Free Essay

Conti

In:

Submitted By kabwe88
Words 2126
Pages 9
Introduction
Organizations use a wide variety of structural alternatives to help them achieve their purpose and goals, and nearly every firm needs to undergo reorganization at some point to help meet new challenges. Structural changes are needed to reflect new strategies or respond to changes in other contingency factors such as environment, technology, size and life cycle, and culture. The following essay seeks to critically analyze and discuss the realignments that have taken place in the Zambian bureaucracy since the last quarter of 2011 with reference to the body of knowledge on organization structure and design.
In the period between October, 2010 - September 2012, the government of the Republic of Zambia has made pronouncements to change the public service organization structure. This has been as a result of the change of government following the Patriotic Front under the leadership of Micheal Chilufya Sata (PF) ousting the Movement for Multiparty Development (MMD), this was in the September, 2011 Zambia general elections.
Ludwig (1944, defines bureaucracy as a personnel and administrative structure of an organization, implying that the bureaucracy of any organization is a structure that has got positions with people carrying on day to day activities.
Organizational structure is the hierarchical arrangement of lines of authority, communications, rights and duties of an organization. It determines how the roles, power and responsibilities are assigned, controlled, and coordinated, and how information flows between the different levels of management.
A structure depends on the organization's objectives and strategy. In a centralized structure, the top layer of management has most of the decision making power and has tight control over departments and divisions.
In a decentralized structure, the decision making power is distributed and the departments and divisions may have different degrees of independence. A company such as Proctor & Gamble that sells multiple products may organize their structure so that groups are divided according to each product and depending on geographical area as well.
The PF Government action to re-alignment some districts in Zambia is smart and innovative policy. Thanks to PF Government for taking this necessary step to bring government closer to the people. District re-alignment must be supported; for it will bring efficiency and accountability in public service delivery.
The creation of new districts is a big economic and development incentive which will transform those areas. One of the hallmark of the MMD regime is that no one was directly responsible for public service deliver, just look at how local markets were politicized with carders. PF district re-alignment is to allow local people to know whose has responsibility for local public services hence make it easy to hold them accountable. To the people living in newly created regions, take this as an opportunity to develop your local areas.
Unfortunately, there are critics from the former MMD regime and other opposition allies, who still want to continue under failed policies. While so quick to criticize the PF for creating new districts, the opposition is not offering any solutions or alternative plans about decentralization in Zambia. So the real question to the opposition critics is, what is your specific plan for the people in Itezhi-Tezhi, Chirundu and Muchinga?
By creating a new province and districts, PF Government is bringing government closer to the people. As it is said, government closest to the people governs best. MMD failed to recognize the changes in Zambia’s demographics. This contributed to poor planning in public service delivery.
This re-alignment should have been under earlier under the former regime. But MMD failed to do it. This is not about gaining political advantage as claimed by some opposition party members. Political gain advantage claims by the opposition is baseless.
PF government won its biggest landslide victory in the 2011 elections where it received political advantage scores from Zambians. That political advantage means changing and adopting smart ways to govern. MMD had a chance for almost 20 years, it failed to deliver. And voters rejected UPND policies. District re-alignment under the PF Government is about making public service delivery efficient, practical, targeted and close to the people of Zambia
If Zambians are to define their development priorities in terms of the presence of civil service bureaucracy in every nook and cranny of the country, then the Patriotic Front has every right to pursue the path of creating districts and burgeoning civil service without any frustration.
However, this development path the Patriotic Front has taken has received sharp reaction from opposition leaders, with Alliance for Development and Democracy party President Charles Milupi taking a scathing attack on the creation of districts. Mr Milupi says the creation of districts is a pursuit by the ruling party to gain political mileage.
Indeed, even in one’s wildest of dreams, it is difficult to understand why government can still think that constructing offices for government departments and employing the district commissioners, alongside a chain of departmental bureaucrats, in new districts is development.
Does this just show how Zambian leaders have taken the wrong end of the meaning of development?
The meaning of development goes beyond the physical government offices and officers at district level.
It must be defined with concepts that contribute to human development in terms of food security, sound social welfare, quality education, a fledgling health system—especially one that ensures absence of mortality rates from preventable and curable condition, good housing and sustainable management of natural resources.
However, that is not the way the Patriotic Front government views the priority of development.
Government spokesperson Kennedy Sakeni quoted by the Zambia Daily Mail of November 29, 2012, bragged that government will be spending K200 billion next year to construct infrastructure for various departments in the new districts.
Sakeni says that government is serious about the creation of new districts because it is an important vehicle for taking development to the people.
He justifies that the creation of districts will lead to robust infrastructure development as a result of increased transfer of resources from central government, which will in turn attract private sector investment in the new districts and subsequently create job opportunities.
