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China And Indi International Journal Of E Business...
China and India play a crucial role in the world economy, molding and shaping the global markets,
despite the differences in the methods of attaining such global prominence. These differences may
appear to set the two countries apart completely, but China and India share a number of similarities.
Despite having semblable population curves and similar domestic issues, India has been unable to
match China's economic success because of its limited production and distribution capabilities, but
its steady investment in its economy appears to give India the advantage for being a superpower in
the future.
Both nations possess comparable features. Both are rapidly expanding, constituting the most
populous regions of the world, and face poverty, a growing rural–urban divide, corruption,
expansive bureaucracies, and illiteracy. They also have a seemingly limitless economic potential and
"are developing rapidly in certain sectors and represent the largest of the emerging markets," as
stated in the International Journal of E–Business Research (Raven 104). But the two nations differ in
their method of garnering economic influence, with China attaining this economic growth much
more quickly than India. China transitioned from a nation closed to trade to one that excelled in
exporting, establishing their status in the world economy. The communist system, established after
World War II, underwent reforms around 1978 to become more market based, pushing China into an
advanced democracy and
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Learning A Foreign Language : Your Choice
Learning A Foreign Language: Your Choice
Introduction
It is certainly true that English is the 'lingua franca' of the business world, however this does not
necessarily equate to "I speak English, so I do not need to learn another language". The movie 'Lost
in Translation' received good acclaim in 2003 for the portrayal of two Americans meeting in Japan
ponders over themes such as loneliness, alienation, struggles that mono lingual English speakers
face when they are forced to rely on the language skills of others. Data suggests that English is
spoken only by 4.7% of world population and learning a foreign language has far reaching effects
such as increasing our global understanding, sharpen Cognitive skills, Increase employability
potential, Increase changes of success while working or studying abroad and overall to appreciate
and understand diverse cultures. My personal choice of a foreign language is Spanish.
Background
I was born and raised in India in an urban setting and I learned to read and write in 3 languages
(Tamil – Native language, Hindi and English) even before joining under–graduate college. Experts
say that children who have studied a language at the elementary level tend to score higher on tests,
language arts and math. Those that have learnt foreign languages tend to show greater cognitive
skills towards problem solving, conceptualizing and reasoning. The 10th Prime Minister of India,
P.V Narasimha Rao was very widely known as a intellect and he can speak
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india economy
Economics is the social science that studies the production, distribution and consumption of goods
and services and in general the economy includes all of the country's economic system, or any other
area, employment, capital, natural resources, industry, trade, distribution, and consumption of goods
and services in that region. The economy could also be described as a spatially limited social
network where the exchange of goods and services in accordance with supply and demand among
participants through barter or through the medium of Exchange using the acceptable values for debt
and credit within that social network and a simplified economy shows how the community provides
basic needs, there are different ways to measure the economic performance of the country, such as
exchange rate and GDP GNP and the securities market and stock market and national debt, interest
rates and inflation, unemployment and balance of trade.
There are two of the fastest growing economies in the world, China and India, and also happens to
be the two largest in the world and are the two forms must be studied and compared them to figure
out how the two countries take advantage of the large manpower development and how to achieve
fast economic growth and the well–being of citizens and to provide jobs for them and what
economic policies and decisions that have affected the economy in India and China.
As mentioned, India is one of the fastest growing economies in the world are China and also the two
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Economic Liberalisation Of India And India
Economic liberalisation in India
India is a country which was and still is diverse in terms of cultures, languages, ethics and beliefs.
During the 1970–1990 when the British rule had just been over in India, it soon started to face
problems in their balance of payments. By the end of 1990, it was in a serious economic crisis. The
government was close to bankruptcy, the central bank of India had refused new credit and foreign
exchange reserves had been depleted to a point where India could barely finance three weeks' worth
of imports which made the Indian government airlift the nations gold reserves as a pledge to the
International Monetary Fund (IMF) in exchange for a loan to cover its balance of payment debts.
The main causes of the crisis was 1) currency overvaluation,2) the current account deficit, and the
confidence of investors played a significant role in the sharp exchange rate depreciation/devaluation.
The economic crisis was primarily due to the large and growing fiscal imbalances over 1980–1985...
During 1985–1886, India started to have balance of payments problems. Precipitated by the Gulf
War, India's oil import bill increased, exports decreased, credit dried up, and investors that had
invested their money in India took their money out. Large fiscal deficits, over the time, had a huge
spill over effect on the trade deficit, culminating in an external payments crisis. By the end of the
90's, India was in deep economic trouble. The gross fiscal deficit of the
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Favourite Personality In Ramayana
Description
Hanuman is one of the most important personalities in 'Ramayana'. Hanuman is known as a popular
devotee of Lord Rama. His help made Rama to find out Sita devi easily and then defeat Ravana in
the war. Hanuman is known as different names such as Anjaneya, Pavan puthra, Maruthi. The name
'Anjaneya' was derived from his mother's name 'Anjana', a female vanara. It is also believed that
Hanuman is the incarnation of Lord Shiva. So Hanuman is known as 'Maharudhra' too. Some
believes that Hanuman is the son of 'Vayu', the God of wind, so having the name 'Pavan puthra'.
Hanuman meets Lord Rama when he was wandering in the forest. Rama was expelled from his
country for a period of 14 years. His wife Sita and brother Lakshmana were accompanying ... Show
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Suchindram temple is a pious place lying about 14 km from Kanyakumari, Tamil Nadu
In Rajasthan, Hanuman Temples at Mehendipur Balaji in Dausa district (80 km from Jaipur) and
Salasar dhaam in Churu district (160 km from Jaipur) attract a large number of devotees from all
over India. The idol of Hanuman ji at Hanuman Temple, Mehendipur Balaji is svaymbhu and
attracts many devotees for getting rid of evil spirits. Apart from this Sri Balaji Maharaj(Bal–
Hanuman) of Mehndipur Balaji give blessings and grants wishes to his devotees. [{Chandraloak
Devpuri Balaji}] is located in Dugana 17 km from Laharpur district–sitapur, Uttar Pradesh.
Bhaktha Anjaneyar is Temple is located in Vedasandur, Dindigul, Tamil Nadu.
