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Corporate finance collection period ratio balance sheet






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· anything owned by a business or individual that has commercial or exchange value

· financial statement that presents a snapshot of what the business owns, what it owes, and what equity it has on given date

· indicates how quickly your customers pay you

· a discipline dealing with the firm’s operations with regard to investing and financing

· figure representing the cost of buying raw materials and producing finished goods

· cash or other assets you expect to use in the operation of he firm within one year

· distribution of earnings to shareholders

· value of a firm’s raw materials, work in process, supplies used in operations, and finished goods

· measures the firm’s use of borrowed funds versus those funds provided by the shareholders or owners

· amount owing to creditors for goods and services on an open account

· amount due from customers for merchandise or services purchased on an open account

· a company’s purchase of its outstanding stock

· a loan for a specified amount for a fixed period of time (usually 1 to 10 years) and often with a fixed periodic repaymentzdravko colic telephone

 

Text 3. Comment on the following text

 

The Clarkson Principles for Stakeholder Management Max Clarkson (1922-1998) Professor, University of Toronto Founder of the Centre for Corporate Social Performance and Ethics in the Faculty of Management

 

The Clarkson Principles of Stakeholder Managementoriginate from four conferences that were hosted by the Centre for Corporate Social Performance and Ethics in the Faculty of Management [now called: the Clarkson Centre for Business Ethics & Board Effectiveness or CC(BE)] between 1993 and 1998. In these conferences, management students gathered to share ideas on stakeholder theory, a then emerging field of study examining the relationships and responsibilities of a corporation to employees, customers, suppliers, society, and the environment. The Clarkson Principles represent an early stage general awareness of corporate governance concerns that have been widely discussed in connection with the business scandals of 2001-2003.
Principle 1 Managers should acknowledge and actively monitor the concerns of all legitimate stakeholders, and should take their interests appropriately into account in decision-making and operations.
Principle 2 Managers should listen to and openly communicate with stakeholders about their respective concerns and contributions, and about the risks that they assume because of their involvement with the corporation.
Principle 3 Managers should adopt processes and modes of behavior that are sensitive to the concerns and capabilities of each stakeholder constituency.
Principle 4 Managers should recognize the interdependence of efforts and rewards among stakeholders, and should attempt to achieve a fair distribution of the benefits and burdens of corporate activity among them, taking into account their respective risks and vulnerabilities.
Principle 5 Managers should work cooperatively with other entities, both public and private, to insure that risks and harms arising from corporate activities are minimized and, where they cannot be avoided, appropriately compensated.
Principle 6 Managers should avoid altogether activities that might jeopardize inalienable human rights (e.g., the right to life) or give rise to risks which, if clearly understood, would be patently unacceptable to relevant stakeholders.
Principle 7 Managers should acknowledge the potential conflicts between (a) their own role as corporate stakeholders, and (b) their legal and moral responsibilities for the interests of stakeholders, and should address such conflicts through open communication, appropriate reporting and incentive systems and, where necessary, third party review.

 

 

The Clarkson Principles should be regarded as “meta-principles”, encouraging and requiring management to develop more specific stakeholder principles and then to implement those in accordance with the Principles.

 






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