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Wyświetlanie 1-3 z 3
Tytuł:
Evaluating the usefulness of cost accounting in selected business entities in light of the Covid-19 pandemic - results of the author’s survey research
Autorzy:
Moskwa-Bęczkowska, Daria
Powiązania:
https://bibliotekanauki.pl/articles/27313509.pdf
Data publikacji:
2022
Wydawca:
Politechnika Śląska. Wydawnictwo Politechniki Śląskiej
Tematy:
cost accounting
commercial companies
COVID-19 pandemic
rozliczanie kosztów
spółki handlowe
pandemia COVID-19
Opis:
Purpose: The purpose of this article is to analyze and evaluate the usefulness of the cost accounting system of selected enterprises in the Świętokrzyskie voivodeship for managing their costs under the conditions of the COVID-19 pandemic. Design/methodology/approach: The article presents the results of the author’s survey research. This research was carried out using the Computer-Assisted Web Interview survey method. Business entities from the Świętokrzyskie voivodeship with an entry in the National Court Register were invited to the survey via e-mail. These were commercial companies, mainly limited liability companies and joint-stock companies. Findings: The main conclusion of the study is that the full cost accounting used in business entities is partially useful for effective cost management of the studied entities. With the COVID-19 pandemic, there was little impact on the usefulness of cost information extracted from applied costing. Originality/value: The COVID-19 pandemic has destabilized all areas of economic and social life in Poland. Therefore, an important issue is the analysis and evaluation of its impact, which is still faced today by representatives of various industries and sectors of the Polish economy. The considerations presented here concern evaluating the utility of cost accounting systems in light of the COVID-19 pandemic. This information can be useful for those dealing with cost accounting issues and the effects of the coronavirus pandemic in theory, as well as business owners, controlling managers or accounting services staff.
Źródło:
Zeszyty Naukowe. Organizacja i Zarządzanie / Politechnika Śląska; 2022, 162; 517--525
1641-3466
Pojawia się w:
Zeszyty Naukowe. Organizacja i Zarządzanie / Politechnika Śląska
Dostawca treści:
Biblioteka Nauki
Artykuł
Tytuł:
The Issue of The Ultra Vires Principle in Turkish Company Law: Has It Been Abolished or Just Hidden?
Autorzy:
Yasan, Mustafa
Powiązania:
https://bibliotekanauki.pl/articles/1046666.pdf
Data publikacji:
2020-12-30
Wydawca:
Katolicki Uniwersytet Lubelski Jana Pawła II
Tematy:
zasada ultra vires
turecki kodeks handlowy
tureckie prawo spółek
zdolność prawna
spółki handlowe
Ultra vires principle
Turkish Code of Commerce
Turkish Company Law
Capacity to have rights and obligations
Commercial companies
Opis:
The Turkish Code of Commerce (TCC) numbered 6102 contains numerous radical regulations as reforms in the Turkish company law. One of these provisions is the TCC A.125 which regulates the capacity of commercial companies to have rights and obligations. This article deals with the ultra vires principle which was transferred to the Continental European law system, including the Turkish legislation from the UK law system. The ultra vires principle had previously expired in the continental European legal system (in particular the Swiss Code of Obligations) which has inspired the TCC as a referring codification. As a result of these developments by the TCC A.125, in contrast to the ultra vires principle, commercial companies are allowed to be entitled and liable for all kinds of matters, except those which are human-specific. For this reason, companies’ legal personalities may have the capacity to have rights and obligations in matters other than their fields of operation. In other words, thanks to the TCC A.135, the ultra vires principle has been abandoned. It can be assumed that harmonization between the TCC and the EU directives has been achieved in the sense of abolishing the ultra vires principle. However, when several provisions randomly scattered in the TCC are taken into consideration, it is obviously seen that the legislator still accepts the field of operation issue as a criterion in about 20 articles. This leads to a question about the actual abolishment of the ultra vires principle. To put it briefly, the legislator’s choice in the new company law regime shows that the TCC has not abandoned the ultra vires principle completely, but it still retains its validity in a hidden way by only changing its form and scope.
