1. The cash receipts section includes expected receipts from the company’s principal source(s) of cash. It also shows anticipated receipts 0f intersest and dividends, and proceeds from planned sales of investments, plant assets, and the company’s capital stock. 2. The cash disbursements section shows expected payments for inventory, labor, overhead, and selling and administative expenses. This section also includes projected payments for income taxes, dividends, investments, and plant assets. 3
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Key Terms, cont. • land: all natural resources used to produce goods and services • labor: the effort people devote to tasks for which they are paid • capital: any human-made resource that is used to produce other goods and services • physical capital: the human-made objects used to create other goods and services • human capital: the knowledge and skills a worker gains through education and experience Chapter 1, Section 1 Copyright © Pearson Education, Inc. Slide 4 Chapter
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Journal of Accounting and Economics 55 (2013) 206–224 Contents lists available at SciVerse ScienceDirect Journal of Accounting and Economics journal homepage: www.elsevier.com/locate/jae Cost of capital and earnings transparency$ Mary E. Barth a,n, Yaniv Konchitchki b, Wayne R. Landsman c a Graduate School of Business, Stanford University, Stanford, CA 94305, USA Haas School of Business, University of California at Berkeley, Berkeley, CA 94720, USA c Kenan-Flagler Business School, University
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1.) The biggest trigger was subprime borrowers’ large (in absolute terms) losses of residential mortgage loans. IKB’s Rhineland off-balance-sheet vehicle was also no longer rolling over the ABCP it issued in U.S, markets to fund its asset-backed securities. Commercial paper investors feared risk of default on these securities because of IKB’s difficulty in meeting its funding obligation. This led to runs on key institutions which had a detrimental effect on the financial system as a whole. This “Run
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Numerous economists and financial experts have labeled the financial crisis of 2008-2009, The Great Recession. Individuals and corporations alike were deeply affected by The Great Recession; either by losing their jobs or by the sudden stock sell off that occurred between 2008 and 2009. There was no question that something had to be done to prevent history from repeating itself. The only question was what to do. The Dodd-Frank Wall Street Reform and Consumer Protection Act (Dodd-Frank Act), signed
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Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac are private corporations that were established by Congress and are referred to as government sponsored enterprises or GSEs. They are the largest “packagers” of individual mortgages into mortgage backed securities (MBS) which they guarantee against loss. We will be addressing the following threats to your financial institutions stability. Counterparty risk. Internal and external vulnerability and threats. Stemming the tide of losses from overly
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economic might. China will continue to be the manufacturing plant of the industrial world for many years. Investment in China will be driven primarily by the creation of local infrastructure focused on trade for export markets, whilst Chinese capital markets will still remain inchoate for many years. India wants to be powerful and hence enjoy global prestige. Its competitive edge resides in low labor costs (wages) in certain sectors (textiles, outsourcing, information technology). It has
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Yes Globalisation is necessary, for an economy to grow. Globalisation refers to the integration of economic, technological, socio-political factors with the world. And with globalisation, with the mutual co-operation and assistance -particularly with reference to the law of comparative advantage- it is going to be beneficial. Globalisation also helps reducing the poverty level in the country-there are plenty of evidences and record to support it.Developing countries specially require globalization
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concentration on scare financial capital to a concentration upon scare human capital as cited by Bartlett and Ghoshal (2002). There is no doubt that financial capital is most important tools for an organization to grow and expand but capital by itself does not create wealth. The strategic capital of the current society is the human resource. Knowledge has become the key factor of every modern organization. A knowledge employee is able to create an idea without capital, knowledge is brain power. As
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currency there is no limit on how much you can have of it. Thus making it priority one for the means to sustain life. Others with greed and big businesses that make their money with profit or so called capital. Starting with the three easy steps or so essentials to start witch are land labor and capital, but there is one additional step to that process which is knowledge. This is where the professional workers or brain workers if you will. That have and now taken over the capitalist way. Making it a
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