Sri Baktha Hanuman Temple, at Ramboda in Sri
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Banks in India
Nationalisation of Banks
Despite the provisions, control and regulations of Reserve Bank of India, banks in India except the
State Bank of India or SBI, continued to be owned and operated by private persons. By the 1960s,
the Indian banking industry had become an important tool to facilitate the development of the Indian
economy. At the same time, it had emerged as a large employer, and a debate had ensued about the
nationalization of the banking industry. Indira Gandhi, then Prime Minister of India, expressed the
intention of the Government of India in the annual conference of the All India Congress Meeting in
a paper entitled "Stray thoughts on Bank Nationalisation."[2] The meeting received the paper with
enthusiasm.
Thereafter, her ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ...
One may also expect M&As, takeovers, and asset sales.
In March 2006, the Reserve Bank of India allowed Warburg Pincus to increase its stake in Kotak
Mahindra Bank (a private sector bank) to 10%. This is the first time an investor has been allowed to
hold more than 5% in a private sector bank since the RBI announced norms in 2005 that any stake
exceeding 5% in the private sector banks would need to be vetted by them.
In recent years critics have charged that the non–government owned banks are too aggressive in
their loan recovery efforts in connection with housing, vehicle and personal loans. There are press
reports that the banks' loan recovery efforts have driven defaulting borrowers to suicide
List of Nationalised Banks
1. Allahabad Bank
2. Andhra Bank
3. Bank of Baroda
4. Bank of India
5. Bank of Maharashtra
6. Canara Bank
7. Central Bank of India
8. Corporation Bank
9. Dena Bank
10. IDBI Bank
11. Indian Bank
12. Indian Overseas Bank
13. Oriental Bank of Commerce
14. Punjab and Sind Bank
15. Punjab National Bank
16. Repco Bank
17. State Bank of Bikaner & Jaipur
18. State Bank of Hyderabad
19. State Bank of India
20. State Bank of Mysore
21. State Bank of Patiala
22. State Bank of Travancore
23. Syndicate Bank
24. UCO Bank
25. Union Bank of India
26. United Bank of India
27. Vijaya Bank
List of New
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The Pros And Cons Of Indian Atomic Bombs
Not long after May 11, 1998 at Pokhran, a betray site in the Indian province of Rajasthan, gatherings
of neighborhood Bishnoi herders–whose traditions prohibit murdering creatures or cutting trees–
heard a gigantic blast, and viewed in astonishment as a colossal clean cloud coasted in the sky. What
the Indian ranchers did not understand, but rather the representatives in Washington and around the
globe soon got a handle on, was the way that India had quite recently joined the United States,
Russia, England, France and China as the most up to date individual from the atomic club. On that
warm May evening, Indian atomic researchers effectively detonated three nuclear gadgets adding up
to around six times the ruinous energy of the American bomb dropped on Hiroshima in 1945. The
following day, as the world endeavored to retain the alarming news, India touched off two more
atomic blasts.
Indeed, even as 90% of Indians acclaimed then–Prime Minister Vajpayee's choice to go atomic, at
that point U.S. President Clinton quickly responded to the blasts with stun and reprimanded India's
atomic trying. The American President contended that India's activities damaged the Comprehensive
Test Ban Treaty supported by 149 countries and the 1970 non–multiplication bargain marked by 185
countries. In spite of the way that neither ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ...
With the race of the Hindu Nationalist, Bharata Janata Party in 1998, Prime Minister Atal Vajpayee
requested Indian researchers to continue with plans for testing at the earliest opportunity. This
prompt the arrangement of explosions in May, and the resulting fast reaction by
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Personal Statement Essay: My Love For Mechanical Engineering
It all started when I was 10, when my father gifted me a toy car for my birthday. I used to play with
it all the time; I opened the parts just to see what it is made up of and how it works. On opening it, I
saw various parts of which I had no idea and how each part performed to make my car move. I was
eager to know the same then. Hence, the seed to my love for automobiles and machines in general
was sown by the little toy car of mine. This passion of mine never subsided and it grew year after
year. At the age of 18, I came across the TV show called "Mega Factories", which is an exclusive
and amazing documentary television series based on the major factories of popular companies. It
gave me a deep insight into the field of machines and manufacturing. ... Show more content on
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I got an opportunity to work with 3 different clients during my 1st year in Wipro. I was privileged to
interact with the clients, to understand their requirements and fulfil them. I have a fair idea on how
an organisation works and can easily adapt myself for a professional career. Since my work mainly
focuses on the Information Technology field I wanted to shift back to Mechanical field. So I decided
to fulfil my dream of pursuing a Master's Program. I chose Germany because; it is affirmed to be
one of the best destinations for Mechanical Engineering. As a part of this preparation I started with
the German language course at 'Goethe Institute' in 'Bangalore' about a month ago and would
complete my A1 German by April,
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British Imperialism During The First War Of Indian...
British Imperialism in India
Indian Independence The first war of Indian independence, also known as the 1857 Indian
Rebellion, was not the first challenge to British authority, but it was the first to feature widespread
coordination with increased levels of intensity. It began with discontent within the sepoy army.
Initially, the soldiers were well–paid to keep their loyalty, but the EIC failed to increase pay to
match the inflation rate. Moreover, they received the impression that the Company was attempting
to change Indian religions, due to the criticism of missionaries in India, previous violations of Hindu
religious conventions, and the introduction of new cartridges that were greased in pig fat and beef
tallow, the previous ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ...
However, India would have to pay for the damages of the mutiny through increased taxes. The next
major step toward independence occurred with the founding of the Indian National Congress (INC)
in 1885 at Bombay. Despite claims of secularism and religious toleration, the INC was a mostly
Hindu organization, and in 1906, the Muslim League was formed. Together, they represented the
public opinion for swaraj, or self–rule, and served as a way for Indians to participate in politics in
response to rising Indian nationalism. One of their first campaigns was the swadeshi movement, a
boycott of British products in favor of Indian domestic goods, which won them autonomy at the
provincial level. Mohandas K. Gandhi (1869–1948), also referred to as Mahatma (meaning "Great
Soul") Gandhi, entered the INC as its president in 1920. He worked under the principles of ahimsa,
non–violence, and satyagraha, truth–struggle, to convince the British that it had wrongfully
repressed India, and work together with the them to reverse its effects. From 1930 to 1934, he
launched a series of civil disobedience movements. The most notable of these was the Salt March in
1930, to protest the salt tax imposed by the British. Gandhi, along with Sarojini Naidu
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The Unique Social Structure Of Lions In Sub-Saharan Africa
Lions Lions are wild mammals classified under Felidae family of Panthera Genus (like of the other
big cats) and assigned a specific name Panthera leo. They are found in the Sub–Saharan Africa and
parts of Eurasia. Lions are generalist carnivores with mammals, particularly ungulates as their main
meal. They are referred to as "the king of the jungle" because of their appearance, raw strength and
power, and partly their unique social structure of a pride. An average lion has a 10 to 14 years
lifespan but can live up to 20 years in monitored captivity.