Turecki kodeks handlowy (TCC) oznaczony numerem 6102 zawiera szereg radykalnych rozwiązań przewidzianych jako reformy tureckiego prawa spółek. Jednym z takich przepisów jest art. 125 TCC, który odnosi się do zdolności prawnej spółek handlowych. Artykuł ten porusza kwestię zasady ultra vires, która została inkorporowana do europejskiego kontynentalnego systemu prawnego, włączając turecki system prawny z porządku prawnego Zjednoczonego Królestwa. Jednakże zasada ta z czasem została uznana za wygasłą w ramach europejskiego kontynentalnego systemu prawnego (w szczególności w szwajcarskim kodeksie zobowiązań), co z kolei zainspirowało ustawodawcę tureckiego do zmian w kodyfikacji. Wynikiem tych działań, na podstawie art. 125 TCC, sprzecznie z zasadą ultra vires, spółki handlowe mają zdolność do bycia podmiotem praw i obowiązków w szerokim zakresie, z wyłączeniem kwestii zarezerwowanych wyłącznie dla osób fizycznych. Z tego powodu w ramach osobowości prawnej przedsiębiorstw mogą one być uzdolnione do bycia podmiotem praw i obowiązków w sprawach wykraczających poza ich własny zakres działalności. Innymi słowy, za sprawą art. 125 TCC koncepcja stosowania zasady ultra vires została porzucona. Można zatem dojść do konkluzji, że dostosowanie TCC do dyrektyw Unii Europejskiej w kwestii zniesienia zasady ultra vires zostało osiągnięte. Jednak biorąc pod uwagę szereg przepisów z różnych części Kodeksu, widoczne staje się, że ustawodawca wciąż uznaje przesłankę zakresu prowadzonej działalności jako warunek w ok. 20 przepisach prawnych. To z kolei prowadzi do pytania o rzeczywiste wyłączenie zasady ultra vires. Konkludując, należy stwierdzić, że wprowadzony przez ustawodawcę nowy reżim prawa handlowego jasno wskazuje, że Kodeks handlowy nie wyłączył zasady ultra vires w całości, a utrzymując jej stosowanie w sposób ukryty, jedynie zmienił jej zakres.
Źródło:
Studia Prawnicze KUL; 2020, 2; 359-375
1897-7146
2719-4264
Pojawia się w:
Studia Prawnicze KUL
Dostawca treści:
Biblioteka Nauki
Artykuł
Tytuł:
The Historical Roots of Belgian Commercial Law
Autorzy:
Waelkens, Laurent
Powiązania:
https://bibliotekanauki.pl/articles/923793.pdf
Data publikacji:
2013
Wydawca:
Uniwersytet Jagielloński. Wydawnictwo Uniwersytetu Jagiellońskiego
Tematy:
belgiskie prawo handlowe
prawo cywilne
prawo rzymskie
prawo kanoniczne
praktyki bankowe
weksel
notariat
Hanza
spółki z osobowością prawną
kodeks handlowy Napoleona z 1807 r.
Belgian commercial law
civil law
Roman law
canon law
banking practices
bill of exchange
notarial practice
Hanseatic League
companies with legal personality
Napoleonic Code de Commerce of 1807
Opis:
The article presents a synthetic approach to the history of Belgian commercial law. The author starts with the regulations of Roman law and leads us from the beginnings of civil law in the times of the Roman Republic, describing the role of aediles and praetors, to the times of the Roman Empire. A significant part is dedicated to the grain trade and searches – not always successfully – for a self-contained commercial law. A separate analysis of the Roman banking practices includes a discussion of cheques and accounting. The fall of the Western Roman Empire brought changes in trade in the Mediterranean region. The description of the Middle Ages includes a series of causal factors that contributed to the development of commercial law in Western Europe and that were related to the Roman tradition (for example the development of canon law and the Church itself as an institution, as well as the development of universities). It also contains the analysis of organisational elements of commercial law that mainly pertain to Italy, which at that time had a leading role. Attention is also devoted to the development of the notarial profession and the bill of exchange. In the 11th century, cities and, by consequence, autonomous and trade-oriented systems of city rights began to gain importance. This evolution which started on the Apennine Peninsula later also took place in the north of Europe, including in the German maritime cities, and eventually brought organisational changes and led to the establishment of the Hanseatic League. Legal regulations embraced, inter alia, the maritime trade. When the first annual fairs were organised, improved safety and decreased toll rates furthered the development of towns situated on trade routes. Changes in the socioeconomic structure and the fall of Constantinople influenced the progressive standardisation of commercial law in different countries. The Greeks brought to the West not only their money and wealth but also their law. In the modern era, the first companies with legal personality appeared. The origins of contemporary Belgian commercial law are without a doubt connected with French law. The French rulers’ protectionist policies, which were characterised by a strong interference in laws regulating trade, were included in the ordinance of 1673, the main drafter of which was Savary, and the ordinance of 1681. Such actions resulted in traders developing their own judicial bodies. The next stage that was important for contemporary Belgian law was the issuing of the Napoleonic Code de Commerce of 1807. The French law was implemented in the parts of the Netherlands conquered by Napoleon. Commercial law courts after the French model were established and were staffed not by professional judges but by entrepreneurs. When the Belgians gained independence in 1830, one of their goals was to implement a new commercial code. In the end, however, they chose a different path – a comprehensive revision of the existing law that continued throughout the following decades. In that process Belgian commercial law was complemented with, among other things, private companies. The changes to the legal code in the 20th century resulted mainly from the developments in international law (e.g. the acceptance of conventions concerning promissory notes) as well as European law. In 1999 company law was transferred from the Code de Commerce to the Companies Code. The French commercial court system was adopted after the Belgian Independence, but during the last two hundred years the organisation of these courts was changed. Although some argue that there is a need for reform and for the removal of non-professional judges, the author of this paper is of the opinion that lay judges are efficient.
Źródło:
Krakowskie Studia z Historii Państwa i Prawa; 2013, 6, 4; 365-386
2084-4115
2084-4131
Pojawia się w:
Krakowskie Studia z Historii Państwa i Prawa
Dostawca treści:
Biblioteka Nauki
Artykuł
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