GEOG 352: Day 20 Chapter 11. Housekeeping Items We have two presentations today: Keltie and Bryce. Diego will present on Tuesday due to an out-of-town.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
The Circular Flow Model
Advertisements

FINANCIAL MANAGEMENT I AND II
Chapter 9: Sources of Capital
Accounting: The Language
International Business 9e By Charles W.L. Hill McGraw-Hill/Irwin Copyright © 2013 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved.
International finance. The Balance-of- Payments Accounts Chapter 1.
Designing Compensation and Benefit Packages
A Growing Economy Chapter 10, Lesson 1.
Personal Finance Benchmark Demonstrate an understand that personal spending, saving, and credit decisions have significant implications for the.
BUSINESS ORGANIZATIONS
Introduction to Financial Management
Labour’s 2015 Manifesto Consultation Process: 1.‘Conversations’ ( ) 2.‘Policy Commissions’ produce consultation papers 3.Papers to the National Policy.
Leaving Certificate 1 © PDST Home Economics. Mortgage  A mortgage is a loan from a lending agency to buy a house  The loan is usually repaid in monthly.
Compensation Stock Options and Other Equity Based Compensation.
Chapter 7 The Government Sector. Introduction: The Growing Economic Role of Government Most of the growth over the past seven decades was due to the Depression.
FIN 3000 Chapter 1 Principles of Finance Liuren Wu FIN3000, Liurn Wu.
The Corporation Chapter 1. Chapter Outline 1.1 The Types of Firms 1.2 Ownership Versus Control of Corporations 1.3 The Stock Market.
FIN 3000 Chapter 1: Principles of finance Liuren Wu.
Saving, Investment and the Financial System
Any Questions from Last Class?. Chapter 3 Benefits, Costs, and Decisions COPYRIGHT © 2008 Thomson South-Western, a part of The Thomson Corporation. Thomson,
Chapter McGraw-Hill Ryerson © 2013 McGraw-Hill Ryerson Limited Introduction To Corporate Finance 1 Prepared by Anne Inglis.
Chapter 8: Financial Structure, Transaction Costs, and Asymmetric Information Chapter Objectives Describe how nonfinancial companies meet their external.
Dallas Hall, Chuck Dobson, Guy Tahye & Tunde Olabiyi.
The Economic System By Dr. Frank Elwell. The Economic System The way that a society is organized to produce and distribute goods and services is the crucial.
Macroeconomics Lecture 5.
Part 4 PowerPoint Presentation by Charlie Cook Copyright © 2003 South-Western College Publishing. All rights reserved. All rights reserved. Finding Sources.
Copyright © 2010 Pearson Addison-Wesley. All rights reserved. Chapter 14 Deficit Spending and The Public Debt.
Chapter Five: Measuring The Economy's Performance.
Lesson Objectives: By the end of this lesson you will be able to: *Explain the rise of mixed economic systems. *Interpret a circular flow model of a mixed.
Chapter 11 Financial Markets.
Planning INFLATION- the general rise in price of goods and services (savings must exceed) You have to have a plan for retirement Years ago companies had.
Chapter 16 Capital Structure.
3.5 Financial Accounts Chapter 22. What are ACCOUNTS? Financial records of business transactions which provide information to groups within and outside.
The Co-operative Development Institute  Northeast Co-operative Development Center founded in 1994 by co-op leaders.  A 501c3 Non-Profit.
Responses to Inflation Kenneth A. Carow, PhD, CFA Indianapolis, IN October 12, 2015.
The world’s new financial brokers Based on the article by Diana Farrell, Susan Lund McKinsey Quarterly, 2008 Number 1 By A.V. Vedpuriswar.
What will I learn We are learning to understand how Local Authorities are financed.