Distribution of Lions
Africa
In Africa, lions are live in the Sub–Saharan region except in the equatorial rain forest and in the
heavily populated regions along the southern coast of the western portion of the continent. Lions are
known to typically thrive in savanna grasslands with scattered Acacia trees where they camouflage
well with the surrounding. However, there are unique desert–adapted lions in the southwestern part
of Africa which have evolved to withstand the harsh environment of the Namib Desert in Namibia.
Most of Africa's wild lions live in Eastern African countries like Kenya and Tanzania as well as the
Southern African countries like South Africa, Botswana, Zimbabwe, and Zambia.
Eurasia ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ...
Most lions now live in eastern and southern Africa, and their numbers are rapidly decreasing. The
number of mature lions in West Africa is estimated at 850 to 1,160. Another surviving population is
in northwestern Africa, with approximately 14 to 21 lions. Both the African and Eurasia lions are
under conservation within national parks and game reserves set up to preserve the dwindling
species. However, some lions in Africa occasionally find themselves roaming in residential areas.
Diseases and human interference have proven to be the major challenges in conservation
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Social Entrepreneurship: Case Study
SE01 TERM PAPER 18 AUG 2014 Aanchal Khosla, MA2014SE001 Centre for Social
Entrepreneurship, School of Management and Labour Studies TATA INSTITUTE OF SOCIAL
SCIENCES ENTREPRENEURSHIP may be defined as a process of organizing any enterprise, a
commercial or social venture, managing it with considerable initiative, innovation and risk.
Introduction to Entrepreneurship– The course on entrepreneurship was introduced with a Case study
of Mamma Mia that helped bring out and refine our preconceived and insufficient understanding of
"entrepreneurship". In the case we tried to understand What makes Judy Craymer an entrepreneur,
her decision to bounce back, where was the innovation involved were some of the aspects we looked
into, however they were understood in more depth as more cases and theories on entrepreneurship
were analyzed. Views on entrepreneurship:– There are a number of views on entrepreneurship which
may be analyzed through the lens of various disciplines. Such as – Economist 's view, In the
economist 's view, an entrepreneur is one who takes a good amount of risk and also uses capital to
make profits.. Psychologist 's view says that for a person to become an entrepreneur he/she must
possesses some special traits, a certain personality type. The management view lays importance on
the presence of skill competence, decision making and opportunity identification ability in an
entrepreneur, process view says that entrepreneurship is like a scientific process and
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Enron And Indi Case Analysis
Dabhol, India Eric Stob 10/13/14 In theory, both Enron and India would have fared well with the
production of a new power plant. Enron was desperate in need of real income and India lacked in
sufficient power for its citizens. Littered with bribes, human rights violations, deceit, and many
examples of poor moral judgment Enron's behaviors clearly show what not to do in a foreign
investment. However, this paper will focus on the violations of human right during the project using
the four–component decision making model to assess the situation, options of what could have been
done, and the conditions of the stakeholders involved directly and indirectly. From the beginning,
Enron was on the wrong foot and by showing examples of each of the components we can see where
Enron falls short in ethical standards. At the time India was in a state of change after the Cold War
and in need of a new power source. The Soviet Union disintegrated, and India had to start to figure
out how to operate in a new world. With their major ally gone and its population soaring, India had
to look for new power sources and partners for its inefficient electric grid system. This is where
Enron steps in and tries to lay its hands on this tempting opportunity. In order to draw international
companies to enter India, Prime Minister P.V. Narasimha Rao had to decentralize "government
control over industrial licensing."(Parry, 2001). By decreasing the regulations, foreign companies
will find more incentive to
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Modern Technologies Associated With Ceramics
Modern Technologies Associated with Ceramics
Introduction
Ceramics, what are they? It might seem like a simple question, plates and bricks and expensive
cooking knives. People use ceramics every day in their lives, but they don't understand the huge
amount of technology that goes into a nice plate. Before we can go over the cutting edge of ceramics
we have to understand the technology that goes into every ceramic. The technologies associated
with traditional ceramics deserve a paper of their own, but they seem vanilla compared to advanced
ceramics, which have new and interesting properties that can make them useful and unlike any
ceramic you see everyday. We can use the understanding of traditional ceramics as a base on which
we build an ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ...
Plasticity is primarily a property ball clays (Stephenson, 1912, p.13). Stephenson says that because
the plasticity of clay is destroyed at 450o, the temperature needed to drive off the water, that
plasticity probably has something to do with the combination with water (1912, p.14). The
mechanism of this plasticity has not yet been satisfactorily explained by any theory, At present three
theories contest the field–the colloid,the soluble salt, and the molecular attraction theories
(Stephenson, 1912, p. 14).
Traditional ceramics can be divided into three categories based on the chemicals and properties of
the clays. These types are china clay which you know to be porcelain, ball clay which is malleable ,
and fire clay which is refractory (Stephenson, 1912, p.12).
China clay is our first type of ceramic. China clay is used to make porcelain (Stephenson, 1912, p.
12). China clay is unique from the other clays because it has large amounts of kaolinite
(Stephenson,1912, p.12) Kaolinite is a white mineral, giving porcelain it's unique look, with a
chemical formula of Al2Si2O5(OH)4 (Stephenson,1912, p.12).
Ball clay is the next type of clay. Ball clay is unique because of its malleability (Stephenson. 1912,
p.13). Ball clay is the clay you see potters working on potter's wheels. It's useful to potters because it
can be molded into complex forms and made permanent by firing (Stephenson, 1912, p.13).
Fire clay is the final type of
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Notes On Medicinal Properties Of Ayurvedic Medicines With...
Medicinal Properties: Guna (Qualities) – Laghu (light to digest) Ruksha (dry) Rasa (Taste) –
Kashaya (astringent) Tikta (bitter) Vipaka (post–digestive taste) – pungent Veerya (Sheeta) –
Coolant Effect on tridosha – balances kapha and pitta dosha Dosage – Decoction 50–100 ml;
powder 3–6 gm Pterocarpus marsupium uses: Keshya – improves hair strength, promotes hair
growth Medohara – reduces fat and cholesterol levels Rasayana – anti–ageing, causes cell and tissue
rejuvenation Indicated in: Raktapitta – bleeding disorders such as nasal bleeding, heavy periods etc.
