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Related Special Reports
Company’s directors behaved slackly in giving CEO a $55.8bn pay package and Delaware’s chancery court has rightly intervened
The central bank rightly still worries inflation will be too low
...been called out and which has quite rightly led to an apology.”...
...With his announcement last week British prime minister Rishi Sunak has surrendered much of the UK’s leadership on implementing its 2050 net zero commitments and has rightly been condemned by business leaders...
Investors are rightly wary of listings that look to take money off the table rather than raise funds for future growth
...Proper understanding of the power asset managers have is central to the importance of what secretary Kerry rightly laments in this article. Ashley HarrisNew York, NY, US...
...Lex (“Greece’s banks cap a perhaps unlikely but remarkable comeback”, April 2) rightly points out that Greece has become a market darling following strong growth in gross domestic product and a lower 10-...
...Investors rightly prefer the separation of chair and chief executive roles, particularly in Europe. Some companies insist the case is not cut and dried. Take FTSE 250 housebuilder Vistry....
...Pilita Clark rightly chastises the “specious campaigns against so-called ‘woke capitalism’” that are causing big companies to pull back from taking serious action on climate change (“Orwellian doublethink...
...Jemima Kelly rightly draws attention to the Aristotelian nature of a lot of today’s talk about “happiness”, and asks why the characters of so few of today’s leaders would attract the admiration of others...
...The FT rightly points out that the EU is falling behind in its objectives to reach net zero (Report, April 1)....
...As the US presidential election draws nearer and Donald Trump pulls ahead of President Joe Biden in the polls, the liberal democratic hand-wringing has rightly intensified (“Biden rebukes Trump for ‘un-American...
...Lex (“Merits and demerits of stock pundits”, March 1) has rightly drawn attention to the disconnect between owning both companies being ravaged by climate change and companies responsible for the ravaging...
...But in an era when we are rightly focused on sustainability, financial sustainability also has to be a key consideration. Money must be used prudently....
...For them, quite rightly, there is only the scorn we reserve for those who see opportunity in tragedy. ★★☆☆☆ In UK cinemas from April 12 and US cinemas from May 17...
...(Business Life, March 4), rightly highlights that the practice of appointing women as chief executive simply to ensure they are the ones who take the fall when times are tough is utterly unacceptable....
...The government rightly considered what constituted “adequacy” when legislating for minimum service levels on the railways....
...The lecture starts, rightly, by recognising the priority of ending stagnation....
...Businesses will rightly continue to press for a permanent ban on customs duties on electronic transmissions....
...As the article rightly puts it: “Decline of the wonk was partly due to their own failure.” The author unfortunately goes on to claim that the wonk has not been present in the past decade....
...Soumaya Keynes rightly finds “scope for more learning” in her assessment of a Brookings Institution report on Jamaica’s foreign debt repayments (“How to squash government debt”, Opinion, April 5)....
...Tej Parikh rightly argues that the “UK needs to get better at measuring growth” (Opinion, January 26) in order to support “helping to improve the quality of the debate around growth”....
...Historian Josephine Quinn rightly identifies the revolutionary impact of adopting the alphabet on western culture (“The civilisation myth”, The Weekend Essay, Life & Arts, FT Weekend, February 3)....
...But, as the article rightly points out, improving upon HRM practices can be self-defeating, a little like a snake eating its own tail....
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