Chapter Three Business

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Across
  1. 2. - A form of fraud where a person violates a trust by moving funds into their account instead of the correct accountant.
  2. 3. ceiling - The invisible barriers said to be faced by women, the disable, or people from visible minorities as they approach senior leadership positions.
  3. 5. with Records - A form of fraud where records are altered in some way to deceive other persons.
  4. 7. trade - The practice of helping in developing countries bypass middlemen so they can sell their products for a profit.
  5. 8. accountant - An accountant who investigates legal and financial documents looking for evidence of tampering.
  6. 12. fraud - A company uses high-pressure phone calls to get customers to buy now or to donate funds to bogus charitable causes.
  7. 14. Protocol (Kyoto Accord) - An agreement that required countries to reduce carbon dioxide emissions.
  8. 16. of Funds - Moving money from one account to another without permission or direction.
  9. 18. of ethics - A document that describes specifically how a company’s employees should respond to different situations
  10. 20. fraud - An individual receives benefits without being eligible.
  11. 21. trading - Illegal buying or selling of shares of a company based company on confidential information that isn’t available to the public.
  12. 25. - Making a particular person or group feel uncomfortable in a work situation because of race, religion, gender, etc.
  13. 28. An accountant from outside the company who checks the financial records.
  14. 31. - Not hiring a person because of an issue not related to the person’s ability to do the job (e.g., race, religion, gender, or disability).
  15. 32. social responsibility (CSR) - Conducting business in a way that is in line with society’s value.
  16. 33. fraud - An individual use the postal service for fraudulent purposes, such as mailing phony job opportunities, chain letters, or inheritance scams
  17. 34. securities commissions - A provincial government agency responsible for regulating the securities industry and prosecuting crimes such as insider trade.
Down
  1. 1. Theft - Could involve taking advantage of employees by not paying for overtime worked.
  2. 4. fraud - A business or individual falsely claims lost, damaged, or stolen property in order to receive insurance settlements.
  3. 6. Dilemma - A situation where a difficult choice must be made between two or more options. An ethical dilemma is a moral problem with a choice between potential right and wrong answers.
  4. 9. - A personal or corporate belief about what is important.
  5. 10. fraud - A business or individual uses temptations, such as bribes or kickbacks, to create a contract.
  6. 11. fraud - A business tricks customers into buying goods or services they don’t really need through unethical advertising or false claims.
  7. 13. - A method used to deceive someone for personal gain.
  8. 15. - Stealing someone’s property.
  9. 17. - A form of fraud that could involve passing bad cheques by forging someone else’s name.
  10. 19. Violations - A company ignoring laws and regulations that involve toxic waste.
  11. 20. - The decision of an employee to inform officials or the public about a legal or ethical violation.
  12. 22. organization - A charitable organization or charity that does not seek profit from the operations of the business and raises funds for a specific.
  13. 23. to accommodate - An employer’s obligation to take appropriate steps to eliminate discrimination against employees.
  14. 24. - The principle of morality and proper conduct that people or businesses use to guide their behaviour.
  15. 26. - A rule used to decide what is good or bad.
  16. 27. market fraud - An individual uses insider trading or other techniques to buy and sell stocks at artificial values.
  17. 29. fraud - A bank officer makes a fraudulent loan to a non-existent business and then pockets the money.
  18. 30. scheme fraud - A person participating in the scheme recruits others in order to receive more money than she or he invested in the scheme.
  19. 31. to report - An obligation to disclose all important information.
  20. 32. Information - Not disclosing data that should be shared, for example, about defective products.