Krumi – worm infestation Visarpa – herpes Kushta – skin diseases Shvitra – leucoderma, vitiligo
Meha – diabetes, urinary tract infections Gala dosha – throat disorders Raktamandala – ring worm
infestation Ayurvedic medicines with Beejak as ingredient: Asana manjishtadi taila – for treatment
of headache and eye disorders Asana cladi taila – for treatment of headache, ear and eye disorders
Asana vilwadi taila – for treatment of headache, ear and eye disorders Narasimha Rasayan – for
treatment of weakness, weight gain, hair growth and rejuvenation Classical Categorization: Susruta
– Salaasaradi gna Vabhata – Asanadi Gana Kaiyadeva Nighantu – Oshadhi Varga Dhanvantari
Nighantu – Amradi Varga Bhavaprakasha – Vatadi Varga Rajanighantu – Prabhadradi Varga
Pharmacological activities: 1. Analgesic Activity In an investigation, PM leaves were successively
extracted with petroleum ether, ethyl
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Compare And Contrast Buddhism And Dalai Lama
Throughout the whole world there are world leaders that lead their respected countries into a
peaceful era. Presidents, dictators, tsars, monarchs, Kings and queens have been some political
leaders that people tend to elect and also look up to for advice and even protection. Even though
these figures are known to be very influential in everyday lives, by making decisions that change the
face of the world, there are also others that have been known to bring peace to places that others
couldn't do. These are religious leaders such as the Pope, the Dalai Lama, and also God figures have
been known throughout history to be the solution of problems where the military, and money cannot
solve. This essay will go through some of the similarities and differences between the religions, ...
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The Dalai Lama is known to be the figurehead to Buddhism. The most recognized Dalai Lama's are
probably the 14th Dalai Lama Tenzin Gyatso, and the third Dalai Lama Sonam Gyatso. The 14th
Dalai Lama Tenzin Gyatso states: "From one viewpoint, Buddhism is a religion, from another
viewpoint Buddhism is a science of mind and not a religion. Buddhism can be a bridge between
these two sides. Therefore, with this conviction I try to have closer ties with scientists, mainly in the
fields of cosmology, psychology, neurobiology and physics. In these fields there are insights to
share, and to a certain extent we can work together." Tenzin Gyatso was appointed as the Dalai
Lama the age of two, and was formally recognized when he was 15. Because assassination is a
common problem with political leaders and religious leaders, he fled from Tibet and stationed
himself and thousands of refugees in Dharamsala Himachal Pradesh, India. He preaches as well as
practices the importance of nonviolence and peace and significance of compassion as Ghandi once
did. The Dalai Lama has received many types of recognitions, one being the Nobel Peace
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India Super Growing Economic Power
India super growing economic power
Submitted by: MUHAMMED FAZAL K
Preface
India is a new emerging economic power in the world. Though the 21st first decade saw a global
level financial crisis, India didn't wilt under its pressure due to it's the Government's progressive
policies and full–fledged reforms. Particularly, nationalization and liberalisation were the real
saviors of India from the recession. Also, the national sectors and global raid helped to maintain the
economy in proper way.
Introduction
India is an exponentially growing economic powering the world. Indian economy stands today as
one of the influential and attractive economy. The liberalization move by the Government of India in
1990s has given a boost to the Indian ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ...
Both imports and exports have taken a leap of 20% on an average. In July 1991 with the
announcement of sweeping liberalization dismantled import controls, lowered customs duties, and
devalued the currency... virtually abolished licensing controls on private investment, dropped tax
rates, and broke public sector monopolies.
Yet the aggregate growth data tells us that the acceleration of economic growth began earlier, in the
early or mid–1980s, long before the exchange crisis of 1991 and the shift of the government of
Narasimha Rao and Manmohan Singh toward neoliberal economic reforms. To the extent that we
trust aggregate national–level income accounts, it is clear that by 1985 Indian aggregate economic
growth had undergone a structural break.
Roles of Sectors Indian Sector analysis
Industry and service
Economic reforms brought foreign competition, led to privatization of certain public sector
industries, opened up sectors hitherto reserved for the public sector and led to the expansion India
the production of burgeoning consumer goods. The share of India's IT industry to the country's GDP
increased from 4.8% India 2005–06 to 7% in 2008.in 2009 7 Indian firms were listed among the top
15 technology outsourcing companies India the world. Mining also is a major segment of Indian
economy as it producing 79 different minerals India 2009–10.
Agriculture
As for worldwide farm output, India ranks
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Environmental Impact of Textile Production
D. Narasimha Reddy 1/11 Environmental Impact of Mechanised and Automated Textile Production
Introduction The contribution of mechanised and automated manufacturing to various
environmental impacts is enormous. Environmental impacts from manufacturing industries can be
seen such areas as toxic chemicals, waste, energy, and carbon emissions. Manufacturing in
developed countries is also a heavy user of water, and there have been many cases of air, water and
soil contamination which have led to such actions as cleanups, class actions suits and a variety of
other corporate liabilities. Environmental impact can be seen in all phases of textile production and
use, from growing or making fibres to discarding a product after its useful life ... Show more content
on Helpwriting.net ...
Chemicals are also used during fabric formation as fabric processing agents and equipment cleaning
and maintenance chemicals. Fabric processing agents include sizing agents and performance
enhancing chemicals such as certain glycol ethers, ethylene glycol, and methanol. These chemicals
typically volatilize or are washed off during fabric formation. However, some may remain with the
fabric throughout the fabric formation process and into the wet processing and finishing operations.
Both fugitive and point source air emissions containing chemicals typically occur during the
slashing (sizing) operation or during fabric drying operations. This includes chemicals used as sizing
agents or performance enhancing chemicals. Dust air emissions may also be generated during fabric
formation. Effluents are generated from fabric cleaning and slashing operations; used oil, lubricants,
and other machine maintenance chemicals; and equipment cleaning operations. Solid waste is also
released from fabric formation. The primary source of solid waste is excess fabric material and
scraps that may contain chemicals not volatilized or removed during fabric formation or chemicals
brought on–site with the raw material (e.g., antimony oxide used as a fire resistant). Dust containing
chemicals is also generated during knitting or weaving operations, which when collected by air
pollution control devices or by floor sweepings is a
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A Brothel Is Against Public Policy
ILLEGAL CONSIDERATION Introduction : Mr. Kamal rents his house to Mr. Baazi for one year.
