Search results for "22(40)"

showing 3 items of 3 documents

Mitä mieltä, professorit?

2006

25 vuoden ikään ehtinyt Aikuiskasvatus kysyi kaikilta aikuiskasvatuksen professoreiltamme heidän näkemyksiään neljässä asiassa. Kaikkiin ei tarvinnut vastata. Tällaista kysyttiin ja näin vastasivat Yrjö Engeström ja Reijo Miettinen Helsingin yliopistosta, Anneli Eteläpelto Jyväskylän yliopistosta, Jukka Tuomisto ja Juha Suoranta Tampereen yliopistosta, Risto Rinne Turun yliopistosta, Kari E. Nurmi Lapin yliopistosta sekä vt:nä virkaa hoitava Leena Ahteenmäki-Pelkonen Joensuun yliopistosta. Vastausjärjestys on arvottu.

Ahteenmäki-Pelkonen LeenaEngeström Yrjökasvatustieteilijät [http://www.yso.fi/onto/yso/p20573]Rinne RistoMiettinen ReijoGeneral MedicineGeneral Chemistrytiede [http://www.yso.fi/onto/yso/p2240]Eteläpelto Annelitiedelehdet [http://www.yso.fi/onto/yso/p10315]Nurmi Kari E.Tuomisto JukkaSuoranta Juhatutkimus [http://www.yso.fi/onto/yso/p183]aikuiskoulutus [http://www.yso.fi/onto/yso/p300][Aikuiskasvatus]aikuiskasvatus [http://www.yso.fi/onto/yso/p10754]professorit [http://www.yso.fi/onto/yso/p17044]Aikuiskasvatus
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Financialisation, regional economic development and the coronavirus crisis: a time for spatial monetary policy?

2021

Abstract This paper argues that ‘spatial monetary policy’ may be needed to achieve more territorially balanced economic development. Central banks have been key in fostering financialised economies while also preventing their collapse in times of crisis—a role further strengthened by the coronavirus pandemic. Central banks have thus become the most powerful economic policy-making institutions, just when spatial disparities are likely to deepen. In the context of crisis-ridden financialised capitalism, regional development policies should consider the spatial implications of central bank interventions and recognise monetary policy as a key element of spatial policy. Simultaneously, monetary …

MacroeconomicsJel/G01Economics and EconometricsSociology and Political Sciencecentral banksGeography Planning and DevelopmentAcademicSubjects/SOC023300211 other engineering and technologies0507 social and economic geographyAcademicSubjects/SOC00790monetary policy02 engineering and technologymedicine.disease_causemedicineEconomicsJel/E52financialisationCoronavirusJel/E58AcademicSubjects/SOC0224005 social sciencesMonetary policyAcademicSubjects/SOC01890021107 urban & regional planningregional developmentManuscriptJel/R58spatial policycrisis8. Economic growth050703 geographyCambridge Journal of Regions, Economy and Society
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Responsible Investment: Taxes and Paradoxes

2017

Abstract Taxes have become an issue of corporate social responsibility (CSR), but the role of taxation is to some extent an ambiguous and controversial issue in the CSR framework. Similarly, another unclear question is what role investors who are committed to sustainable and responsible investment (SRI) see taxes as having on their environmental, social, and governance (ESG) agenda. Corporate taxes have an inverse relationship with the return of the investors: taxes paid directly affect what is left on the bottom line, reducing the return of investors. However, investors are now more aware of tax-related risks, which can include different forms of reputation risk. Corporate tax planning may…

corporate social responsibility (CSR)media_common.quotation_subjectcorporate governanceCommercial lawAffect (psychology)yritysverotusPublic lawESG0502 economics and businesssustainable and responsible investment (SRI)verosuunnitteluCorporate taxmedia_commonPublic economicssustainable and responsible investment (sri)Corporate governance05 social sciencesRevenue. Taxation. Internal revenueHJ2240-5908050201 accountingInvestment (macroeconomics)yrityksetcorporate taxessosiaalinen vastuucorporate social responsibility (csr)esgaggressive tax planningCorporate social responsibilityBusiness050203 business & managementReputationNordic Tax Journal
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