...What new ethical and social responsibility issues might present themselves when moving from a domestic only organization to one that reaches a global arena? * Economics – related to globalization in trade, money, corporations, banking, capital, * Political – science, governance, wars, peace, and regimes, * Sociology-communities, conflict, classes, nations, agreements * Psychology-individuals as subjects and objects of global action * Anthropology- cultures overlapping, adapting, clashing, merging, * Communications- information as knowledge and tools-internet. What is an example of an ethical perspective that is considered American? What is an example of an ethical perspective from another culture that deals with a similar subject? Identify the culture and the ethical perspective. Why are the perspectives of these two different? How are they similar? * Westernization or Occidentalization: Is a process whereby non-Western people come to adopt Western lifestyle, customs, and values. Westernization has been a pervasive and accelerating influence across the world in the last few centuries. It is usually a two-sided process, in which Western influences and interests themselves are joined by a wish of at least parts of the affected society to change towards a more Westernized society, in the hope of attaining Western life or some aspects of it. Ethical Perspectives on China’s One-Child Policy: * Policy introduced in 1979 * Control...
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...†iwR÷vW© bs wW G-1 evsjv‡`k AwZwi³ msL¨v KZ…©c¶ KZ…©K cÖKvwkZ †M‡RU e„n¯úwZevi, gvP© 19, 2009 [ †emiKvwi e¨w³ Ges K‡c©v‡ikb KZ©„K A‡_©i wewbg‡q RvixK…Z weÁvcb I †bvwUkmg~n ] SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION Jiban Bima Tower (15, 16 & 20th Floor) 10 Dilkusha C/A, Dhaka-1000, Bangladesh NOTIFICATION Dated, the 11th March, 2009 No. SEC/CMRRCD/2008-186/Admin/03-29⎯In exercise of power conferred by section 33 of the Securities and Exchange Ordinance, 1969 (Ordinance No. XVII of 1969), the Securities and Exchange Commission makes, after prior circulation, the following further amendments in the Securities and Exchange Commission (Public Issue) Rules, 2006, namely :⎯ In the aforesaid Rules,⎯ 1. In rule (2), for sub-rule (1) the following sub-rule (1) shall be substituted, namely :⎯ “(1) In these Rules, unless there is anything repugnant in the subject or context,⎯ (a) “associate” means any partner, employee or officer of a company or a body corporate over which the directors or subscribers to the Memorandum of Association and Articles of Association can exercise significant influence or control; ( 2445 ) g~j¨ t UvKv 6.00 2446 (b) evsjv‡`k †M‡RU, AwZwi³, gvP© 19, 2009 “banker to the issue” means any bank so named in the prospectus to collect money as subscription against security; “bidders” means the eligible institutional investors; “book-building method” means the process by which an issuer attempts to determine the price to offer its security based on demand...
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...Studies in Business and Economics THE GLOCAL STRATEGY OF GLOBAL BRANDS DUMITRESCU Luigi Lucian Blaga University of Sibiu, Romania VINEREAN Simona Lucian Blaga University of Sibiu, Romania Abstract: A few years ago, globalization was the new paradigm in international business, however from a branding perspective it has lost its initial efficiency giving the fact that consumers do not seem to feel a connection anymore with the standardized products of global corporations, catered to them in mass marketing communication programs. With their centralized decision making, most companies simply stopped having a connection with the new global marketplace and neglected its emergence. Hence, the influence of local characteristics arose, and with that a new term that encapsulates the global and the local – glocal. “Glocalization” encourages companies to “think global, act local”, and they could do so by using the global brand, while localizing certain elements of that brand in order to suit a particular country. Keywords: global brands, globalization, glocal strategy, glocal marketing. 1. Introduction In 1983, Theodore Levitt published a provocative Harvard Business Review article entitled “The Globalization of Markets”, in which he stated that a new global market, based on uniform products and services, had emerged. He asserted that large scale companies have stopped emphasizing on the customization of their offers to providing globally standardized products that are advanced...
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...Acknowledgement First we owe a great many thanks to the many people who have helped us in completing our report. We show our deepest gratitude to our honorable course instructor Mr. Adeyl Khan for giving us the permission to do this report. We are also thankful to him for guiding us throughout our entire project and correcting various aspects of our work with endless patience and attention. We would also like to thank Khondker Murshid, Assistant General Manager at R.B Group of Companies Limited (WALTON) for his time to guide us regarding the product and service design and production process in this project. Finally, we would like to thank North South University for letting us use its Internet and library facilities, which helped us a lot to complete our report. Executive Summery Walton is a Bangladeshi brand which has many subsidiaries. One of which is Walton Motors. It produces motor vehicles. The brand Walton is owned and operated by Walton Group head quartered in Dhaka, Bangladesh. This report is focused on some specific operations management of Walton Ltd. More specifically this report is about Walton motorbike and it’s after sales service. The paper has been designed in a way that shows the current operating processes and a proposed procedures so that they can improve effectively and efficiently over current operation processes. In this report we analyzed the operation management system of the Walton motorcycles from the design to production. We learned how they...
