Industry Comparison
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Current language: English (2023)
You are viewing information about the following Industries:
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Managed Care
The Managed Care industry offers health insurance products for individual, commercial, Medicare and Medicaid members. Entities also provide administrative services and network access for self-funded insurance plans and manage pharmacy benefits. Enrolment in managed care traditionally has been correlated with employment rates, whereas revenue is driven by medical cost inflation. Legislative uncertainty and a focus on reducing health care costs may create downward pricing pressure and continue to drive industry consolidation. In addition, a focus on patient outcomes and plan performance continues to shape the industry’s sustainability risks and opportunities. -
Casinos & Gaming
Publicly held casinos and gaming entities operate gambling facilities or platforms, including brick-and-mortar casinos, riverboat casinos, online gambling websites and racetracks. The industry is characterised by intense regulatory oversight, which is the main barrier to entry for new operators. Industry regulation varies significantly worldwide.
Relevant Issues for both Industries (8 of 26)
Why are some issues greyed out?
The SASB Standards vary by industry based on the different sustainability-related risks and opportunities within an industry. The issues in grey were not identified during the standard-setting process as the most likely to be useful to investors, so they are not included in the Standard. Over time, as the ISSB continues to receive market feedback, some issues may be added or removed from the Standard. Each company determines which sustainability-related risks and opportunities are relevant to its business. The Standard is designed for the typical company in an industry, but individual companies may choose to report on different sustainability-related risks and opportunities based on their unique business model.-
Environment
- GHG Emissions
- Air Quality
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Energy Management
The category addresses environmental impacts associated with energy consumption. It addresses the company’s management of energy in manufacturing and/or for provision of products and services derived from utility providers (grid energy) not owned or controlled by the company. More specifically, it includes management of energy efficiency and intensity, energy mix, as well as grid reliance. Upstream (e.g., suppliers) and downstream (e.g., product use) energy use is not included in the scope. - Water & Wastewater Management
- Waste & Hazardous Materials Management
- Ecological Impacts
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Social Capital
- Human Rights & Community Relations
- Customer Privacy
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Data Security
The category addresses management of risks related to collection, retention, and use of sensitive, confidential, and/or proprietary customer or user data. It includes social issues that may arise from incidents such as data breaches in which personally identifiable information (PII) and other user or customer data may be exposed. It addresses a company’s strategy, policies, and practices related to IT infrastructure, staff training, record keeping, cooperation with law enforcement, and other mechanisms used to ensure security of customer or user data. -
Access & Affordability
The category addresses a company’s ability to ensure broad access to its products and services, specifically in the context of underserved markets and/or population groups. It includes the management of issues related to universal needs, such as the accessibility and affordability of health care, financial services, utilities, education, and telecommunications. -
Product Quality & Safety
The category addresses issues involving unintended characteristics of products sold or services provided that may create health or safety risks to end-users. It addresses a company’s ability to offer manufactured products and/or services that meet customer expectations with respect to their health and safety characteristics. It includes, but is not limited to, issues involving liability, management of recalls and market withdrawals, product testing, and chemicals/content/ingredient management in products. -
Customer Welfare
The category addresses customer welfare concerns over issues including, but not limited to, health and nutrition of foods and beverages, antibiotic use in animal production, and management of controlled substances. The category addresses the company’s ability to provide consumers with manufactured products and services that are aligned with societal expectations. It does not include issues directly related to quality and safety malfunctions of manufactured products and services, but instead addresses qualities inherent to the design and delivery of products and services where customer welfare may be in question. The scope of the category also captures companies’ ability to prevent counterfeit products. - Selling Practices & Product Labeling
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Human Capital
- Labour Practices
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Employee Health & Safety