The problem with the assertions of the government spokesperson is that they lack a point of reference. Maybe he, together with his government, must be under some bad spell or illusion—gaining political mileage—they are refusing to accept.
There are existing districts even within the 50 kilometre radius from city centres that barely meet basic education needs and still struggle with health needs of the people.
Lusaka, for example, which is a hub of the central government, holds all the hues of professional qualifications in the name of chief engineer so and so, chief planner so and so, and health expert so and so that are still underutilised.
The residential areas in Lusaka are poorly planned and hardly serviced with basic utilities. The roads are rutted with potholes, the drainage systems are blocked, the sewer-lines hardly function and every other rainy day all houses are flooded in a cesspool of garbage and human excreta.
Smart governments today know that a blotted civil service focused at nonessential staff, is not the best to invest in, especially in a rural area. So, the value of a block of offices constructed at K200 billion for government workers is useless to rural residents that grapple with malnutrition, unclean water sources, collapsed crop marketing structures and farm extension services that are inaccessible.
Government priorities must always focus at optimising resource allocation into development pointers that produce immediate results and innovative ways to stimulate private investment in rural areas if any tangible wealth and job creation is to be realised.
A private investor who wants to put up a tourism resort for bird watching and canoeing at Ncheta Island in the Bangweulu Wetlands wouldn’t mind to see government administrators at Samfya once in a blue moon. But what would kill his immediate inspiration to invest is the absence of reliable water and air transport, lack of good schools, absence of health facilities that can handle emergence cases, and a shorter distance where he can tap energy.
Suffice to say that there is no single district in this country that is adequately meeting these social services. Health infrastructure are mere shells and cannot offer even the basic of primary health care, schools grapple with delivering quality education and peasant farmers are without extension services. Worse still the conservation and management of the natural resources in this country is hopelessly bad.
Sports activities and other personal development programmes like women social clubs are poorly organised, while residential areas are dens of drugs and alcohol abuse and insecurity looms large. This is all in old and existing districts.
Therefore developmental problems of Zambia’s rural ilk do not lie in the absence of heads of departments. This country does not need financing the bureaucracy of unproductive positions—District Commissioner, District Agriculture Coordinator, District Medical Officer, District Intelligence officer and heads of government organisations.
The development priorities of the Patriotic Front government and its justification of creating districts must be causing sleepless nights among the United Nations Development Programme (UNDP) experts away from their diplomatic corridors. This is because the Human Development Index has no district commissioners’ office as a measure of progress.
What Zambia needs today is not to create the bigger bureaucracy of rural district white collar jobs.
The country needs a motivated trained labour that will fold sleeves and do the hands-on work—show the hapless villagers the basic technology in water and sanitation, break the stones with them to pave their roads and mix the mulch and manure for a composite heap to produce market crops.
It also yearns for motivated paramedical personnel, teachers and social development workers, provided the right support to hold firm the hands of rural children and women and walk with them through that challenging path of primary health and education. Above all they need business scouts that will pave new exciting path of technology and entrepreneurship.
A visit to a single government office in a rural area reveals the dysfunction a typical district bureaucracy occupies in the strata of rural development. It reveals government officers, who are more of ‘mortuary attendants’ watching over dead reports that indicate more failures than successes.
It reveals how busy the bureaucrats are organising gossip meetings with ruling party cadres and talking shop development coordinating committee meetings that hardly result into implementation.
Worse still, the major daily activities includes forging receipts to retire funding, with barely a quarter of the allocations going into service delivery other than administrative consumption— expensive furniture, fuel and allowances to attend workshops in Lusaka, office tea, cookies and soft drinks, including all unnecessary expenditure.
Therefore cost efficiency of creating district office blocks fall far short when of the long term development that the Patriotic Front claims the exercise is intended to facilitate.
This is why it must be shocking to politicians like Charles Milupi to hear government spokesperson, Sakeni, justify government creation of districts.
There are districts, long created before this country’s independence 48 years ago, that cannot still deliver the development needs of the people.
Despite these old districts having a lot of potential for private investment, they have gone through boom and bust cycles with the vagaries of the market economy working against them.
Sadly, the district bureaucracy that has changed names of positions and programmes has done very little to address these developmental challenges, simply reminding us that the development Zambia needs is different from the same old way of doing things.
Therefore the K200 billion for infrastructure in new districts is another budgetary allocation completely put in a wrong place by government in an old way of doing things.
This kind of money can build nine good second level referral hospitals with all emergence equipment that would cut on the cost resulting from women dying in child birth due to obstetric complications and money spent on fuel to transport patients from one remote mission hospital over a pothole rutted 120 kilometres road to a provincial hospital.

