Episodes
Dr Mike Lucas of The Open University Business School explains how the experience of working and teaching in accounting and finance has forced him to a fundamental reappraisal of the idea that businesses’ objective is to maximise shareholder wealth.
Published 03/09/10
Dr Mike Lucas of The Open University Business School explains how the experience of working and teaching in accounting and finance has forced him to a fundamental reappraisal of the idea that businesses’ objective is to maximise shareholder wealth.
Published 03/09/10
Alan Shipman of The Open University Economics Department recalls the origins and optimistic expectations of the shareholder value ‘revolution’, inspired by economic ideas of profit-maximisation and a political turn against profligate management.
Published 03/09/10
Alan Shipman of The Open University Economics Department recalls the origins and optimistic expectations of the shareholder value ‘revolution’, inspired by economic ideas of profit-maximisation and a political turn against profligate management.
Published 03/09/10
Dr Mike Lucas probes the shareholder value model, identifying its adverse effects on employees, consumers, the social and natural environment – and ultimately on shareholders themselves.
Published 03/09/10
Dr Mike Lucas probes the shareholder value model, identifying its adverse effects on employees, consumers, the social and natural environment – and ultimately on shareholders themselves.
Published 03/09/10
Alan Shipman examines the unintended fallout from the shareholder value ‘revolution’, and reasons for the rapid rise and fall of value-driven productivity and profits.
Published 03/09/10
Alan Shipman examines the unintended fallout from the shareholder value ‘revolution’, and reasons for the rapid rise and fall of value-driven productivity and profits.
Published 03/09/10
Dr Mike Lucas outlines the key aspects of a Buddhist approach to business and economics, and its potential for a fundamental break from the individualism and constant expansionism of conventional economics.
Published 03/09/10
Dr Mike Lucas outlines the key aspects of a Buddhist approach to business and economics, and its potential for a fundamental break from the individualism and constant expansionism of conventional economics.
Published 03/09/10
Dr Mike Lucas explains the implications of a new business model based on Buddhist economics, and how it could promote a new governance structure re-connecting the corporation with the community.
Published 03/09/10
Dr Mike Lucas explains the implications of a new business model based on Buddhist economics, and how it could promote a new governance structure re-connecting the corporation with the community.
Published 03/09/10
Dr Mike Lucas looks at the social implications of a new business model based on Buddhist economics.
Published 03/09/10
Dr Mike Lucas looks at the social implications of a new business model based on Buddhist economics.
Published 03/09/10
Alan Shipman highlights the range of partnership, family, mutual and cooperative enterprises which have successfully resisted pressures to become a ‘public limited company’, and whose market leadership adds to the pressure to reform the shareholder model.
Published 03/09/10
Alan Shipman highlights the range of partnership, family, mutual and cooperative enterprises which have successfully resisted pressures to become a ‘public limited company’, and whose market leadership adds to the pressure to reform the shareholder model.
Published 03/09/10
Dr Mike Lucas assesses the changes to conventional accounting methods, and management teaching, that would be needed to establish a new business model based on Buddhist economics.
Published 03/09/10
Dr Mike Lucas assesses the changes to conventional accounting methods, and management teaching, that would be needed to establish a new business model based on Buddhist economics.
Published 03/09/10
Alan Shipman and Dr Mike Lucas of The Open University discuss the problems of adopting new business models in a world where accounting and business education are still dominated by profit-maximising ‘shareholder value’, and the challenges ahead for those pursuing a Buddhist economics alternative.
Published 03/09/10
Alan Shipman and Dr Mike Lucas of The Open University discuss the problems of adopting new business models in a world where accounting and business education are still dominated by profit-maximising ‘shareholder value’, and the challenges ahead for those pursuing a Buddhist economics alternative.
Published 03/09/10