The category addresses a company’s ability to create and maintain a safe and healthy workplace environment that is free of injuries, fatalities, and illness (both chronic and acute). It is traditionally accomplished through implementing safety management plans, developing training requirements for employees and contractors, and conducting regular audits of their own practices as well as those of their subcontractors. The category further captures how companies ensure physical and mental health of workforce through technology, training, corporate culture, regulatory compliance, monitoring and testing, and personal protective equipment. - Employee Engagement, Diversity & Inclusion
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Business Model and Innovation
- Product Design & Lifecycle Management
- Business Model Resilience
- Supply Chain Management
- Materials Sourcing & Efficiency
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Physical Impacts of Climate Change
The category addresses the company’s ability to manage risks and opportunities associated with direct exposure of its owned or controlled assets and operations to actual or potential physical impacts of climate change. It captures environmental and social issues that may arise from operational disruptions due to physical impacts of climate change. It further captures socio-economic issues resulting from companies failing to incorporate climate change consideration in products and services sold, such as insurance policies and mortgages. The category relates to the company’s ability to adapt to increased frequency and severity of extreme weather, shifting climate, sea level risk, and other expected physical impacts of climate change. Management may involve enhancing resiliency of physical assets and/or surrounding infrastructure as well as incorporation of climate change-related considerations into key business activities (e.g., mortgage and insurance underwriting, planning and development of real estate projects).
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Leadership and Governance
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Business Ethics
The category addresses the company’s approach to managing risks and opportunities surrounding ethical conduct of business, including fraud, corruption, bribery and facilitation payments, fiduciary responsibilities, and other behaviour that may have an ethical component. This includes sensitivity to business norms and standards as they shift over time, jurisdiction, and culture. It addresses the company’s ability to provide services that satisfy the highest professional and ethical standards of the industry, which means to avoid conflicts of interest, misrepresentation, bias, and negligence through training employees adequately and implementing policies and procedures to ensure employees provide services free from bias and error. - Competitive Behaviour
- Management of the Legal & Regulatory Environment
- Critical Incident Risk Management
- Systemic Risk Management
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Disclosure Topics
What is the relationship between General Issue Category and Disclosure Topics?
The General Issue Category is an industry-agnostic version of the Disclosure Topics that appear in each SASB Standard. Disclosure topics represent the industry-specific impacts of General Issue Categories. The industry-specific Disclosure Topics ensure each SASB Standard is tailored to the industry, while the General Issue Categories enable comparability across industries. For example, Health & Nutrition is a disclosure topic in the Non-Alcoholic Beverages industry, representing an industry-specific measure of the general issue of Customer Welfare. The issue of Customer Welfare, however, manifests as the Counterfeit Drugs disclosure topic in the Biotechnology & Pharmaceuticals industry.-
Access Standard
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Energy Management
The category addresses environmental impacts associated with energy consumption. It addresses the company’s management of energy in manufacturing and/or for provision of products and services derived from utility providers (grid energy) not owned or controlled by the company. More specifically, it includes management of energy efficiency and intensity, energy mix, as well as grid reliance. Upstream (e.g., suppliers) and downstream (e.g., product use) energy use is not included in the scope.None -
Data Security
The category addresses management of risks related to collection, retention, and use of sensitive, confidential, and/or proprietary customer or user data. It includes social issues that may arise from incidents such as data breaches in which personally identifiable information (PII) and other user or customer data may be exposed. It addresses a company’s strategy, policies, and practices related to IT infrastructure, staff training, record keeping, cooperation with law enforcement, and other mechanisms used to ensure security of customer or user data.-
Customer Privacy & Technology Standards
Applicable jurisdictional laws or regulations may establish various data security requirements relating to the use, disclosure, storage and transmission of patient health information. Entities are required to develop policies and technical safeguards to protect patient health information. A failure to comply with these standards can lead to significant civil and criminal penalties. These risks are intensified by an increase in cyberattacks that target managed care entities.