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...“Analysis of Credit Department of Dhaka Bank Limited” Submitted to: Afsana Akhter, Senior Lecturer and Shamim Ehsanul Haque, Lecturer BRAC Business School BRAC University Submitted by: Emran Hussain (ID – 06204025) Submitted on: 10th May, 2010 1 Letter of Transmittal May 10th, 2010 Afsana Akhter, Senior Lecturer Shamim Ehsanul Haque, Lecturer BRAC Business School BRAC University Dear Sir and Madam, With great pleasure I submit this internship report that I have been assigned to us as an important requirement of BBA program at BRAC University. I have found the study to be quite interesting, beneficial and knowledgeable. I have tried my level best to prepare an effective & creditable report. This report is about the Credit Analysis of the Credit Department of Dhaka Bank Limited. I also want to thank you for your support and patience with me and I appreciate the opportunity provided by BRAC University and Dhaka Bank Limited to work on this wonderful project. Yours sincerely, Emran Hussain (ID – 06204025) 2 Acknowledgement I would like to express my gratitude to all the people that were involved both directly and indirectly in the preparation of this report. I apologize to the people whose names that I have not mentioned, and their contribution is highly appreciated by me. At first, I would like to thank my academic supervisor Afsana Akhter – Senior Lecturer, BBS, BRAC University – for guiding me and for giving me the opportunity to initiate...
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...Internship Report on “Analysis of Credit Department of Dhaka Bank Limited” Submitted to: Afsana Akhter, Senior Lecturer and Shamim Ehsanul Haque, Lecturer BRAC Business School BRAC University Submitted by: Emran Hussain (ID – 06204025) Submitted on: 10th May, 2010 1 Letter of Transmittal May 10th, 2010 Afsana Akhter, Senior Lecturer Shamim Ehsanul Haque, Lecturer BRAC Business School BRAC University Dear Sir and Madam, With great pleasure I submit this internship report that I have been assigned to us as an important requirement of BBA program at BRAC University. I have found the study to be quite interesting, beneficial and knowledgeable. I have tried my level best to prepare an effective & creditable report. This report is about the Credit Analysis of the Credit Department of Dhaka Bank Limited. I also want to thank you for your support and patience with me and I appreciate the opportunity provided by BRAC University and Dhaka Bank Limited to work on this wonderful project. Yours sincerely, Emran Hussain (ID – 06204025) 2 Acknowledgement I would like to express my gratitude to all the people that were involved both directly and indirectly in the preparation of this report. I apologize to the people whose names that I have not mentioned, and their contribution is highly appreciated by me. At first, I would like to thank my academic supervisor Afsana Akhter – Senior Lecturer, BBS, BRAC University – for guiding me and for giving me...
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...| | | | | | | | |Home | | | | | |[pic] | |Products | | | | | |Services | | ...
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...Internship Report on “Analysis of Credit Department of Dhaka Bank Limited” Submitted to: Afsana Akhter, Senior Lecturer and Shamim Ehsanul Haque, Lecturer BRAC Business School BRAC University Submitted by: Emran Hussain (ID – 06204025) Submitted on: 10th May, 2010 1 Letter of Transmittal May 10th, 2010 Afsana Akhter, Senior Lecturer Shamim Ehsanul Haque, Lecturer BRAC Business School BRAC University Dear Sir and Madam, With great pleasure I submit this internship report that I have been assigned to us as an important requirement of BBA program at BRAC University. I have found the study to be quite interesting, beneficial and knowledgeable. I have tried my level best to prepare an effective & creditable report. This report is about the Credit Analysis of the Credit Department of Dhaka Bank Limited. I also want to thank you for your support and patience with me and I appreciate the opportunity provided by BRAC University and Dhaka Bank Limited to work on this wonderful project. Yours sincerely, Emran Hussain (ID – 06204025) 2 Acknowledgement I would like to express my gratitude to all the people that were involved both directly and indirectly in the preparation of this report. I apologize to the people whose names that I have not mentioned, and their contribution is highly appreciated by me. At first, I would like to thank my academic supervisor Afsana Akhter – Senior Lecturer, BBS, BRAC University – for guiding me and for giving me...
