Summary
 
 

“I conceive that the great part of the miseries of mankind are brought upon them by false estimates they have made of the value of things.”

 

Benjamin Franklin

 

In the wake of the recession, the collapse of large parts of the financial sector and the crisis of legitimacy faced by leading corporations, the words of Benjamin Franklin ring true.

 

In response to these challenges, CIMA and Tomorrow’s Company have together created ‘The Tomorrow's Value lecture series’. This outstanding series of lectures is bringing together some of the most senior figures from the global business world to explore, question and probe what we mean by value - how it is created, how it can be measured, and what the drivers of value creation are.

 

Tomorrow’s Company argues that business can, must and should be a ‘force for good’ – and that enduring value is increasingly created by aligning economic imperatives with social and environmental drivers. This ‘triple context’ frames the operating environment for business, with the result that for global companies, business success and sustainability are mutually reinforcing.

 

CIMA has a unique relationship with finance directors and others who together must ‘earth’ this new value agenda with its practical translation into metrics of performance, providing essential data and informing the critical decisions of management teams, company boards, investors and other key stakeholders.

 

The lectures so far offer no easy solutions but we are convinced that the questions they have posed are essential to raise – and we are confident that this programme has begun the dialogue and inspired the robust and rigorous thinking needed to start to provide much-needed answers.

 

It will not be sufficient, we believe, to rely on propping up the economy using the policy levers of the last century – rather we need to create a new mindset, which provides a far clearer understanding of what shape the economy of the future will take.

 

We argue that recognising the responsibilities of stewardship, to create economic, social and environmental capital, will provide a powerful framework for financial, investment and other critical business decisions.

 

In understanding how to do this in practice, we will be creating Tomorrow’s Value.

 

Tony Manwaring                                        Charles Tilley

Chief Executive                                          Chief Executive

Tomorrow’s Company                             CIMA

 
 
Click here for more on our latest Tomorrow's Value lecture at our annual parliamentary reception at the House of Lords, where Paul Abberley, Chief Executive of Aviva Investors gave a keynote on Investing in Stewardship. 
 

 

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posted by Admin  on February 24, 2011
Tomorrow's Company has played an important and leading role in developing the argument for stewardship, and in so doing has helped to create the conditions which have led to the establishment of the Stewardship Code in the UK.   We are now building on this impact, to establish a new momentum for stewardship and understanding of what this means in practice - by tackling both the demand side (setting out  'Why Stewardship Matters' and developing toolkits to help each participant in the system to be more effective in their pursuit of stewardship) and the supply side (working with fund managers, investment consultants and FRC to develop the “stewardship spectrum” and establishing criteria through which excellence in stewardship might be identified and rewarded in the market). Normal 0 false false false EN-GB X-NONE X-NONE MicrosoftInternetExplorer4 DefSemiHidden="true" DefQFormat="false"...
     

posted by Admin  on December 15, 2010
This brief will lay out the structures of the World Peace Partnership (WPP) and World Peace Festival. It will detail the potential platform created for corporate sponsorship, where companies will not only be able to showcase their Corporate Social Responsibility and sustainability programmes, but also to demonstrate their integrity and relevance.
     



posted by David  on July 18, 2011
In 1944, FD Roosevelt proposed a new Bill of Rights.  Due to his untimely death it was never progressed.  Perhaps it is time to pick up his ideas once again. 
     

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