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Access & Affordability
The category addresses a company’s ability to ensure broad access to its products and services, specifically in the context of underserved markets and/or population groups. It includes the management of issues related to universal needs, such as the accessibility and affordability of health care, financial services, utilities, education, and telecommunications.-
Access to Coverage
Entities in the Managed Care industry may improve a population’s access to health care by limiting plan costs and rate increases for health insurance in jurisdictions where private health insurance is prevalent. These improvements most significantly affect segments of the population that tend to have lower rates of insurance coverage. These entities generally must also comply with regulations intended to control plan costs, including medical loss ratios, as well as ensuring all applicants have access to coverage regardless of health status, gender or pre-existing conditions. Increased regulatory focus on health care costs and compliance with evolving regulations continue to present challenges for the industry.
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Product Quality & Safety
The category addresses issues involving unintended characteristics of products sold or services provided that may create health or safety risks to end-users. It addresses a company’s ability to offer manufactured products and/or services that meet customer expectations with respect to their health and safety characteristics. It includes, but is not limited to, issues involving liability, management of recalls and market withdrawals, product testing, and chemicals/content/ingredient management in products.-
Plan Performance
Managed care entities manage performance in areas such as responsiveness, complaints, voluntary disenrollment and customer service to maintain competitiveness. In some jurisdictions, performance on important metrics may be factored into reimbursement rates and bonus payments. Disclosure on specific indicators related to plan performance may allow investors to understand how entities protect enterprise value.
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Customer Welfare
The category addresses customer welfare concerns over issues including, but not limited to, health and nutrition of foods and beverages, antibiotic use in animal production, and management of controlled substances. The category addresses the company’s ability to provide consumers with manufactured products and services that are aligned with societal expectations. It does not include issues directly related to quality and safety malfunctions of manufactured products and services, but instead addresses qualities inherent to the design and delivery of products and services where customer welfare may be in question. The scope of the category also captures companies’ ability to prevent counterfeit products.-
Improved Outcomes
Entities in the Managed Care industry can play a critical role in maintaining and improving the health of enrolees. Improved enrolee health can help entities develop a reputation for high-quality care, potentially leading to increased market share and improved margins. Some entities may participate in programmes that try to strengthen the relationship between enrolee health and entity value by linking employee performance to reimbursement rates and bonuses. Entities that take part in such programmes may develop a competitive advantage compared to those that do not. Entities that fail to deliver high-quality outcomes for enrolees may experience decreased market share, penalties such as fines and suspensions, and increased legal costs.
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Employee Health & Safety
The category addresses a company’s ability to create and maintain a safe and healthy workplace environment that is free of injuries, fatalities, and illness (both chronic and acute). It is traditionally accomplished through implementing safety management plans, developing training requirements for employees and contractors, and conducting regular audits of their own practices as well as those of their subcontractors. The category further captures how companies ensure physical and mental health of workforce through technology, training, corporate culture, regulatory compliance, monitoring and testing, and personal protective equipment.None -
Physical Impacts of Climate Change
The category addresses the company’s ability to manage risks and opportunities associated with direct exposure of its owned or controlled assets and operations to actual or potential physical impacts of climate change. It captures environmental and social issues that may arise from operational disruptions due to physical impacts of climate change. It further captures socio-economic issues resulting from companies failing to incorporate climate change consideration in products and services sold, such as insurance policies and mortgages. The category relates to the company’s ability to adapt to increased frequency and severity of extreme weather, shifting climate, sea level risk, and other expected physical impacts of climate change. Management may involve enhancing resiliency of physical assets and/or surrounding infrastructure as well as incorporation of climate change-related considerations into key business activities (e.g., mortgage and insurance underwriting, planning and development of real estate projects).-
Climate Change Impacts on Human Health
An increase in extreme weather events associated with climate change could have significant health impacts. These events, coupled with the potential spread of infectious diseases and food and water scarcity, may present material implications for the Managed Care industry through an increase in encounters with the health care system. Entities that manage the risks posed by extreme weather events and potential changes in the incidence, morbidity and mortality of illnesses and diseases may protect shareholder value better.