Accounting Principles Second Canadian Edition Prepared by: Carole Bowman, Sheridan College Weygandt · Kieso · Kimmel · Trenholm.
Sources of Finance – Location 3.1 Standard Grade Business Management.
Chapter 11 Financial Markets. Investment Investment is the act of redirecting resources from being consumed today so that they may create benefits in.
Expanded Ledgers. Providing the Information Solution What we need to do is take all the transactions from E. Boa, Capital and start putting them into.
McGraw-Hill/Irwin Corporate Finance, 7/e Eighth Edition.
Chapter Outline 9.1Principals of Business Valuation Valuation Formula Components of the Opportunity Cost of Capital Compensation for Risk 9.2Risk Management.
© Edco Positive Economics Chapter 23. © Edco Positive Economics How Does the Government Intervene in the Economy? Collect taxes Pay social.
Chapter 24: Corporate Taxation To its detractors, the corporate income tax is a major drag on productivity in the corporate sector, and the reduction in.
CH 5.1 Supply Law of Supply Supply Curve Elasticity of supply Law of Supply Supply Curve Elasticity of supply.
Copyright © 2010 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved.McGraw-Hill/Irwin The Balance-of- Payments Accounts.
E. Napp Saving and Investing In this lesson, students will be able to identify characteristics of saving and investing. Students will be able to identify.
+ Chapter 11 Ownership Transfer: Accelerating Transition Jessica Pyett & Larissa Thelin.
GEOG 352: Day 21 Chapter 11. Housekeeping Items Any reactions to Maria Ines’s presentation? One-page mini- essays due on Thursday. We have two presentations.
Public vs Private Money Supply Current situation Currently the money supply fluctuates cyclically every decade or so causing havoc to businesses, jobs.
VALUATION OF SHARES AND DEBENTURE. NEED OR PURPOSE  When two or more companies amalgamate or one company absorb another company.  When a company has.
GEOG 352: Day 22 Presentations. Housekeeping Items  There are a number of events coming up related to climate change: on Tuesday the 24 th, there will.
Announcements It’s LSAT week! I take the test on Saturday. If you are sick, stay AWAY from me Most of IA material will be covered this week Summatives.
1.02 ~ ECONOMIC ACTIVITIES AND CONDITIONS CHAPTER 2 MEASURING ECONOMIC ACTIVITY.
Financial Management Decisions n Investment: What assets to own? n Financing: How to pay for those assets? n Dividend: What to do with Net Income?
 Capital Spending: money spent by a business for an item that will be used over a long period.  Capital Projects: spending by businesses for items such.
The Scope Of Corporate Finance Professor XXXXX Course Name / Number.
Supply.  Labor and output  One basic question every business owner must answer is how many workers to hire  Marginal product of labor: the change of.
Middle East Economies Saudi Arabia, Iran, Israel, and Turkey.
INVESTMENT ALTERNATIVES Chapter 2. ALTERNATIVES IN INVESTMENTS Investment avenues are the outlets of funds. There are varieties of investment avenues.
BALANCE SHEET. Starter – DON’T LOOK IN BOOKS !!! What does a Trading, Profit and Loss Account show? What does an Appropriation Account show? How is it.
Chapter 7 Obtaining the Right Financing for Your Business University of Bahrain College of Business Administration MGT 239: Small Business MGT239 1.
1. What would you do with $5,000? Be specific. 2. What percentage of taxes should the government take? 3. Where is the safest place to keep your money?
Accounting: The Language
Role of the state in the macroeconomy: public expenditure
Great notes for each chapter
CHAPTER 8 Personal Finance.
CHAPTER 8 Personal Finance.
CHAPTER 8 Personal Finance.
Presentation transcript:

