tangible assets
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2022 ◽  
Vol 6 (1) ◽  
pp. 28-37
Author(s):  
Sarah Yuliarini ◽  
Titik Inayati

Intrinsic aspect  that is owned by internal management on policies related to the corporation social responsibility (CSR) program leads to the results the company wants to achieve their purposes. Based on the context of intrinsic factors, this study intends to explore facts from the internal management of a company regarding the compatible concept for sustainable development (SD) as company achievements on CSR as a program that is run by the company. This research was conducted with a qualitative approach and strengthened by a triangulation process with supporting data from the company's Sustainability Report (SR). Monetary quantity parameter or economy aspect of corporate wealth (such as tangible assets be classified as internal features or extrinsic factor) have relatable impact to sustainable development (SD), with semantic analysis method revealed intrinsic factor have not it. The contribution to outcomes is to create a conceptual framework for categories associated with sustainable development through the CSR program that is required by the government for companies to implement in Indonesia. The implication of the research is found the CSR reporting supporting economic aspect, strengthen sustainable development in practices.  


2021 ◽  
pp. 089976402110655
Author(s):  
Inigo Garcia-Rodriguez ◽  
M. Elena Romero-Merino ◽  
Marcos Santamaria-Mariscal

This article examines the capital structure and debt maturity in nonprofit organizations (NPOs). In particular, we analyze whether these financing decisions are made as expected according to the two main theories used to explain the capital structure, that is, the trade-off and pecking order theories. To do so, we study the associations between NPOs’ indebtedness and their size, age, tangibility, liquidity, profitability, risk, and growth. We use fixed effects, probit, and Heckman selection models with unbalanced panel data containing 8,721 charities in the United Kingdom for the period 2011–2018 (60,222 year-obs). Our results show that the financing patterns of NPOs are consistent with the arguments of the pecking order theory. We also find that less than half of our sample uses long-term debt. Moreover, debt maturity is longer in larger NPOs, those with more tangible assets, or those with higher liquidity.


Author(s):  
Donald R. Lessard ◽  
D. Eleanor Westney

Strategy in a global setting involves competition in industries that extend across national boundaries and among firms with different national home bases that may tap into strategic resources in more than one location. The resources that the firm accesses from its home country provide it with international competitive advantage only if they are relevant in other markets, if the value they create is appropriable, and if they are transferable to those markets (RAT), These resources include tangible assets and factors of production, but, importantly, also the capabilities the firm develops. Similarly, the resources that it taps from other contexts provide it with further competitive advantage only if these resources are complementary to the firm’s existing resources, appropriable, and transferable to the locations where it can exploit them (CAT). These two sets of factors—RAT and CAT—provide a framework for international strategic decisions that emphasizes developing, acquiring, and transferring capabilities.


2021 ◽  
Vol 14(63) (2) ◽  
pp. 67-72
Author(s):  
Carmen Elena Anton ◽  

Accounting policies are access ways which companies can use to fulfil the development strategies envisaged. According to the accounting regulations currently applicable in Romania, the accounting policies are specific to each company and subject to approval by the management, and they are constantly applied from one financial year to another. The revaluation of the tangible assets is part of the options available to managers. Nevertheless, their implementation is based on a prior analysis of the impact on performance. The aim of this paper is to identify the influences that this accounting policy has on the company’s performance


2021 ◽  
Vol 14 (12) ◽  
pp. 579
Author(s):  
Ioannis E. Tsolas

The purpose of this paper is to investigate the relationship between a firm’s capital structure (i.e., leverage) and its operating environment, taking into account firm (i.e., efficiency, asset structure, profitability, size, age and risk) and industry effects. For a sample of Greek pharmaceutical, cosmetic and detergent (PCD) enterprises, firm efficiency was estimated using bootstrapped data envelopment analysis (DEA), and a leverage model was produced using ordinary least squares (OLS) regression. The findings confirm the significance of firm efficiency (i.e., the franchise-value hypothesis over the efficiency-risk hypothesis) and asset structure on leverage. Efficiency and overall and short-term leverage have a significant negative relationship, indicating that more efficient firms tend to choose a relatively low debt ratio. Pharma firms are more affected since they are less efficient than cosmetics and detergents firms. Furthermore, asset structure and short- and long- term leverage have a significant negative and positive relationship, respectively, indicating that the firms with more tangible assets have less short-term debt and more long-term debt in their capital structure. Cosmetic and detergent firms, which have slightly more tangible assets than pharma firms, appear to be able to substitute high-cost, short-term debt with the low-cost, long-term debt by using such assets as collateral.


