Wall Street Journal (November 30)
Germany is unfairly getting blamed for the Eurozone crisis. “The reality is that the Germans—along with the Dutch and the Finns—are the rare Europeans who understand that saving the euro requires more than a blank check. It requires a new political commitment to better economic policy…. Money alone won’t solve Europe’s more fundamental debt and growth problem.”
Germany is unfairly getting blamed for the Eurozone crisis. “The reality is that the Germans—along with the Dutch and the Finns—are the rare Europeans who understand that saving the euro requires more than a blank check. It requires a new political commitment to better economic policy…. Money alone won’t solve Europe’s more fundamental debt and growth problem.”
CorpComms (November 28)
Accuracy needs to be improved in corporate social responsibility (CSR) reports according to researchers at the University of Leeds and Euromed Management School who looked at 4,000 CSR reports. They concluded “reports often feature unsubstantiated claims, holes and inaccurate figures.” Among the biggest errors, the researchers found one Italian energy company reported carbon emissions four times those of the entire planet earth.
Accuracy needs to be improved in corporate social responsibility (CSR) reports according to researchers at the University of Leeds and Euromed Management School who looked at 4,000 CSR reports. They concluded “reports often feature unsubstantiated claims, holes and inaccurate figures.” Among the biggest errors, the researchers found one Italian energy company reported carbon emissions four times those of the entire planet earth.