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...Executive Summary The topic of this report is Money laundering is a problem in Dhaka Bank Limited. To prepare this report I have taken necessary assistance from Dhaka Bank Limited during my period. Much of the economy is cash-based, which means that many transactions bypass regulated financial institutions. The popular attractiveness of the hawala, or ‘hundi’, network has been increased by tight restrictions on currency transfers imposed by the government. Corruption is a major concern in Bangladesh and is responsible in part for the large role that the country plays in regional smuggling. Much of the smuggling is undertaken for purposes of tax avoidance, but arms and drugs are also smuggled through the country. Funds from these operations tend to be laundered via the financial markets. My study covers the history of DBL. It tells about its objectives, mission and goals. The report says about the employees and their ideas on money laundering .I have told about the products and services of Dhaka Bank Limited. The financial highlight is also included in the report. The overall performance of DBL shows a satisfactory position .The firm is trying to stand against money laundering problem. They are expected to be the premier financial institution in the country. 1.1 Objectives My internship report will mainly focus on money laundering problem of Dhaka Bank Limited. When any renowned or influential person comes in the bank for making a relationship with the bank for different...
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...1.0 Introduction 1.1 Origin of the Report The report has been prepared as a requirement for the completion of BBA Degree and course BUS 498, Project Work, SSM Sadrul Huda, course instructor, assigned to do an analysis report on “Promotional Activities of different private banks in Bangladesh”. For this purpose I, Mustafizur Rahman, ID – 2007-1-10-097 choose to prepare this report on Promotional Activities of 5 different private banks. The date of submission of the report is April 28, 2011. 1.2 Background Promotion is a form of corporate communication that uses various methods to reach a targeted audience with a certain message in order to achieve specific organizational objectives. Nearly all organizations, whether for-profit or not-for-profit, in all types of industries, must engage in some form of promotion. Such efforts may range from multinational firms spending large sums on securing high-profile celebrities to serve as corporate spokespersons to the owner of a one-person enterprise passing out business cards at a local businessperson’s meeting. Like most marketing decisions, an effective promotional strategy requires the marketer understand how promotion fits with other pieces of the marketing puzzle (e.g., product, distribution, pricing, target markets). Consequently, promotion decisions should be made with an appreciation for how it affects other areas of the company. 1.3 Objectives of the Study: Objectives of Marketing Promotions The most obvious objective...
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...ASIAN METACENTRE RESEARCH PAPER SERIES no.20 The Social Organization of Remittances: Channelling Remittances from East and Southeast Asia to Bangladesh Md Mizanur Rahman Brenda S.A. Yeoh ASIAN METACENTRE FOR POPULATION AND SUSTAINABLE DEVELOPMENT ANALYSIS HEADQUARTERS AT ASIA RESEARCH INSTITUTE NATIONAL UNIVERSITY of SINGAPORE Md Mizanur Rahman is a Postdoctoral Fellow at Asia Research Institute, National University of Singapore, Singapore. He is a sociologist with particular interests in migration and development, migration and human (in)security, minority migration and migration policy in East and Southeast Asia. He obtained his Ph.D. in Sociology from National University of Singapore, Singapore, and M.A. in Sociology from Aligarh Muslim University, Aligarh, India. Brenda S.A. Yeoh is Professor, Department of Geography, and the Head of Southeast Asian Studies Programme, National University of Singapore. She leads the research cluster on Asian Migrations at the Asia Research Institute and is Principal Investigator of the Asian MetaCentre for Population and Sustainable Development Analysis (funded by the Wellcome Trust, UK) at the Asia Research Institute. She is a social geographer whose main interest in population-related studies lies in migration, family and gender issues. She has in recent years completed, in collaboration with other colleagues, research projects on modes of childcare in Singapore, migrant women as paid domestic labour in the Southeast Asian context...
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...Annals of Tourism Research, Vol. 27, No. 2, pp. 345±370, 2000 Pergamon 5 2000 Elsevier Science Ltd. All rights reserved Printed in Great Britain 0160-7383/00/$20.00 PII: S0160-7383(99)00073-0 CARIBBEAN CRUISE TOURISM Globalization at Sea Robert E. Wood Rutgers University-Camden, USA Abstract: Caribbean cruise tourism provides a particularly illuminating vantage point for understanding the processes of globalization in the world today. After documenting the rapid expansion of this business, the paper explores three central manifestations of globalization at work in the Caribbean cruise industry: the restructuring of the industry in the face of global competition, capital mobility, and labor migration; new patterns of global ethnic recruitment and strati®cation, including their incorporation into the product marketed to tourists; and deterritorialization, cultural theming, and simulation. The paper asserts that this ``globalization at sea'' illustrates the contradictions, ambiguities, and unchartered course of contemporary globalization processes. Keywords: globalization, tourism, cruise industry, Caribbean, migration, ethnicity. 5 2000 Elsevier Science Ltd. All rights reserved. ReÂsumeÂ: Le tourisme de croisiÁere aux CaraÈõbes: la globalisation en mer. Le tourisme de croisiÁere aux CaraÈõbes fournit un point de vue particuliÁerement appropriÂe pour comprendre le processus de globalisation dans le monde d'aujourd'hui. AprÁes avoir passÂe en revue la rapide expansion de ce...