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Business Ethics
The category addresses the company’s approach to managing risks and opportunities surrounding ethical conduct of business, including fraud, corruption, bribery and facilitation payments, fiduciary responsibilities, and other behaviour that may have an ethical component. This includes sensitivity to business norms and standards as they shift over time, jurisdiction, and culture. It addresses the company’s ability to provide services that satisfy the highest professional and ethical standards of the industry, which means to avoid conflicts of interest, misrepresentation, bias, and negligence through training employees adequately and implementing policies and procedures to ensure employees provide services free from bias and error.None
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Access Standard
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Energy Management
The category addresses environmental impacts associated with energy consumption. It addresses the company’s management of energy in manufacturing and/or for provision of products and services derived from utility providers (grid energy) not owned or controlled by the company. More specifically, it includes management of energy efficiency and intensity, energy mix, as well as grid reliance. Upstream (e.g., suppliers) and downstream (e.g., product use) energy use is not included in the scope.-
Energy Management
With many facilities open 24 hours a day, the Casinos & Gaming industry requires a large amount of energy to operate. Casino facilities often have few windows and therefore rely on their buildings’ mechanical systems for heating, ventilation, air-conditioning (HVAC) and lighting. Fossil fuel-based energy production and consumption contribute to significant environmental impacts, including climate change and pollution, and have the potential to impact casino entities’ results of operations. Entities that rely on electricity consumption for their operations increasingly must manage energy efficiency as well as energy availability, including the risks and opportunities associated with energy sourcing from fossil fuels or from renewable and alternative energy sources.
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Data Security
The category addresses management of risks related to collection, retention, and use of sensitive, confidential, and/or proprietary customer or user data. It includes social issues that may arise from incidents such as data breaches in which personally identifiable information (PII) and other user or customer data may be exposed. It addresses a company’s strategy, policies, and practices related to IT infrastructure, staff training, record keeping, cooperation with law enforcement, and other mechanisms used to ensure security of customer or user data.None -
Access & Affordability
The category addresses a company’s ability to ensure broad access to its products and services, specifically in the context of underserved markets and/or population groups. It includes the management of issues related to universal needs, such as the accessibility and affordability of health care, financial services, utilities, education, and telecommunications.None -
Product Quality & Safety
The category addresses issues involving unintended characteristics of products sold or services provided that may create health or safety risks to end-users. It addresses a company’s ability to offer manufactured products and/or services that meet customer expectations with respect to their health and safety characteristics. It includes, but is not limited to, issues involving liability, management of recalls and market withdrawals, product testing, and chemicals/content/ingredient management in products.None -
Customer Welfare
The category addresses customer welfare concerns over issues including, but not limited to, health and nutrition of foods and beverages, antibiotic use in animal production, and management of controlled substances. The category addresses the company’s ability to provide consumers with manufactured products and services that are aligned with societal expectations. It does not include issues directly related to quality and safety malfunctions of manufactured products and services, but instead addresses qualities inherent to the design and delivery of products and services where customer welfare may be in question. The scope of the category also captures companies’ ability to prevent counterfeit products.-
Responsible Gaming
Although the main purpose of gambling is entertainment, the industry faces a negative perception often related to pathological gambling. In addition to pathological gambling, which is a progressive addiction characterised by increasing preoccupation with gambling, customers also may experience problem gambling, a less severe form of pathological gambling. Although casinos do not cause problem gambling, they provide opportunities to gamble and may earn disproportionately greater revenue from pathological and problem gamblers. Responsible gambling entities adopt industry best practices to mitigate negative effects of problem gambling that may result from violations of self-exclusion lists, irresponsible advertising, gambling by minors, or instances in which the entity has otherwise enabled gambling problems. Highly-publicised incidents related to pathological and problem gambling may damage entities’ reputations and result in regulatory curtailment of their licences to operate.