Mr. Baazi uses the house to run a brothel. Mr. Kamal has decided to evict Mr. Baazi. When Mr.
Kamal comes to know about the intentions about Mr. Baazi, he wants to evict him from his house.
Now Mr. Kamal seeks to you to know whether he can evict Mr. Baazi on lawful grounds. Issues : 1)
Whether the consideration and object is lawful? 2) Whether, running of a brothel is against public
policy? 3) Is the usage of the house as a brothel will render the contract void? Arguments : For
Plaintiff : The object used in the case is absolutely lawful. Plaintiff is the offeror and defendant is the
offeree. Plaintiff was getting rent as the consideration in ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ...
Any contract whose consideration or object is immoral or opposed to public policy is void. In the
case of V. Narasimha Raju Vs. V. Gurumurthy Raju & Ors. , Supreme Court decided that the
contract violating the public policy is void. In Uphill v. Wright , plaintiff sued the defendant for
recovering the rent of the flat with the knowledge that she was the mistress of a person who used to
visit her. The court held that the plaintiff can't recover the money as the contract was for immoral
purpose and is void. So when the consideration becomes illegal the contract becomes void and the
plaintiff is the owner of the house and he has complete right to evict defendant lawfully. For
Defendant: The parties are competent. There is an offer and acceptance between the parties, the
object is the house and the consideration is the rent of the house which is valid. So, the contract
between the parties is valid under the ICA . The contract was for the period of one year and due to
which the defendant has complete right over the house for the period of one year. If the plaintiff
wants the defendant to evict the house it should be done by the mutual consent of both the parties. If
it is not done mutually and then the contract is broken it will be a breach of contract, and the
plaintiff is liable to pay damages . The object in this case
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India 's Foreign Direct Investments
Despite its deceleration over the past few years, India has become one of the most attractive places
to outsource operations for corporations due to several important factors: Its young, well–educated
low cost labor (Median age 27, according to the World Fact Book, CIA), the gradual economic
liberalization and industry deregulation and their several technical skills are only to mention a few
of the characteristics that make, along with China and certain other rising Asian nations, serious
candidates for hosting big corporation's foreign direct investments (Ranker, 2014). But India has had
to come a long way to stand to where it is now. Several events throughout history have made the
nation struggle, from religious to political issues, from ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ...
Under this system, Nehru sought to strengthen the agricultural and power sectors, providing
agriculture 45% and industry 5% of the resource during the first Five–Year Plan. It initially gave
India an increase of 3.6% (Exhibit 10a) on its gross domestic product during the first five years.
Following this the government isolated the country from foreign investment (as nationalist leaders
feared a dependency on it) and trade in an effort to promote domestic production and as a strategy to
reduce imports. Since the government had also created a complex system of licensing through the
Permit Raj, resources became scarce, the complexity of its bureaucracy fostered corruption and
became a reason of delay for companies. This made it hard for other important areas of the country
to help increase its economic growth. Also, the government gradually came into possession of most
of the private sectors: By 1956, it already had control of commercial banking, oil, insurance and
some important resources such as steel and mining. The government, along with the large family
conglomerates controlled almost all Indian economy and could arbitrarily choose how each industry
would be ran; it regulated the where, the how, the how much and the whether or not a company
would be given permission to produce. Price regulation and
... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
The Economic Reforms in India Since 1991
It has been over twenty years since the unlikely combination of P.V. Narasimha Rao as Prime
Minister and his Oxford–educated finance minister finally liberated (so they claim) the Indian
economy from overwhelming government control.
It was a rotting edifice based on institutionalized scarcity, wildly illogical price controls, hilariously
shoddy products, protectionism and endemic underperformance was swiftly demolished in 100 days
of inspired action. The Socialist Utopia powered by the fevered imaginations of Nehru and
Mahalanobis which seemed forever doomed to rot at the so called 'Hindu Rate of Growth' was now
dead and buried, just like them.
In the iconic Union Budget of 1991, Singh tabled the New Economic Policy or NEP, which ... Show
more content on Helpwriting.net ...
But one can argue that 'modern' India has always dispossessed and ignored its poorest of the poor
who are routinely bullied by the state.
Now the dominant discourse has framed the so–called 'Great Development Challenge' as an effort to
extend the 'dynamism of liberalism' to 'those denied access and equal opportunity' (Tripathi 2011).
This does not make accounts of horrendous poverty any less legitimate, not does it make the
suicides of farmers any less tragic.
But some argue that the statistics speak for themselves. In 1991, 35.8% of India's population of 846
million, that is, about 300 million people, lived on less than one dollar a day, which is the generally
accepted measure that economists use worldwide to define absolute poverty (in a strictly global
context, as opposed to relative poverty, which is necessary an intra–state indicator) . Ten years later,
the figure dropped to 27.5%. By 2006, with India's population at 1.02 billion people, that necessarily
implied that there were 270 million people living in absolute poverty. In the intervening years, when
India added 115 million people, those living in absolute poverty fell by 30 million. Had the poverty
rate remained as it was, that is 35.8% , there have been 365 million poor people. Thus we are able to
argue, with some fairly reasonable certainty that the economy, within this timeframe lifted 95
million people out of absolute poverty.
I now move to the last
... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
Fig. System Model
III. Implementation Details System Model Fig.System Model The system consists of three main
components. Data owner that can be organization basically exhibit sensitive data to be stored in
cloud. An organization that offers services to customer from a remote facility connected via internet.
A cloud service provider which control cloud server and distribute paid storing area on its
framework to store the owner's data. Cloud service provider that provide client storage along with
public or private cloud. Authorized user these are group of owner's client which have right to obtain
the remote data. The system model use in this work can be accepted by numerous practical
applications. To give an example such as e–Health application ... Show more content on
Helpwriting.net ...
Ateniese, R. D. Pietro, L. V. Mancini, and G. Tsudik, "Scalable and efficient provable data
possession," in Proc. 4th Int. Conf. Secur.Privacy Commun. Netw. (SecureComm), New York, NY,
USA, 2008, Art. ID 9. [11] C. Wang, Q. Wang, K. Ren, and W. Lou. (2009). "Ensuring data storage
security in cloud computing," IACR Cryptology ePrint Archive, Tech.Rep. 2009/081. [Online].
