Corporate social responsibility and Corporate treasury: Difference between pages

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imported>Doug Williamson
(Replace 'business' with appropriate references to 'organisation'. Replace 'regardless of legality' with fuller explanation.)
 
imported>Charles Cresswell
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(CSR).
Corporate treasury refers to treasury activities which are carried out in companies which use financial products to support their main business; usually a trading business. This is in contrast to treasury activities which take place in banks and financial institutions (generally providers of financial products) and in the public sector, and to work carried out by treasury professionals acting as advisers and consultants.
 
''Corporate governance''.
 
A form of corporate self-regulation integrated into a business model.  
 
Ideally, CSR policy is a built-in, self-regulating mechanism where the business or other organisation  monitors and ensures its adherence to law, ethical standards, and international norms.
 
The organisation embraces responsibility for the impact of its activities on the environment, consumers, employees, communities, stakeholders and all other members of the public sphere. The organisation also proactively promotes the public interest by encouraging community growth and development, and voluntarily eliminating practices that harm the public sphere.
 
 
All this means both (1) adherence to existing laws and (2) going significantly better than the minimum standards required by law.


The individuals who work in this function are known as corporate treasurers.


== See also ==
== See also ==
* [[Corporate governance]]
* [[Corporate treasurer]]
* [[ESG investment]]
* [[Risk management]]
* [[Ethics]]
* [[Treasury management]]
* [[Greenwash]]
 
[[Category:Corporate_Strategy]]

Revision as of 11:15, 14 June 2013

Corporate treasury refers to treasury activities which are carried out in companies which use financial products to support their main business; usually a trading business. This is in contrast to treasury activities which take place in banks and financial institutions (generally providers of financial products) and in the public sector, and to work carried out by treasury professionals acting as advisers and consultants.

The individuals who work in this function are known as corporate treasurers.

See also