GEOG 352: Day 20 Chapter 11

Housekeeping Items We have two presentations today: Keltie and Bryce. Diego will present on Tuesday due to an out-of-town game. I will also present on Chapter 11. Here’s the schedule so far for the mini-presentations on the case studies. We need more volunteers. You can use PowerPoint or not, though PowerPoint gives the audience more to fix on. Address the following in bullet form: what and where is the case? What does the case organization do? What organizational format (co-op, responsible business, etc.)? Forms of capital addressed? Strengths and weaknesses? Lessons and applicability (or not) elsewhere? Keep to 5-8 minutes + Q & A.

Schedule for Mini-Presentations datename Kyle13th Sacia, Mike, Melany18th Sarah, Amy, Rob, Bryce, Keltie20th Zane, Jen, Diego, Jesse25th Emmanuel, Maya27th Jordan? Jayme?

Following Up on “Commons” vs. Open Access Systems Scholarpedia: From Fennell (2011): “Open access vs. the commons. When Hardin (1968, p. 1244) asked his readers to ‘[p]icture a pasture open to all,’ he was referencing an ungoverned open-access regime from which nobody could be excluded. Yet by calling the resulting collective action problem ‘the tragedy of the commons,’ the notion of common property became conflated with the lawless (or law-free) condition of open access.”Hardin (1968, p. 1244)

Following Up on “Commons” vs. Open Access Systems The distinction between open-access and common property was made decades ago by Ciriacy- Wantrup and Bishop (1975) and has been reiterated by Ostrom (e.g. 1999, pp. 335–336; see also Schlager and Ostrom 1992) and others (e.g. McCay 1996, p. 113; Dagan and Heller 2001, pp. 556–557; Eggertsson 2003, pp. 75–76).Ciriacy- Wantrup and Bishop (1975)Schlager and Ostrom 1992 McCay 1996Dagan and Heller 2001Eggertsson 2003 Elinor Ostrom, one of the world’s leading theorists and researchers on common property systems won the Nobel Prize in 2009 for her work. See also “The Tragedy of Enclosure” by George Monbiot: of-enclosure/. of-enclosure/

Chapter 11 The authors start out by arguing that small investors don’t make much on their investments, due to the various service charges, whereas those who rake it in are the large investors who take in about 80% of all returns on investment. They cite commentators who argue that the financial sector, as it has grown in recent years, has ceased to perform a fully useful function and needs to be scaled back. Despite public outrage at the enormous bonuses paid to financial sector executives before and during the ‘crash’ of ‘07-08 and, despite the massive bailout of such firms by the public purse, the practice of self-bonusing continues. For quite some time, the financial sector was regulated, but much of that regulation disappeared in the neo-con revolution of the 1980s and after.

Chapter 11 The book discusses the disadvantages of hedge funds and of private equity schemes gutting existing firms. In addition, many corporations hide their profits in off- shore banking havens so as to avoid paying their fair share of taxes. For every dollar of “aid” that goes to developing countries, $7 comes back in the form of loan repayments and profits. In general, over the past 40 years, there has been a significant transfer of wealth from the bottom 50% to the upper 1%. Our speaker at the Film Festival, Matt Hern, claimed that the top 85 richest individuals on the planet have wealth equal to the bottom 3.5 billion people on the planet. I have not been able to verify that as yet. There are ways to spread the wealth out.

Chapter 11 One involves the mechanism of Employee Share Ownership Plans (ESOPs) where employees own shares and share profits, which offers the additional incentive of encouraging greater productivity. I don’t know the exact mechanism of Harmac, but that is an example of a worker-owned mill that was rescued from oblivion when its former multinational owner wanted to shut it down. ESOPs, combined with financial mechanisms such as JAK, might help limit the rising tide of personal debt which threatens the stability of the economy. Government debt is also exacerbated by the cuts to corporate taxes and the avoidance of corporations paying taxes in the first place, which leaves less money for public and social infrastructure.

Chapter 11 There are lots of other examples of alternatives in the book – the trusteeship model developed by Sismondi, Mill, Lewis, and ultimately Gandhi; Huey Long’s idea of minimum wages and maximum salaries; charging high resource rents on oil and gas as Norway does to pay for social programs and other government expenditures, and so on. What are your ideas?  -