Available: http://eprint.iacr.org/ [12] C. Erway, A. Küpçü, C. Papamanthou, and R. Tamassia,
"Dynamic provable data possession," in Proc. 16th ACM Conf. Comput. Commun.Secur. (CCS),
New York, NY, USA, 2009, pp. 213–222. [13] Q. Wang, C. Wang, J. Li, K. Ren, and W. Lou,
"Enabling public verifiability and data dynamics for storage security in cloud computing,"in Proc.
14th Eur. Symp. Res. Comput. Secur. (ESORICS), Berlin, Germany, 2009, pp. 355–370. [14] Z.
Hao, S. Zhong, and N. Yu, "A privacy–preserving remote data integrity checking protocol with data
dynamics and public verifiability," IEEE Trans. Knowl. Data Eng., vol. 23, no. 9, pp. 1432–1437,
Sep. 2011. [15] A. F. Barsoum and M. A. Hasan. (2010). "Provable possession and replication of
data over cloud servers," Centre Appl. Cryptograph. Res., Univ. Waterloo, Waterloo, ON, USA,
Tech. Rep. 2010/32.[Online]. Available:
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Judy Craymer Case Study Case Studies
SE01 TERM PAPER
18 AUG 2014
Aanchal Khosla, MA2014SE001
Centre for Social Entrepreneurship,
School of Management and Labour Studies
TATA INSTITUTE OF SOCIAL SCIENCES
ENTREPRENEURSHIP may be defined as a process of organizing any enterprise, a commercial or
social venture, managing it with considerable initiative, innovation and risk.
Introduction to Entrepreneurship
The course on entrepreneurship was introduced with a Case study of Mamma Mia that helped bring
out and refine our preconceived and insufficient understanding of "entrepreneurship".
In the case study we tried to understand what makes Judy Craymer an entrepreneur, her decision to
bounce back,in what ways was she innovative and creative, how did she manage risk. These were
some ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ...
With Amrita Ramachandaran's interview, a lot of clarity on the correlation between the theory and
practice of entrepreneurship was obtained through her journey and experiences as an entrepreneur.
Amrita with two of her friends started Right–click, a brand communication company in 2010 and by
what I understood she followed a model of effectual entrepreneurship.
According to Saras D. Sarasvathy "All entrepreneurs begin with three categories of means: (1) who
they are―their traits, tastes, and abilities; (2) what they know―their education, training, expertise,
and experience; and, (3) whom they know―their social and professional networks. Using these
means, the entrepreneurs begin to imagine and implement possible effects that can be created with
them." 2
In the case of right click, Amrita knew that she possesses the traits and abilities to become an
entrepreneur because she always desired to do something of her own. Her education and training
was in mass media and communication which sought her experience and expertise in the fields of
communication and branding. Her social network comprised of her colleagues from her previous
jobs, clients, family and friends. All this combined enabled Amrita to take the plunge into
entrepreneurship. To check if her idea is implementable She started off with taking small steps such
as hiring just one employee who worked from
... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
The Indian Insurance Industry : India
Chapter 1 – The Indian Insurance Industry.
It was the 10th Prime Minister of India, P. V. Narasimha Rao and his then Finance Minister Dr.
Manmohan Singh, who set into motion, Phase 1 of the privatisation of the Indian Insurance Industry.
The government was forced to act on the 'globalization of India' due to the country being
economically weak and was suspected to be on the verge of bankruptcy. After the privatisation of
the banking sector was looked into, the government setup a committee led by Chairman R. N.
Malhotra in 1993 to propose change and reforms to be made in the Insurance Industry. The findings
and recommendations of the committee in 1994 eventually led to the formation of the Indian
Insurance regulator, the minor yet ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ...
Although not conclusive, in 2005, 2009 and 2013, Dr. Singh Government, seemed to have expressed
interest in bringing about the reforms on a few occasions. India in March this year, pushed through
with Phase 2 of reforms.
The Insurance Laws (Amendment) Act 2015 now enacted, is widely expected to seamlessly remove
archaic and redundant provisions in the legislations which existed till now and incorporate certain
provisions to provide the IRDAI with the flexibility it requires to discharge its functions more
effectively and efficiently. The relatively low 26% cap on foreign investment had been a widely
discussed affair. The Amendment Act, now been enacted, introduces key changes to the Insurance
Act, 1938, the General Insurance Business (Nationalization) Act, 1972 and the Insurance Regulatory
and Development Authority (IRDA) Act, 1999. The major transformations include but are not
limited to the following:
– Increasing the foreign investment cap to 49%.
– Permitting overseas reinsurers to open branch offices to carry out reinsurance business in India.
– Facilitating the entry of Lloyd 's of London, under regulations yet to be finalised.
As the first step to implement these changes, the Ministry of Finance introduced the Indian
Insurance Companies (Foreign Investment) Rules 2015 (Rules) on 19 February 2015. The Rules
require that approval from the Foreign Investment Promotion Board, Department of Economic
Affairs, Ministry of Finance (FIPB) will
... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
DBQ 23 Decolonization and Revolution
DBQ 23: Decolonization and Revolution
From 1945 and beyond, leaders have selected different paths to affect change. Some encouraged
independence through violence, peaceful actions, diplomacy, and the commitment of their struggling
nation. Others sparked revolutions by appealing to the peoples' needs. Through policy, and
sometimes uniting a people, trailblazers changed the face and structure of their nation. A column
from a journalist during the time period would help to see a broader perspective during such varying
and exciting time. Decolonization, revolution, and nation building are all goals of any effective
leader willing to make a change.
Spanning from 1945 to 1975, countless independence movements have changed societies ... Show
more content on Helpwriting.net ...
The method applied by Zedong focused on uniting China under one belief in order to implement
communist ideas in the country, widely changing the country's structure. (Doc 7). At his defense
trial, Cuban revolution leader Fidel Castro appealed to those struggling in his country. He spoke to
those who hoped for a brighter future and who have been betrayed by their country. By addressing
their battle, Castro urged them to fight for a better Cuba. His relentless and undying commitment
ultimately granted Castro his wish for a revolution. (Doc 8). An additional document consisting of a
diary entry from a Chinese citizen during the communist revolution would create a clearer vision as
to how convincing Mao Zedong truly was.
Some modern leaders look more inward as to their nations' policies and people to affect change.