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...www.ccsenet.org/ijbm International Journal of Business and Management Vol. 6, No. 7; July 2011 86 ISSN 1833-3850 E-ISSN 1833-8119 Capital Market of Bangladesh: Volatility in the Dhaka Stock Exchange (DSE) and Role of Regulators Md. Tariqur Rahman (Corresponding author) Senior Research Associate, Centre for Policy Dialogue (CPD) House No. 40/C, Road No, 11 (New) Dhanmondi R/A, Dhaka-1209, Bangladesh Tel: 880-2-812-4770, 9141734 Ext-146 E-mail: rahmantariqdu@gmail.com Khondker Golam Moazzem Senior Research Fellow, Centre for Policy Dialogue (CPD) House No. 40/C, Road No, 11 (New) Dhanmondi R/A, Dhaka-1209, Bangladesh Tel: 880-2-812-4770, 9141734 Ext-147 E-mail: moazzem@cpd.org.bd Received: December 17, 2010 Accepted: February 27, 2011 doi:10.5539/ijbm.v6n7p86 Abstract Over the last few years, the capital market of Bangladesh has witnessed a haughty growth which is not in line of development in the real sector of the economy. Although, the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) of Bangladesh has tried to correct the irregular behavior observed in the market, very often it is argued that lack of proper and firm decisions from the regulator’s side has contributed to make the market more unstable rather than to reduce it. The paper attempts to identify the casual relationship between the observed volatility in the country’s major bourses namely the Dhaka Stock Exchange (DSE) and the regulatory decisions taken by the SEC empirically. Using Vector Auto-regressive...
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...1 POLICY REFORMS AND TRADE LIBERALIZATION IN BANGLADESH I. MAIN FEATURES OF BANGLADESH ECONOMY GDP and its composition. During the fiscal year 2002-2003, the GDP of Bangladesh stood at around $52 billion. The growth rate of GDP has picked up in recent years. Thus, during 1980-90, it grew annually at 3.7 per cent on average, barely above the population growth rate. On the other hand, it approached an average annual rate of 5 per cent during 1991-2002. The relative shares of consumption and savings in the GDP witnessed modest changes during this period. In 1991, consumption accounted for over 86 per cent of the GDP, while in 2002 it fell to nearly 82 per cent. Correspondingly, the shares of savings in GDP rose by a quarter over this period. During the same period, the investment/GDP ratio increased from 17 per cent to 23 per cent. Within this, the ration of public investment to GDP remained stagnant around 7 per cent, while that of private investment increased from 10 per cent to 17 per cent of GDP. Changing sectoral distribution. As indicated by changes in the sectoral distribution of the GDP, the economy of Bangladesh underwent important structural transformations over the last three decades. At independence in 1971, agriculture was the dominant sectors accounting for over 55 per cent of the total GDP. The industrial sector was small, contributing less than 10 per cent of the GDP. The services including transportation and power accounted for the rest of the GDP. The...
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...Introduction: Trade is an integral part of the total developmental effort and national growth of all economies including Bangladesh. It particularly plays a central role in the development plan of Bangladesh where foreign exchange scarcity constitutes a critical bottleneck. Export trade can largely meet ‘foreign exchange gap’, and export growth would increase the import capacity of the country that, in turn, would increase industrialization, as well as overall economic activities. Bangladesh’s import needs are substantial; hence the need to rapidly increase exports is immediate. In order to finance the imports and also to reduce the country’s dependence on foreign aid, the Government of Bangladesh has been trying to enhance foreign exchange earnings through planned and increased exports. However, the global trade scenario has exposed structural limitations of the Bangladesh economy, posing a variety of challenges for the country that has underdeveloped technology and a low capital base. In this assignment we discuss the composition, performance and trends of foreign trade of Bangladesh. In the process, we examine Bangladesh’s export and import performance compared to those of various countries, regions and the world over the years. We also discuss the sources of Bangladesh’s imports and directions of Bangladesh’s exports and the dynamic changes over the years, and highlight the trends of export and import shares to GDP and trade balance positions with different countries...
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