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Employee Health & Safety
The category addresses a company’s ability to create and maintain a safe and healthy workplace environment that is free of injuries, fatalities, and illness (both chronic and acute). It is traditionally accomplished through implementing safety management plans, developing training requirements for employees and contractors, and conducting regular audits of their own practices as well as those of their subcontractors. The category further captures how companies ensure physical and mental health of workforce through technology, training, corporate culture, regulatory compliance, monitoring and testing, and personal protective equipment.-
Smoke-free Casinos
Casino facilities are usually climate-controlled environments with internal air circulation, and they have a relatively high concentration of employees and customers. Although anti-smoking campaigns have helped some regions enact smoking bans for public places, many casinos remain exempt from such bans. Smoke exposes employees and customers to increased risks of heart attacks, cancers, and other illnesses. Studies have shown that casino dealers exposed to second-hand smoke have higher-than-average rates of respiratory illness. Entities that derive a significant portion of their revenue from smoking customers may be negatively affected by smoking bans. Alternatively, by creating smoke-free facilities, casino operators may attract more non-smoking patrons.
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Physical Impacts of Climate Change
The category addresses the company’s ability to manage risks and opportunities associated with direct exposure of its owned or controlled assets and operations to actual or potential physical impacts of climate change. It captures environmental and social issues that may arise from operational disruptions due to physical impacts of climate change. It further captures socio-economic issues resulting from companies failing to incorporate climate change consideration in products and services sold, such as insurance policies and mortgages. The category relates to the company’s ability to adapt to increased frequency and severity of extreme weather, shifting climate, sea level risk, and other expected physical impacts of climate change. Management may involve enhancing resiliency of physical assets and/or surrounding infrastructure as well as incorporation of climate change-related considerations into key business activities (e.g., mortgage and insurance underwriting, planning and development of real estate projects).None -
Business Ethics
The category addresses the company’s approach to managing risks and opportunities surrounding ethical conduct of business, including fraud, corruption, bribery and facilitation payments, fiduciary responsibilities, and other behaviour that may have an ethical component. This includes sensitivity to business norms and standards as they shift over time, jurisdiction, and culture. It addresses the company’s ability to provide services that satisfy the highest professional and ethical standards of the industry, which means to avoid conflicts of interest, misrepresentation, bias, and negligence through training employees adequately and implementing policies and procedures to ensure employees provide services free from bias and error.-
Internal Controls on Money Laundering
By the nature of its business, the Casinos & Gaming industry may be attractive to criminals seeking to launder money or disguise the origin of funds. Risk factors include customer anonymity, accessibility to multiple facilities and the large amount of cash transactions in each facility. Therefore, strict and robust internal controls are necessary for entities to prevent violations of reporting and money laundering regulations. Casino operators that fail to detect and prevent money laundering activities may be subjected to criminal investigations. Violations of anti-money laundering laws and regulations could result in criminal prosecution or substantial regulatory penalties.
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Energy Management
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Energy Management
With many facilities open 24 hours a day, the Casinos & Gaming industry requires a large amount of energy to operate. Casino facilities often have few windows and therefore rely on their buildings’ mechanical systems for heating, ventilation, air-conditioning (HVAC) and lighting. Fossil fuel-based energy production and consumption contribute to significant environmental impacts, including climate change and pollution, and have the potential to impact casino entities’ results of operations. Entities that rely on electricity consumption for their operations increasingly must manage energy efficiency as well as energy availability, including the risks and opportunities associated with energy sourcing from fossil fuels or from renewable and alternative energy sources.
Data Security
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Customer Privacy & Technology Standards
Applicable jurisdictional laws or regulations may establish various data security requirements relating to the use, disclosure, storage and transmission of patient health information. Entities are required to develop policies and technical safeguards to protect patient health information. A failure to comply with these standards can lead to significant civil and criminal penalties. These risks are intensified by an increase in cyberattacks that target managed care entities.