Hosni Mubarak, former President of Egypt, aimed to unite his country and better certain systems to
strengthen the nation. When in a hard and confusing time, Mubarak provided Egypt with a steady
guiding hand. In the midst of this chaos, instead of addressing the questions and wants of the people,
Hosni Mubarak demanded they offer themselves to supply the needs of their country and support
their leader. This mindset calmed Egyptians as Mubarak reopened Egypt to the Arab world, tried to
reaffirm the constitution and judicial system, and tackled social issues. (New Leaders of Nations
#1). Former prime minister of India
... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
Comparing Hinduism And Islam
Many people tend to confuse Muslims from Hindus and vice versa. After visiting each place of
worship and examining each person individually, and listening to each person speak so highly about
their religion and culture, you can clearly distinguish between the two. They have many similarities
and differences, which establish a relationship between the two. Although in the past there has been
many disputes over the two, this is due to their dissimilarities. The most common dispute between
the two are because of the gods. Hinduism, think that gods are present in everything and anything
while Islam believes in the holiness of Allah alone. I find it interesting, when it comes to eating
certain things both religions don't consume a certain ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ...
The Islamic religions follows five pillars from the prophet. 1. Testament that there is one God and
Muhammad is his messenger; 2. prayer five times daily mainly before sunset and after; 3. fast
during Ramadan– you can eat after sunset; 4. charity to the poor at least 2.5% of their overall
wealth; 5. Pilgrimage– journey to the holy place in India, the Mosque.
The goal of Hinduism is to break the cycle of rebirth, in attempt to attain salvation. On the other
hand, the goal of the Islamic religion is to fulfill their responsibility of life by following the Quran
and Hadith, and to live life with compassion towards all of Gods creations. When it comes to the
place of worship, both religions differ in regards to statues and pictures. Shiva Vishnu contained
many statues of their gods and it is a common practice to have these images. Although, ISOM does
not contain any drawings, paintings, or statues regarding their gods. God cannot be seen, but sees
all. They only have calligraphy and the temple is angled in such a way that it faces Mecca.
Islam comes from the Arabic root word of 'Salema' which translates to– peace, submission, and
obedience. Islam is submission to the will of God and obedience to His rules. The Muslims follow
the Qur 'an, and traditions of the Holy Last messenger Muhammad, called 'Sunnah ' which is found
in prayers or 'hadiths ' by the men around him. Hindus follow the Vedas and Gita, Smrti and Sruti
are oral
... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
Publica Administration in the Age of Globalization in India
PUBLIC ADMINISTRATION IN THE AGE OF
GLOBALIZATION IN INDIA
The aim of this paper is to acquaint the reader about the influence of globalisation on the Public
Administration of India. But before I proceed I feel it is absolutely necessary to define the two
terms–"Globalisation" and "Public Administration". I will then discuss the changes that
Globalisation has brought about on the Indian Public Administration. Globalisation is the process of
international integration arising from the interchange of world views, products, ideas, and other
aspects of culture. Globalisation is an umbrella term and is perhaps best understood as a unitary
process inclusive of many ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ...
The practices of traditional Public Administration are under increasing attack from neo–liberal
economists and rational choice scholars who have provided the intellectual inputs to the politicians
determined to reduced the state and scope of the public sector. As a result of Globalization, the
national economies are gradually opening up. So as the economies lose their discrete, self–contained
character they become harder for National control and management. Globalization in India began
essentially in the year 1991 when the deficit in the balance of payments prompted India, under
Prime Minister, P. V. Narasimha Rao and his Finance Minister, Manmohan Singh (currently the
Prime Minister of India) to undertake a series of structural economic reforms as a part of the bailout
deal with the International Monetary Fund. Since 1991, the context of administration has again been
changing under the impact of the New Economic Policy. Concepts like 'globalisation',
'liberalisation', and 'privatisation' have gained wide cur¬rency that are indicative of more openness
of government to international competition, deregulation and dismantling of a series of government
controls, and downsizing of government by handing over selected activities to the private sector, and
by encouraging the non–government organisations to work more and more in the social
development sector, particularly in such
... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
Comparative Religion
Throughout this semester in Comparative Religions I have learned about many different religions
and how they used to and are now practiced. Before taking this class I had general knowledge about
all the religions we learned about but knew the most about Christianity. From this class and going on
the field trips I gained a larger understanding of the world's major religions. The two religions I had
the chance to understand more were Evangelical Christian and Hinduism. I am fortunate to have
gotten to be apart of their services and have a better understanding of their religion.
The first service Brent and I visited was a Evangelical Christian service at Compass Church 95th
Street location. The church was a very modern setting places right next ... Show more content on
Helpwriting.net ...
Before the questions she gave us a lot of information about their beliefs at ISKCON which answered
some of our questions. She started by telling us about how the knowledge has been passed down.
They believe that certain personalities can translate the word of god through the descending process.
Only certain knowledge is shared at times because at different periods of time people are more
receptive while at others they aren't. She then tells us that they are just like other religions in the
aspect that they teach about the love of god. Unlike what most think they are a monotheistic
religion. They believe that g_d is Krishna. Krishna means all attractive and it isn't idol worship they
worship his spiritual energy.The biggest point she made was about the science of the soul. The soul
is the life giving force to our body. The physical body is just a covering for the soul. While the
physical appearance of the body may change, the soul stays constant. She also puts emphasis on the
fact that the soul has a spiritual connection to g_d. G_d is like a fire and we are the sparks from it.
While we are not the fire we come from it and share similar qualities. The first question we asked
was, "Is it harder for you to do daily activities while keeping your religion in mind?" She replied by
saying that it isn't any harder because her whole life is centered around worshipping god. She does
everything everyone else does but just keeps Krishna in the center of focus.
... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
Lord Vishnu Research Paper
Lord Vishnu is one of the most important and influential Gods in Hinduism. He is able to take on
many different avatar forms and obtain special powers. Lord Vishnu is the protector of the universe
meaning he was set out to conserve the world we live in. Lord Vishnu has been incarnated nine
times, the tenth time is predicted to happen, it is said that he will return in the form for Kalki at the
age of decline. Lord Vishnu's consort is Lakshmi, the goddess of wealth and prosperity. Hinduism
has four main aims of life and Vishnu's implements, powers, symbolism, and stories relate directly
back to those four aims of life. Lord Vishnu is one of the three Gods in the triumvirate, the other two
are Brahma and Shiva. Their goal is set out to ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ...
