management of resources and ethical principles and values cultivated by people. The fraud triangle created by Donald Cressey, demonstrates reasons that lead an individual to commit fraudulent acts, such as motivation, opportunity and pressure. In this sense, internal control emerges as a very important tool to mitigate the risks arising from situations of errors and fraud, which are likely to happen in companies. The internal control translates into a set of measures that protect the assets of the business and ensure the fulfillment of its objectives however, like any other management tool is has limitations, however these can be overcome with the use of basic procedures, or alternative internal control. It is essential that an internal control system, in addition to implemented, adequate and functioning is maintained and monitored. The case studies of SILMAC and SCT, show the importance of internal control is the prevention and detection of errors and fraud. For note that the fraud occurred following oversights in its internal control and confidence in their employees.