Access & Affordability
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Access to Coverage
Entities in the Managed Care industry may improve a population’s access to health care by limiting plan costs and rate increases for health insurance in jurisdictions where private health insurance is prevalent. These improvements most significantly affect segments of the population that tend to have lower rates of insurance coverage. These entities generally must also comply with regulations intended to control plan costs, including medical loss ratios, as well as ensuring all applicants have access to coverage regardless of health status, gender or pre-existing conditions. Increased regulatory focus on health care costs and compliance with evolving regulations continue to present challenges for the industry.
Product Quality & Safety
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Plan Performance
Managed care entities manage performance in areas such as responsiveness, complaints, voluntary disenrollment and customer service to maintain competitiveness. In some jurisdictions, performance on important metrics may be factored into reimbursement rates and bonus payments. Disclosure on specific indicators related to plan performance may allow investors to understand how entities protect enterprise value.
Customer Welfare
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Improved Outcomes
Entities in the Managed Care industry can play a critical role in maintaining and improving the health of enrolees. Improved enrolee health can help entities develop a reputation for high-quality care, potentially leading to increased market share and improved margins. Some entities may participate in programmes that try to strengthen the relationship between enrolee health and entity value by linking employee performance to reimbursement rates and bonuses. Entities that take part in such programmes may develop a competitive advantage compared to those that do not. Entities that fail to deliver high-quality outcomes for enrolees may experience decreased market share, penalties such as fines and suspensions, and increased legal costs.
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Responsible Gaming
Although the main purpose of gambling is entertainment, the industry faces a negative perception often related to pathological gambling. In addition to pathological gambling, which is a progressive addiction characterised by increasing preoccupation with gambling, customers also may experience problem gambling, a less severe form of pathological gambling. Although casinos do not cause problem gambling, they provide opportunities to gamble and may earn disproportionately greater revenue from pathological and problem gamblers. Responsible gambling entities adopt industry best practices to mitigate negative effects of problem gambling that may result from violations of self-exclusion lists, irresponsible advertising, gambling by minors, or instances in which the entity has otherwise enabled gambling problems. Highly-publicised incidents related to pathological and problem gambling may damage entities’ reputations and result in regulatory curtailment of their licences to operate.
Employee Health & Safety
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Smoke-free Casinos
Casino facilities are usually climate-controlled environments with internal air circulation, and they have a relatively high concentration of employees and customers. Although anti-smoking campaigns have helped some regions enact smoking bans for public places, many casinos remain exempt from such bans. Smoke exposes employees and customers to increased risks of heart attacks, cancers, and other illnesses. Studies have shown that casino dealers exposed to second-hand smoke have higher-than-average rates of respiratory illness. Entities that derive a significant portion of their revenue from smoking customers may be negatively affected by smoking bans. Alternatively, by creating smoke-free facilities, casino operators may attract more non-smoking patrons.
Physical Impacts of Climate Change
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Climate Change Impacts on Human Health
An increase in extreme weather events associated with climate change could have significant health impacts. These events, coupled with the potential spread of infectious diseases and food and water scarcity, may present material implications for the Managed Care industry through an increase in encounters with the health care system. Entities that manage the risks posed by extreme weather events and potential changes in the incidence, morbidity and mortality of illnesses and diseases may protect shareholder value better.
Business Ethics
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Internal Controls on Money Laundering
By the nature of its business, the Casinos & Gaming industry may be attractive to criminals seeking to launder money or disguise the origin of funds. Risk factors include customer anonymity, accessibility to multiple facilities and the large amount of cash transactions in each facility. Therefore, strict and robust internal controls are necessary for entities to prevent violations of reporting and money laundering regulations. Casino operators that fail to detect and prevent money laundering activities may be subjected to criminal investigations. Violations of anti-money laundering laws and regulations could result in criminal prosecution or substantial regulatory penalties.