REFERENCES
Petrauskis, C., (2005) Restoring Dignity to Employment in Zambia: Legal and Moral Motivation to Promote the Common Good, preliminary reaction, JCTR, 26 September 2005

CSPR, The Path Away from Poverty: An Easy Look at Zambia’s Poverty Reduction Strategy Paper 2002-2004, CSPR Zambia, Poverty Eradication Newsletter (PEN), Issue No. 5, June 2005 http://www.ukzambians.co.uk/ Mtetesha N., et al (2011), The impact of the National housing policy on assisting the poor acquire decent shelter: a case study of Kalingalinga and Chalala residential areas, Policy monitoring and evaluation report, unpublished manuscript, University of Zambia.

Simon, D. (2002), Can Democracy Consolidate in Africa amidst Poverty? Economic Influences upon Political Participation in Zambia, Commonwealth and Comparative Politics, 40/1: 23-42

Similar Documents

Free Essay

Acting Review of a View from the Bridge and Twelve Angry Men

...Discuss the performance of two actors in any live production that you have seen. You should also compare these with the performances of two actors from another live production you have seen. In your answer you should include; • Names of productions, dates viewed, venues • Actors’ interpretations of roles • Acting styles • Vocal characterisation • Physical characterisation • Interaction of characters • Personal reaction • Audience responses • Critical opinions • Comparison with other performances Ivo Van Hove’s interesting adaptation of Arthur Miller’s ‘A View from the Bridge’, which I went to see on 23rd February 2015 at the Wyndham theatre London, made effective use of simplistic set and costume so that the audience focused on the talented acting and fascinating interpretation. This play, set in 1950s Brooklyn, follows Italian immigrants and the ultimate downfall of Eddie Carbone- the protagonist- as he develops inappropriate feelings towards his niece, Katherine. The play was enjoyed by audience members and critics alike describe by David Alan as ‘the production of a lifetime’. Personally, I felt that Phoebe Fox’s interpretation of Catherine was incredibly effective. An integral theme to the play is her character’s innocence and ignorant attitude towards the relationship between her and Eddie, as she is utterly unaware of his developing feelings towards her. A particular moment where she successfully portrayed Catherine’s naivety was on her first entrance. The...

Words: 1272 - Pages: 6

Premium Essay

Rhetoric Techniques In The Film 'Rocky Balboa'

...be no need to persuade anyone to support America domestically, rather it reinforces their values which appeals to more people to go watch the film. In a great deal of irony, Apollo Creed defeats Rocky while he is wearing American flag shorts. Although Rocky’s underdog story is completely and utterly synonymous with the American Dream in almost every way, the man in the American Flag shorts still won. So in a strong defensive effort for the sake of patriotism, America won the match no matter what side you were on, or regardless if Rocky would’ve won. Aside from the visual aspect of the film as well as the dialogue throughout the film, another huge component of building the patriotic aesthetic of Rocky is the musical score, composed by Bill Conti. “Gonna Fly Now”, the main theme of the movie is very resemblant of a patriotic anthem, layered with booming horns in a magnificent, unison crescendoing major that illustrates a message of victory and pride, without hardly any lyrics as well. A sign that illustrates this point is the two separate scenes where he runs from his apartment to the museum stairs. In the first scene, he fails to make it all the way to the top of the stairs without excruciating pain, showing signs of weakness. The music accompanying that scene is relatively sad and quiet. But in the second run when he makes it up the stairs, beaming with pride as he dances around the top platform, he is accompanied with the powerful “Gonna Fly Now” variation, again illustrating...

