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Lily Chang

2967 Posts
Italy: How family enterprises plan succession without disrupting strategic direction

Succession & Strategy: Insights from Italian Family Enterprises

Family-owned businesses dominate the Italian private sector in scale and cultural influence. Estimates and academic studies indicate that family firms represent a large majority of Italian companies and account for a significant share of private employment and value added. Succession in these firms is not merely a personnel change: it is a turning point that can either preserve decades of strategic momentum or trigger fragmentation, loss of market position, and capital strain.This piece outlines how Italian family enterprises orchestrate succession while preserving their strategic trajectory, detailing practical governance tools, legal and tax approaches, talent-development methods, and illustrative real-world cases.Key constraints…
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Alcohol: why “a little” isn’t always harmless

Alcohol: Why “A Little” Isn’t Always Harmless

Alcohol ranks among the world’s most widely consumed psychoactive substances, and many individuals see light drinking—perhaps a glass of wine at dinner or a post‑work beer—as harmless or even somewhat helpful. Growing medical research, however, increasingly disputes that assumption, indicating that even minimal intake can elevate the likelihood of injuries and illness, interact unpredictably with medications and preexisting conditions, and cause population‑level harm over time. This article outlines why small amounts are not always risk‑free, offering clear mechanisms, evidence, examples, and practical guidance.What “a little” meansStandard drink definitions: In the United States a standard drink contains about 14 grams of…
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Paris, in France: What investors expect from ESG disclosures and audit readiness

Navigating ESG & Audit Readiness for Investors in Paris, France

Paris occupies a central place in the sustainability and finance conversation. As the birthplace of the 2015 international climate accord, the city and its financial institutions have high visibility on climate transition ambitions. Institutional investors, asset managers, pension funds and banks in Paris and across France increasingly expect clear, comparable, and auditable Environmental, Social and Governance (ESG) disclosures from listed companies and large private firms. The combination of EU rules (notably the Corporate Sustainability Reporting Directive), French regulators’ scrutiny, and strong investor activism makes Parisian markets a leading test case for how disclosure and audit readiness must evolve.Regulatory framework shaping…
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Chile: corporate CSR advancing transparency and community participation in local projects

Boosting Transparency & Community through Chile’s Corporate CSR

Chile’s economic model has historically relied on extractive industries, agriculture, fishing, and export‑oriented manufacturing, sectors that have powered growth while concentrating environmental and social pressures in particular areas. Consequently, corporate social responsibility (CSR) in Chile is not a peripheral marketing tool but a strategic requirement that influences social license, investor confidence, and local development. In recent years, rising public expectations for transparency and genuine community involvement in territorial initiatives have pushed CSR to evolve from simple philanthropy toward governance, disclosure, and collaborative design.Regulatory and institutional drivers advancing transparencyA range of public pressures encourages companies to embrace greater transparency and deepen…
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