Here is the synopsis of our sample research paper on The Impact of Government Regulations on Corporate Finance. Have the paper e-mailed to you 24/7/365.
Essay / Research Paper Abstract
10
pages. There is no doubt that government regulations oftentimes
cut into corporate profits as corporations are made to follow
regulations and restrictions imposed by the government. While
this can cut into the profits of a company, thus lessening the
shareholder wealth, at the same time businesses do have an
ethical obligation to follow these imposed regulations in order
to comply with regulations that are enacted for the good of the
environment and other major concerns. Bibliography lists 11
sources.
Page Count:
10 pages (~225 words per page)
File: D0_JGAcrpev.doc
Buy This Term Paper »
 
Unformatted sample text from the term paper:
While this can cut into the profits of a company, thus lessening the shareholder wealth, at the same time businesses do have an ethical obligation to follow these imposed regulations
in order to comply with regulations that are enacted for the good of the environment and other major concerns. REGULATIONS BY GOVERNMENT
There will likely be no end to the long-term relationship between government regulation and business. The two entities have become familiar bedfellows throughout the near and far past as
government agencies continually attempt to place their direction upon commerce. Hit particularly hard by governmental infiltration are the small businesses, which are said to be the "engine that drives
the economy" (Torres, 1998, p. C2-6). It has been surmised that small businesses are frequently misunderstood by the government with regard to the concerns that revolve around industry-related issues.
This misinterpretation has led the government to become unfamiliar with the true concerns surrounding small business owners. An example of this that
illustrates such gross misunderstanding is the fact that the government rates capital concern as the primary problem, when in actuality a California survey showed that it was fourth on the
list of small business owners. Before capital were more important issues of labor availability, state and federal taxes. "You have workers that are often difficult to train when
willing, but are often unwilling to really work and earn their way" (Torres, 1998, p. C2-6). To demonstrate the escalating power government has
upon the business world, statistics representing such a stronghold show that the previous Federal Register, which boasted an overwhelming forty-one thousand pages in the nineteen eighties, now reflects over ninety-six
...