Subjects for study Six subjects and Seven Papers of study in IPCC are – Group I Paper 1: Accounting (100 marks) Paper 2: Law, Ethics and Communication Part I: Law (60 marks) Business Laws (30 marks) Company Law (30 marks) Part II: Business Ethics (20 marks) Part III: Business Communication (20 marks) Paper 3: Cost Accounting and Financial Management Part I: Cost Accounting (50 marks) Part II: Financial Management (50 marks) Paper 4: Taxation Part I: Income-tax (50 marks) Part II: Service Tax (25
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perceived as an opportunity, there is perhaps merit in carefully reviewing the policy in light of economic theory, and comparative experience. As the bulk of the public investments are in industries with economies of scale and scope (with externalities that in principle invite considerable regulation), this study suggests an alternative institutional arrangement for improving PSEs’ financial performance: mutual stock holding among complementary enterprises tied around a public sector bank to minimise problems
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Banking Awareness Study Material Shared by Rajesh Kumar and Bhavya Vadudevan www.Gr8AmbitionZ.com your A to Z competitive exam guide Page 1 Banking Awareness Study Material - powered by Gr8AmbitionZ.com Indian Banking Structure a) b) c) d) e) Central Bank (RBI) Specialised Banks Commercial Banks Development Banks Co-operative Banks Specialised Banks: NABARD: National Bank for Agriculture and Rural Development. This bank is meant for financing the agriculture as well as rural
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International Operations Management The new role of WTO as a World trade court 1957 : GATT General Agreement on Tariff and trade 23 countries only when Gatt was created. A club of countries dominated by US. Major discussions on tariff reductions : KENNEDY ROUND NIXON ROUND Try to reduce the tariff among countries. 1990 : URUGAY ROUND Decision to convert GATT Into a more formal organzation 1995 : creation of WTO = World Trade Organization 125 countries Involved in four
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“dirty float” the government or the country's central bank occasionally intervenes to change the direction of the value of the country's currency. In most instances, the intervention aspect of a dirty float system is meant to act as a buffer against an external economic shock before its effects become truly disruptive to the domestic economy. Therefore, with a managed or dirty float the government doesn’t peg the currency, but tries from time to time to influence the rate by buying or selling in the
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between personalized town meetings and diffused county government, and the population was extremely ethnically mixed with an unusual degree of religious toleration and democratic control. Because of easily acquirable land, a large amount of social and economic democracy prevailed in the middle colonies. The South was a plantation based economy with a strong aristocratic atmosphere where owners lorded over black slaves. They were devoted to exporting agricultural products such as tobacco and rice. In
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FACTORS AFFECTING THE PROCUREMENT EFFICIENCY IN PRIVATE HOSPITALS IN KENYA (A CASE STUDY OF CONSOLATA MISSION HOSPITAL, NYERI) NDUNG’U MARGARET NJERI A RESEARCH PROJECT SUBMITTED TO THE DEPARTMENT OF LOGISTICS AND SUPLLIES MANAGEMENT DEDAN KIMATHI UNIVERSITY OF TECHNOLOGY IN PARTIAL FULFILLMENT OF THE REQUIREMENTS FOR THE AWARD OF DEGREE IN BACHELOR OF PURCHASING AND SUPPLIES MANAGEMENT. MARCH 2015 DECLARATION I Ndung’u Margaret Njeri, declare that the material in this research project
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by an extremely lax U.S. monetary policy that led to easy credit, and by foreign producers who supplied cheap goods to America in part by managing their currencies. The resulting, unsustainable imbalance led to financial collapse and a worldwide economic downturn, even in rapidly developing countries such as Brazil, Russia, India and China—the BRIC countries. The following articles from Knowledge@Wharton look at these and other developments in global finance. They also examine how similar crises
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The Global Roots of the Current Financial Crisis and its Implications for Regulation Anil Kashyap (University of Chicago) Raghuram Rajan (University of Chicago) Jeremy Stein (Harvard University) Where did the current financial crisis come from? Who or what is to blame? How will it be resolved? How do we undertake reforms for the future? These are the questions this paper will seek to answer. The analysis will have three parts. The first is a rough and ready sketch of the global roots of this
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and are included in this package: The Staff Report prepared by a staff team of the IMF for the Executive Board’s consideration on February 13, 2015, following discussions that ended on November 24, 2014, with the officials of Malaysia on economic developments and policies. Based on information available at the time of these discussions, the staff report was completed on January 23, 2015. An Informational Annex prepared by the IMF. A Press Release summarizing the views of
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