Plus d’un million de livres à portée de main !
Bookbot

Douglas McWilliams

    Capital Markets and Corporate Governance
    Alexander La' Vay
    The flat white economy
    • Since the financial collapse the 'Flat White Economy' has spawned four times more jobs than the City lost in the crisis. London is now growing one and a half times faster than Hong Kong as a result- a driving force behind this triumph of lifestyle and economics, being immigration. Leading economist Douglas McWilliams describes how this meteoric success, named after its favourite coffee and centred on East London, has swapped the City's champagne and supercars lifestyle for bicycles and boho flats and has become the prototype for digital cities around the world including the rest of the UK.

      The flat white economy
    • I know of life, death, heaven, the devil, hell, soul, mind, the universe, nature, love, consciousness and the personal and the reservoir, of the unconscious, and God. Alexander La'Vay is four of the big religions of the world; Christianity, Judaism, Buddhism and Islam, there are four main individuals in the book, Marie, David, Lara and Caydn, and their effect, their religions' effect, on all of humanity. This book is brutal at times, there is strong coarse language, it is loving, erotic, purposeful, beautiful, cruel and kind.

      Alexander La' Vay
    • Capital Markets and Corporate Governance

      • 349pages
      • 13 heures de lecture

      The debate over corporate governance, or how companies are controlled, has flourished vigorously for several years in the U.S. and has now spread to the U.K. This book collects papers by leading academics, bankers, and consultants which discuss major issues in corporate governance in the U.K., Germany, and Japan. It examines the role of shareholders, company boards, and managers under a market-based system as exists in the U.K. and the U.S. in comparison with the insider system found in Japan and, to a lesser extent, Germany. The issue of the effectiveness of the British system and how it might be made more efficient through increasing the accountability of company boards to shareholders, both directly and via the capital market, is extensively discussed.

      Capital Markets and Corporate Governance