Words: 1611 - Pages: 7

Free Essay

Venquest

...Entrepreneurship         Individual  Assignment:  Case  Analysis       Lecturer:  Prof.  Dr.  Mohd.  Hassan  Mohd.   Osman     Prepared  by:   Mohammad  Pazyar   Matric:  MR111216                     Spring  2014   VendQuest  (A):  The  Business  Idea     Introduction   Obviously   as   it   appears,   there’s   a   unique   e-­‐commerce   solution   is   made   up   by   Conti.   To   make   a   pragmatic   decision   whether   or   not   he   should   commence   on   his   business,  a  visionary  analysis  seems  inevitable.  It  seemingly  seems  very  crucial   to   have   a   SWAT   analysis   table   first   to   best   categorize   the   strengths,   Weaknesses,   opportunities  and  threats.  Accordingly,  it’s  needed  to  go  over  each  of  them  and   conclude  on  the  case  if  it’s  feasible  for  him  or  not  to  start  up  his  venture.     SAWT  Analysis  Table:  (based  on  the  facts  in  the  case)       Strengths     • Strong  background  in  both  construction  and   equipment  management...

Words: 1315 - Pages: 6

Free Essay

Reuben, Reuben

...Reuben, Reuben (1983) Cast: Tom Conti, Kelly McGillis (in her film debut), Roberts Blossom, Cynthia Harris, and Joel Fabiani Director: Robert Ellis Miller Synopsis: Tom Conti stars in the titular role, a drunken, womanizing Scottish poet, Gowan McGland, who preys upon the bored stiff femmes of a New England college town. By swooning over them with his undeniably irresistible poetry and a wit without equal, it all inexorably ends in the same place, a bedroom full of passionate love making – all perfectly under the noses of the characteristically affluent spouses (or so he believed!) Nevertheless, the circumstances take a hurried, and rather unanticipated change when he meets a young, strikingly attractive student, Geneva Spofford (Kelly McGillis), who has a grander influence on him than he can admit. And yet, behind that modest farmer’s daughter facade, lies the source of an apparent reawakening of the archetypal slothful poet, forcing to him to get a grip on his life – or else! Undoubtedly Man’s Best Friend William Harris V ery much in the British tradition of quality, Robert Ellis Miller’s Reuben, Reuben is incontestably modest, wittily intimate, and incessantly intelligent. Based on the novel (of the same name) by Peter De Vries and subsequent stage adaption, Reuben, Reuben doesn’t fail to deliver the same sense of satiric jocularity Peter De Vries was best known for. Featuring a cast of both honoured and emerging stars – for the era anyway – audiences...

Words: 1057 - Pages: 5

Free Essay

Rating Agencies and Financial Crisis

...Table of content: 1) Introduction 2) Rating agency: * Who are rating agencies? * Development of the rating agencies * Function of rating agencies * The procedure of rating assignment * Solicited method * Unsolicited method * Sovereign rating * Rating scale and definition * Advantages of credit rating * Disadvantages of credit rating 3) Rating agencies and companies: * Failures of rating agencies * Reasons for the mistakes of rating agencies 4) Rating agencies and states: * Background * History of Italian rating * Critics against Italian rating 5) How to improve the rating: * “Issuer pays” or “Investor pays” * Public funding of rating * Government rating agency * Increase of competition * Liability of CRAs 6) Conclusion 7) references Introduction: The history of the Credit Rating Agencies (CRAs) is well represented through a parabolic trend. Before 1960 CRAs were quite famous only in the USA, later on their importance have increased in all the world until the recent crisis, in which they reached their highest level; whereupon they have been loosing power. Credit Rating Agencies are: an independent company that evaluates the financial condition of issuers of debt instruments and then assigns a rating that reflects its assessment of the issuer's ability to make the debt payments. An important key to understand the future of the thesis concerns the...

