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Green Finance: Making the Transition to a Climate-Resilient Future
A Digital Future: Financial Services and the Generation Game

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Ready for lift off?

Europe’s financial services industry is getting its mojo back, finds EIU survey

Micro-insurance: here to stay

From business opportunity to open innovation lab

M&A: The comeback kid

M&A activity poised for recovery in 2014, finds EIU survey

Local currency debt: Laggard

Why hasn’t the rebound in local currency bonds been more robust?

Restoring confidence: Risk management capabilities in the wake of the financial crisis

Report Summary

Restoring Confidence

The corporations and communities debates

Should giving to charity be part of a company’s social responsibilities? This was the question the Economist Intelligence Unit (EIU) sought to explore in the first round of its Corporations and Communities Debate series. The motion chosen was: “CSR has nothing to do with charity”. The idea was to provoke discussion on whether or not companies should treat philanthropic contributions as an important part of their social responsibilities—or whether businesses can have a greater social impact by leaving charity to others and doing what they do best: making money.

Measuring the soft costs of cybercrime: a hard problem in need of a solution

Cyberattacks come in many forms, and each can entail soft costs of different kinds and magnitudes. Cyberthieves could steal sensitive personal data, taking the trust of current and future customers with them. “Hacktivists” could immobilize a website, causing customer frustration and bad press. Competitors could lift product designs and take over the market with low-cost copies. And hostile nations could disrupt or destroy services and facilities vital to a healthy economy.

What’s in a number? Estimating the cost of cybercrime

If you need to understand property crime in the US, visit the Federal Bureau of Investigation’s website. Its Uniform Crime Report will tell you how many offenses were committed nationally in 2011 (9,063,173) and of what type (burglary 24%, larceny 68% and motor vehicle theft 7.9%). It will also give you an estimate of how much property crime cost the US economy that year ($15.6bn).

The Good Bank

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