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A 2016 round up on international trade

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Best practice in risk management

As companies deepen their investment in emerging markets, extend their supply chains and face increasing pressure from regulators, investors and other stakeholders to increase transparency and disclosure, the executives tasked with risk management assume an ever-greater responsibility for the smooth running of the business. Once largely associated with insurance, compliance and loss avoidance, the risk management function has been transformed in recent years and is now firmly entrenched as a board-level concern.

From burden to benefit

It is an irony of modern business that regulation, a concept designed to reduce risk by protecting the interests of corporates, customers and society at large, has itself become one of the most serious risks that companies face. From dealing with unfamiliar regulatory frameworks in overseas markets to scanning the environment for new threats, regulatory risk management has become a time-consuming and costly activity that demands board-level engagement and a rigorous approach.

Managing risk in perilous times

Chief risk officers at the world's financial institutions are unlikely to look back fondly on 2008. Within little more than a year, the international financial system had been brought to the brink of collapse following five years of unprecedented growth. And while there were many actors to blame for the situation—not least a combination of negligent lending, irresponsible borrowing and unrestrained economic expansion—poor management of risk was widely seen as an important culprit.

CEO Briefing 2009

CEO Briefing 2009: For corporate pioneers is a Norton Rose report, written in cooperation with the Economist Intelligence Unit. 

The Economist Intelligence Unit surveyed over 900 senior executives across a range of industries and markets worldwide and spoke in depth with 19 CEOs and other senior executives to find out their take on the global economy following the fiscal and economicturmoil of 2008.

The austere traveller

The Economist Intelligence Unit surveyed 354 executives worldwide in November and December 2008 to obtain their views on how the global economic downturn will feed into corporate travel plans,with particular focus on the impact on the hotel sector. All of the executives surveyed travel at least once a quarter for business, with 37% travelling more than once a month and 7% travelling weekly. Forty-four percent of the executives in this survey were C-Level/board level, with the remaining senior executives and other managers.

The entrepreneur in adversity

Written by the Economist Intelligence Unit on behalf of Barclays Wealth, this seventh volume of Barclays Wealth Insights examines the characteristics and motivations of entrepreneurs in a challenging economic environment.

Perseverance becomes an essential quality for entrepreneurs in a challenging environment

Family business

Written by the Economist Intelligence Unit on behalf of Barclays Wealth, this eighth volume of Barclays Wealth Insights examines the characteristics and motivations of family businesses, with particular emphasis on today’s challenging economic environment.

Beyond box-ticking

The boardroom has always been the preserve of the gifted, the ambitious and the self-confident. In Anglo-Saxon business culture, board-level executives wield substantial power and, while other stakeholders have a voice, it is predominantly the views of these top few board members that count in terms of business planning and strategy.

Managing supply-chain risk for reward

For several years, it has been possible to correlate effective supply-chain management with above-average market performance. Boston-based AMR Research, for example, pegged the average return of companies in its 2007 "Supply Chain Top 25" list at nearly 18%, compared with less than 6.5% for the Dow Jones Industrial Average.

Manufacturing confidence

It is not hard to grasp the difficulties facing manufacturing companies today. Newspaper headlines tell stories of falling orders, plant closings, asset sales and job losses in the thousands.

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