Words: 2909 - Pages: 12

Premium Essay

Procurement of Bestway

...supply chain management PMAS AAUR UIMS RAWALPINDI Submitted to: Mr. Ishtiaq Alam Submitted by: GROUP MEMBERS MUHAMMAD SHOAIB 10-ARID-1405 ADEEL AKBAR 10-ARID-1385 NAZREEN ASHFAQ 09-ARIRD-1000 SHAZIA KANWAL 10-ARID-1418 Table of Contents Executive Summary 2 Supply Chain Management Project Proposal 3 1. Company Background 4 BRIEF INTRODUCTION OF THE ORGANIZATION 4 BESTWAY CEMENT LIMITED 4 BESTWAY CEMENT HATTAR 4 BESTWAY CEMENT CHAKWAL LINE I & II 4 MUSTEHKAM CEMENT 5 BESTWAY GROUP 5 BESTWAY FOUNDATION 6 MISSION STATEMENT 6 ESTABLISHMENTS 6 2. Procurement 8 Procurement Department Organization: 8 Procurement System: 8 Capital Procurement: 14 Operational Procurement: 18 Categorical Distribution of Goods to be Procured: 19 Routine Items: 19 Leverage Items: 19 Bottleneck Items: 19 Critical Items: 19 International Procurement 20 Factories’ Procurement 25 Modes of Payment 25 Payment against Documents 26 Procurement Standards being Followed 26 Risks Factors 26 Overcoming Risks 26 Executive Summary This project report is based on work assigned basically to study the procurement process of any reputable organization. After due analysis we chose Bestway cement limited to work on, because it has made tremendous achievements in less two decades so we shall how well the procurement department is playing its due role in achieving such esteem position. In our supply...

Words: 6361 - Pages: 26

Free Essay

Research Narrative- Kurt Cobain

...Brittany Peters Instructor Wenrich Eng. 121 7 June 2015 Research Narrative “Okay, so I get to wake up today and have another day he doesn’t.”- Dave Grohl, band member of Nirvana What would music have been like in the 1990s without Kurt Cobain? Or maybe the question to ask is, “What would music be like today if Kurt Cobain was alive?” The grunge movement was brought to life by the front man of the band Nirvana, Kurt Cobain (Kurt and Courtney).He was what most believed to be an iconic man in the 1990s for the music genre known as alternative rock/grunge. Kurt Cobain passed away on April 5th, 1994, in his home, when he was only 27 years old (“April 05”). He recently started a family with his wife Courtney Love, who was also a musician in a band called Hole (Kurt and Courtney). Kurt was in and out of rehabilitation centers for his drug addiction, and soon before his death had, what people considered at the time, an accidental overdose in Rome. The day his corpse was found an electrician reports his findings. The police and fire department arrive. Pictures are taken of the scene, and then handed to detectives to enhance the report of the incident that took place on the street of Lake Washington Boulevard. As news spreads of the musician’s tragedy fans gather at his house and a memorial service is performed in his honor (Kurt and Courtney). I now tell you the story of how and when Kurt Donald Cobain’s body was found. An electrician, Gary Smith, from the company Veca Electric...

Words: 2697 - Pages: 11

Free Essay

Oic 11 E 12

...OIC 11 bilancio di esercizio, finalità e postulati Le finalità ed i postulati del bilancio sono specificamente richiamati dall'articolo 2423 del codice civile, in particolare: * L'articolo 2423 comma 2 del codice civile fissa la clausola generale ovvero la finalità primaria del bilancio secondo la quale quest'ultimo deve essere redatto con chiarezza e deve rappresentare in modo veritiero e corretto la situazione patrimoniale e finanziaria della società e il risultato economico dell'esercizio. L'uso dell'aggettivo veritiero non significa pretendere dai redattori del bilancio ne promettere ai lettori di esso una verità oggettiva di bilancio, irraggiungibile con riguardo ai valori stimati, ma richiedere che i redattori del bilancio operino correttamente le stime e ne rappresentino il risultato. * il comma 3 stabilisce che se le informazioni richieste da specifiche disposizioni di legge non sono sufficienti a dare una rappresentazione veritiera e corretta si devono fornire le informazioni complementari necessarie allo scopo. Ciò sta a significare che è già previsto che non sia possibile per le norme di legge regolare tutte le situazioni che si possono manifestare. * il comma 3 introduce l'obbligo della deroga qualora in caso eccezionali l'applicazione delle disposizioni di legge sia incompatibile con una rappresentazione veritiera e corretta. Questa norma rafforza la portata del principio generale, richiedendo la deroga a criteri specifici di rappresentazione o valutazione...