2021 ◽  
Vol 4 (27) ◽  
pp. 122-126
Author(s):  
A.V. Aleksandrov ◽  

Despite the fact that not all intangible assets are represented and valued by small and medium-sized enterprises, their connection with economic and financial decisions within the framework of sustainability and strategic growth in crisis conditions is important, since it allows achieving success (profit) now and in the future. The article presents qualitative indicators characterizing a small business unit, the essence and characteristics of in-tangible assets. The directions of develop-ment of the system of intangible assets as the basis for ensuring sustainability and stra-tegic growth, based on the relationship of four components: financial, customer, inter-nal processes, innovation and training, are proposed. The purpose of the article is to draw attention to the existence and im-portance of intangible assets in small busi-ness.


2021 ◽  
Vol 25 (3) ◽  
pp. 18-32
Author(s):  
T. Saiful Bahri ◽  
Dedi Budiman Hakim ◽  
Bambang Juanda ◽  
Sahara Sahara

Purpose: Attention to the capacity of rice milling companies is very important because this company is the main business actor that creates added value. This study aims: (1) to identify the determinants of the performance of the rice milling industry based on the Resources Based View (RBV) framework and (2) to formulate the structural relationship that occurs between the resources of rice milling companies on business performance.    Methodology/Approach: RBV framework and formulate the structural relationships that occur between company resources and business performance Through the SEM-PLS method. Findings: Structurally, the results of the analysis show that the performance of rice mills is directly determined by reputation with the largest path coefficient of 0.856 and is then followed by marketing differentiation 0.184 and human capital 0.1822, while tangible assets directly have a negative relationship (-0.236) but indirectly through the latent variable the reputation as a mediator has a greater (0.558) and significant positive relationship. Research Limitation/Implication: The research has empirical implications that not all RBV dimensions can predict the performance of the rice industry, especially organizational variables. This illustrates that in reality in the manufacturing industry, organizational function variables do not really affect the produced. Originality/Value of paper: This article becomes an important for policymakers in Aceh Province to develop the rice milling industry based on the RBV.


2021 ◽  
pp. 162-182
Author(s):  
Linda Essig

All too often, artists who are attentive to the 'business' of their creative practice are accused of 'selling out'. But for many working artists, that attention to business — to revenue generation, asset accrual, the arts economy — is what enables an artist to not just survive, but to thrive. When artists follow their mission, or organizations theirs, they don’t sell out, they spiral up by keeping mission at the forefront. Money and other tangible assets are not their end goal — they are instead the means toward the end of artistic and cultural production. As I talked with artists and arts infrastructure leaders about what makes their work sustainable, an unexpected theme emerged: property ownership. This essay looks at artists, organizations, and communities that own property to see the ways in which missions drive decision-making, assets are maximized, and 'success', however it is defined, can be sustained. When property ownership is part of that sustainability equation, history, agency, and racial equity also become matters of concern.


2021 ◽  
Vol 7 (4) ◽  
pp. 216
Author(s):  
Mostafa A. Ali ◽  
Nazimah Hussin ◽  
Hossam Haddad ◽  
Reem Al-Araj ◽  
Ibtihal A. Abed

The current economic trend worldwide is for an industrial economy based on tangible assets to convert into a non-tangible economy based on intellectual capital. Lately, a multidimensional view of intellectual capital and its implications on innovation performance have generated renewed research interests. Based on these facts, the relationship amongst different antecedent factors such as culture and trust on intellectual capital components was analysed. In addition, a correlation among intellectual capital components (as non-tangible assets) and innovation performance for the banking sector was established. The positivism philosophy, deductive approach and quantitative methods were used as the research methodology to accomplish the research objectives. In this process, a questionnaire survey and purposive sampling technique were used to collect the responses from 364 employees of the Iraqi commercial banks. The obtained data were analysed statistically using the SPSS v25 and AMOS v24 software. The results revealed a significant impact of culture and trust (antecedent factors) on various intellectual capital components. Furthermore, a strong connection between these antecedent factors and intellectual capital components was evidenced, confirming the study hypotheses. Interestingly, intellectual capital components were found to enhance significantly the innovation performance of the banks, leading to better competitive advantages. In addition, it provided evidence on the impacts of inter-relationships amongst human, structural and relational capitals. Consequently, the study provides academicians and practitioners valuable insights into and guidance on how developing intellectual capital enhances competitive performance, especially in the context of Iraqi commercial banks.


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