![]() |
|
|
|
| July 2, 2002 |
|
Aid to Africa, Farm Aid, and Media Performance
CIBC/Chamber Weekly CEO/Business Leader Poll by COMPAS in the Financial Post |
|||
|
IAddressing the Chretien government’s agenda for the G8 summit in Kananaskis, Alberta, business leaders gave the general effectiveness of foreign aid to Africa a poor grade. They are particularly concerned about the financial and social consequences of a misappropriation of funds by corrupt recipient governments. Business leaders are nonetheless enthusiastic about foreign aid to the extent that it focuses on education, and they favour a strong role for NGOs and serious efforts to facilitate African exports to Canada.
Business leaders meanwhile seem to agree with the $8 billion farm subsidy program, perceived as inevitable in light of American agricultural subsidies. The Canadian CEOs and business leaders also concurred that there needs to be more media attention given to objective experts and less to radical street demonstrations. These are the key findings from the current web-survey of CEOs and other business leaders conducted by COMPAS on behalf of the National Post under sponsorship of the Canadian Chamber of Commerce and CIBC. the week following the WorldCom scandal, the largest accounting scandal to date, Canadian business leaders have experienced a dramatic loss of confidence in the accounting firms servicing publicly traded companies, foresee an extended bear market, and believe that the future will lie with dividend-paying stocks. Business leaders blame most of all senior management and accounting firms. They assign some blame for the saga of scandal to investment dealers, securities regulators, and governments for privileging capital gains over dividends in tax policy, thereby providing an incentive for accounting irregularities. Few respondents assign much blame to the business press for poor reporting or mutual funds for poor assessment of accounting risk when making their investments. These are the key findings from the current web-survey of CEOs and other business leaders conducted by COMPAS on behalf of the National Post under sponsorship of the Canadian Chamber of Commerce and CIBC. |
|||
|
|
|||
|
|||
|
|