Words: 3024 - Pages: 13

Free Essay

Diritto Societario Europeo - Pederzini

...LE SOCIETA’ DI DIRITTO ITALIANO E IL TRATTAMENTO DELLE SOCIETA’ STRANIERE. L’OPERATIVITA’ TRANSFRONTALIERA DELLE SOCIETA’ ITALIANE ED EUROPEE INTRODUZIONE Esistono fatti, soggetti, rapporti,situazioni che presentano caratteri di estraneità rispetto ad uno Stato (o,più precisamente,rispetto al suo territorio) e che, specularmente, presentano punti di collegamento con un altro o più altri Stati. Tali situazioni richiedono una particolare regolamentazione da parte del legislatore nazionale che potrà intervenire con 2 tipi di norme: - norme materiali o sostanziali:norme che recano la puntuale disciplina della fattispecie, rendendola applicabile,espressamente,anche a soggetti che non siano interni all’ordinamento di riferimento - norme formali:norme che contengono la soluzione di possibili conflitti che si vengono a creare tra più possibili discipline astrattamente applicabili ad una determinata fattispecie che presenti punti di contatto con più ordinamenti giuridici IL DIRITTO INTERNAZIONALE PRIVATO Il diritto internazionale privato è una disciplina giuridica che si occupa specificatamente dei problemi riconnessi con la necessità di stabilire il regime giuridico applicabile alle situazioni che presentino elementi di estraneità rispetto ad un ordinamento giuridico. Si tratta,cioè,dell’insieme delle norme giuridiche statali chiamate a determinare i criteri per l'individuazione del diritto applicabile da parte del giudice nei rapporti giuridici interprivati connotati da elementi...

Words: 22561 - Pages: 91

Premium Essay

Google and Privacy Issues

...never have these companies created a compilation of personal information based on years of our trusting them. Google has been attempting and has begun to succeed in taking over all of our digital media, from the top used search engine as well as Gmail and Google news which have become the number one news source for many people. People are taking information that they want to hear and Google has been trapping society in a box by finding out our major interests and purely basing everything else off of that rather than incorporating new ideas. Google has the power to control us without us even realizing it and “because Google is so readily available and easy to use, more people across the planet will divulge their personal information” (Conti, G.) and Google does so by manipulating individuals through search engine rankings. Through internet browsers third party cookies, Google has the ability to tap into personal searches and figure out what advertisements to sell us in order to make profits. The fact that our searches can be...

Words: 1655 - Pages: 7

Free Essay

Amphetamine Use and Its Effects

...AMPHETAMINE USE AND ITS EFFECTS Name: Institution: Course: AMPHETAMINE USE AND ITS EFFECTS Stimulant use by humans has a very long history. The Ma-huang drug has been used by the Chinese natives for more than 5000 years (Ebadi, 2002). The active agent of Mu-huang was found to be ephedrine in 1887. First synthesis of Amphetamine proper was in 1887 as part of a program for manufacturing aliphatic amines. At first, investigations on amphetamine properties concentrated on peripheral effects and it was found that it was a sympathomimetic agent having bronchodilator properties. However, the effect on the central nervous system was not reported until 1933 which was followed closely by the first amphetamine abuse reports. Amphetamines give people a feeling of relief from fatigue and euphoria, it produces anorexia, improves performance of doing simple tasks and increases the activity levels (Ebadi, 2002). Amphetamine abuse is considered to be related primarily to the euphorigenic effects that lead to its use in high doses before the onset of the final stage which is compulsive abuse. The abuse of Amphetamines at present has been at low epidemic levels since the drug as introduced in the 1930s. During the beginning of the 1950s and 60s however, the epidemic appeared in the United States, Sweden and japan. A study of the epidemic reveals that there were several factors which contributed to its spread and these include; large population segments being introduced to the drug for recreational...

