Energy Security in India Important facts regarding energy generation capacity and the energy mix for India Source | Percentage | Coal | 57 | Hydro | 18.6 | Renewable | 12.25 | Gas | 8.9 | Nuclear | 2.2 | Oil | 0.56 | Sector | Percentage | State | 40 | Central | 29 | Pvt | 29 | 1. Energy is the prime mover of a country’s economic growth. Availability of energy with required quality of supply is not only key to sustainable development, but the commercial energy also have
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Strategy Mountain Dew Product formulation based on consumer and Lays demand How to get Consumers buy more than one Pepsi product per visit New product introduction based on recommendations by retailers. “Fun For You” Industry Attractiveness Measure Weight PepsiCo North America 10 7 7 7 8 10 4 PepsiCo International 10 5 5 8 7 9 5 Frito-Lay 8 5 5 7 6 5 6 Quaker Oats 8 6 6 7 6 5 5 Market Size and growth .1 rate Intensity of Competition Emerging Opportunities and Threats Cross-Industry Strategic
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Origin of the Report This report is originated as a partial fulfillment of the requirement of the course “F-310: Public Finance” of BBA program under Department of Finance of the Faculty of Business Studies, University of Dhaka and under the observation of the assigner teacher Umma Rumana Huq on 22 November 2012. Objective The broad objective of the study is to identify the various ways to finance economic growth and poverty reduction strategies in Bangladesh for attaining better economic performance
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The tremendous success of readymade garment exports from Bangladesh over the last two decades has surpassed the most optimistic expectations. Today the apparel export sector is a multi-billion-dollar manufacturing and export industry in the country. The overall impact of the readymade garment exports is certainly one of the most significant social and economic developments in contemporary Bangladesh. With over one and a half million women workers employed in semi-skilled and skilled jobs producing
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for these countries to integrate themselves in the world economy. Meanwhile they continued to grow rapidly in terms of population, a factor that they could later leverage when they would start to open up. Slowly even with relatively lower per capita GDP but a big enough population and favourable age structure their overall impact in world economy could no longer be ignored. In the meantime, Developed countries were at their peak. The way in which business would be done was changing world over. Spurred
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website. FY11 growth outcome, outlook for FY12: Output and investment activities in the economy paced up substantially in FY11 after a couple of years in post global crisis relative slowdown. The Bangladesh Bureau of Statistics (BBS) estimates real GDP growth for FY11 at 6.66 percent (very close to initial projection of 6.70 percent), following 6.07 percent growth in FY10. Industry sector had the strongest growth gain from 6.49 percent of FY10 to 8.16 percent in FY11, supported by strong growth exceeding
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The Velvet Divorce: An Economic Analysis of Cause and Effect In light of EU enlargement and discussion of the Eurozone, Czechoslovakia has emerged as a role model for comparison. The two central European countries of the Czech Republic and Slovakia present an interesting case study on the optimum currency area and on political unification. Despite economic, social and demographical convergence as well as an overwhelming majority opinion in favor of unification, the two countries split less
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need to revive growth in manufacturing and infrastructure sectors. It also highlights the importance of improvement in Tax to GDP ratio and Non-tax revenues. • Tax revenues budgeted at 10.6% of GDP in FY15. • Tax budgeted to grow at 20% in FY15 compared with 10% growth seen in FY14 • Assumption of nominal FY15 GDP growth of 13.4%. • Retains fiscal deficit target at 4.1% of GDP. • Increased divestment target of Rs 634 bn • Boost to domestic manufacturing and investments, particularly in infrastructure
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1991 Indian economic crisis By 1985, India had started having balance of payments problems. By the end of 1990, it was in a serious economic crisis. The government was close to default, its central bank had refused new credit and foreign exchange reserves had been reduced to such a point that India could barely finance three weeks’ worth of imports which lead the Indian government to airlift national gold reserves as a pledge to the International Monetary Fund (IMF) in exchange for a loan to cover
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comments & recommendations at the end. 2.0 Product development After decades of development, tourism has already become the fastest and most prosperous industry in Australia, with a proportion of 2.5% in terms of its contribution to Australia’s GDP in 2011 (Hooper& van Zyl2011, p. 12). The rapid development of Australian tourism largely depends on its competitive capability of developing tourism products whichappeals to various specific requirements of different segmentation markets. As analyzed
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