Words: 1370 - Pages: 6

Premium Essay

Kim Kardashian West Research Paper

...individual family member. Of course, for the sacrifice of this privacy comes a hefty paycheck; this fact, reiterating that she is a businesswoman. Kim models and makes paid public appearances, as well as running several branches of the store DASH with her sisters, Kourtney and Khloe. With some her own and some partnered with family, Kim has successfully put her name on a clothing line at Sears, a nail polish line with Nicole, a perfume line, a line of watches, and a line of swimsuits with Bunny Beach Swimwear (Conti). Those are just a few of the items Kim specifically has her name on, but she also gets paid for endorsing brands such Charmin, Tria Beauty, Skechers, Midor Licquer Carl’s Jr., ShoeDazzle.com, and QuickTrim (Conti). Kim hustles whether it is her own sexy tanning lotion line or Charmin toilet paper. She takes pride in her work and says of her endorsements: “I’ve worked hard to support the products I’m personally involved with and that I believe in…” (Conti). Kim is a working woman is humbled to take any job while putting the maximum effort forward, creating the idea that she is a feminist. On the contrary, Kim’s being a public figure, businesswoman, and so-called feminist does not actually make her a feminist. If Kim were a feminist, she would be an a-typical one. The definition of a feminist is: a person who supports feminism; and feminism is: the advocacy of women's rights on the grounds of political, social, and economic equality to men. This is an upstanding political...

Words: 1767 - Pages: 8

Premium Essay

Shared Values

...The Total is More Than the Sum of all its Parts. How Shared Values Direct the Social Responsibility James Ficorilli Indiana Wesleyan University The total is more than the sum of all its parts. How shared values direct the social responsibility According to Robbins and Coulter (2009), social responsibility is defined as a business’s intentions beyond its legal and economic obligations, to do the right things and act in ways that are good for society. Barnea and Rubin describe corporate social responsibility as “actions taken by firms with respect to their employees, communities, and the environment that go beyond what is legally required of a firm” (2010). The leadership issue I chose that most closely describes my view of social responsibility as a manager was equipping. The scripture from John 15: 1-6 describes how we are of the true vine in Christ and in order to bear fruit He prunes or shapes the vines; those that do not bear fruit are cut and taken away. In terms of social responsibility, my management view is to equip my employees with the necessary tools and training needed to accomplish the task at hand. As a manager my role is to give direction and guidance in order to achieve the desired results. Giving direction and guidance, equipping and training, all relate to the Biblical passage of pruning the branches in order to bear fruit or produce. The management decisions I make have to be in line with the socially responsible goals established by the company...

Words: 1121 - Pages: 5

Free Essay

Italy's Business Environment

...pubblico, saldi attivi/passivi, investimenti diretti esteri , debito pubblico e altri ancora. PARTE 1 L’italia ha un disavanzo pubblico inferiore se comparato all’area euro ( relatvo al 2012) e le previsioni dicono che scendera’ ulteriormente. Il debito per l’anno presente risulta essere uno piu un quito del tot. prodotto nel paese. Si parla dunque di dati piuttosto scadenti ma relativamente nella media e superiori a quelli della Grecia. La situazione fiscale italiana non e’ in allarme poiche’ durante la crisi nera scaturita da mal funzionamento del sistema finanziario intra-bancario, le banche italiane non avevano tenuto basso la rata di interesso su prestiti bancari ma bensi’ piuttosto standard e rigida. Per rimettere il bilancio dei conti in ordine con le aspettative del UME, e’ neccessario diminuire la spesa primaria corrente anche per i prossimi 2-3 anni fino al 2014 tornando in rapporto al PIL sul livello dello scorso decennio. Ridurre il capitale per finanziare I vari settori senza prendere in considerazione le varie interrelazioni e connessioni fra i vari sistemi economici statali ( es: ospedali, scuola, interporti, sistemi radio televisivi, porti) non e’ conveniente poiche’ potrebbe avere un effetto contro...

Words: 1152 - Pages: 5

Premium Essay

Progressive Era

...significantly increasing the American electorate.   This movement opened many doors for women; they now knew that they had a voice and the right to speak on political issues within the government and allowed them property rights.   The stock market crash of 1929 caused fear and panic throughout the country and resulted in the beginning of the Great Depression.   All aspects of the economy were affected by this downward spiral in the stock market; it caused many banks and businesses to fail and have to fail for bankruptcy.   Unemployment increased, which created a decrease in purchasing power for consumers and that led to businesses having to lower prices on merchandise.   Many laborers were forced to choose between wage cuts and pink... [conti Progressive...

Words: 3734 - Pages: 15