Vishnu has been incarnated nine times, each time is a different energy for a different purpose but
generally his returns have the same underlying theme. The first incarnation was into Matsya, which
is a fish. The second is Kurma, a turtle, he became this when the churning of the ocean was
happening. The third is Varaha, a boar, he returned the Vedas after they were stolen in this
incarnation. The fourth is Narasimha, who is half man half lion, in this incarnation he defeated a
demon that had gained immunity from pain against human force. The fifth is Vamana, which is a
dwarf like creature that has the ability to grow great heights. He convinced the demon Bali to let
him have as much land of Bali's new empire in three steps, then he transformed into a large giant
and covered the world in 1 step, defeating the demon Bali. The sixth Parasurama which is the form
of a fierce hunter, in this form he ridded all the sinful monarchs. The seventh is Rama, this is
probably the most known incarnation of Vishnu, in this form he defeated the demon king Ravana
who captured one of his wives, Sita. The eighth is Krishna, also one of the more known stories
because in this form he brought forth the Bhagavad Gita, which is his famous message. His most
recent incarnation was as Buddha the all knowing one, who appeared in the 5th century
... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
Hinduism Essay
Hinduism Hinduism, known today as Sanatana Dharma, originated primarily in India and is the
oldest religion in history. Unlike Christianity, Hinduism cannot be dated back so it is unknown
exactly when this religion came about. Hinduism is often broken down into three different groups
which express Brahman in different forms. Hindus recognize one God known to them as Brahman.
Brahman is the creator of everything and is present in everything. Brahman represents many
different gods. There are three gods that have a major influence over the religion, they are Vishnu,
who is the preserver along with his three incarnations Rama, Krishna and Narasimha; Shiva, the
destroyer; and Sakti, the Mother of Goddesses, also known as Parvati, ... Show more content on
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On thing that has remained relatively the same is the organized functioning of India's society which
includes a clear division of labor among four major occupational groups; this later became known as
the caste system. The purpose of the caste system is to uplift people from worldly concerns and to
encourage them to behave according to the higher laws. This division of labor that is represented by
the caste system is a strong part of Sanatana Dharma's emphasis on social duties and the sacrifice of
an individuals desires for the sake of the social structure. This religion consists of many other things
that influence the culture as well. Such as arranged marriages which are different than a forced
marriage. In an arranged marriage both parents of each the bride and the groom believe that there
son and daughter are compatible and could form a lifelong partnership. The bride and the groom
both must agree to the ceremony before it occurs. Hindu scriptures prohibit any use of physical
punishment or blackmail should either party disagree to the marriage. Hindu's believe in a cycle of
birth, death, and rebirth also known as samsara. This cycle they believe is controlled by what they
call karma. They believe that each time they are reborn they are born again as a hire being than there
last form on earth. This is because of karma. If in a person's life they perform, think, and desire only
good things than when death comes they
... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
The Business Cycle Model : A Diagram That Shows How...
The business cycle model is a diagram that shows how economic activity fluctuates over time. There
are four phases of this activity known as boom, recession, upswing and downswing. Overtime, the
theory is that economic activity will increase and that living standards, employment and the quality
of life to rise. The boom or peak stage of the business cycle is when the level of economy is at its
highest. It occurs after the upswing stage. The levels of expenditure, output income and employment
are also at their highest. Inflation in prices also increase as there is more demand in goods and
services. The government might use policies to try slow down or contract economic activity to
stabilise inflation. India is a developing country that is believed to be falling into the boom period of
the business cycle. At a GDP percent of 7.3% currently, India is believed to be one of the fastest
growing countries. "With China slowing, India is certainly carrying the day in terms of best growth
rates," said Peter Boockvar, Lindsey Group 's chief market analyst. On the other hand, China's
growth rate is starting to slow. China's real GDP growth is currently sitting at 6.3%. With an aging
population, and low fertility rates, it is believed China's Economy will soon start to fall and go into a
downswing. The Down and Upswing stages occur when an economy is rising and falling. The
downswing stage includes fallings levels of expenditure, income, output, and employment. As the
economic activity
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The Main Role Of Lord Vishnu And Lord Shiva
Vishnu is the middle god in the Hindu triumvirate (or Trimurti). The trio consists of three gods who
are responsible for the creation, upkeep and destruction of the world. The other two gods are
Brahma and Shiva. Lord Vishnu's job is to protect the people of Earth, restore, and to preserve. So
his overall theme is to protect the people of Earth. He reigns in Heaven with his wife, Lakshmi, the
goddess of wealth. Lord Vishnu weirdly enough originated when Lord Shiva rubbed nectar on his
ankle1 (Shiva Purana) .The Shiva Purana is one of eighteen Sanskrit texts in Hinduism. It primarily
centers around the Hindu god; Lord Shiva and the goddess Parvati, but references all gods. What
makes Vishnu one of the Trimurti, and so important to praise? Vishnu's purpose is to protect the
people who live on Earth. So his main theme is to protect people, specifically the people of the
Hindu belief. So everything Lord Vishnu does should boil down to, protecting Earth or the people of
Hindu belief 2. Vishnu lives in Param Padam, the supreme abode. In this place, liberated souls spend
eternity living in supreme bliss. He promises people who are well, eternal bliss which comes with
protection in the Param Padam. Vishnu would constantly come down to earth in the form of Lord
Narayana in order to deliver messages or to make sure that things are going according to the Divine
plan. Lord Shiva would protect people from doing bad and ruining their chances of going to Param
Padam. Vishnu is the
... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
The Economic Globalization Of India
Economic Globalization has swept across the world since the end of WWII. Slowly but surely all the
nations across the world have been impacted by Economic Globalization. India for example, has
been one of the countries that has been recently hit by the storm, and India's economy can be seen to
still be shooting up. In my paper I will be discussing the Economic Globalization of India, the roots
of the globalization to occur, the effects it had and the negative effects it had. Effects such as foreign
trade, economic growth and GDP (Gross Domestic Product). From the mid 90's to current times
India sees the effects of globalization, bringing India into one of the top countries in the world in
terms of GDP being ranked at 10th in the world.
The economic globalization in India began in the 90's with the economic growth being credited to
advances in IT (Information Technology) business. "One of the major forces of globalization in
India has been in the growth of outsourced IT and business process outsourcing (BPO) services" (1).
The past few years have seen more and more educated people due to India's low cost of labor but
educated and English speaking workforce. With economic globalization hitting India in the IT and
BPO fields, it has allowed companies to expand their operations to India to take advantage of their
massive growth opportunity. The ability for corporations to expand to India has enabled huge
corporations to open up markets in India allowing for great
success.
... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
Coke and Pepsi Learn to Compete in India
Coke and Pepsi Learn to Compete in India
Section 1:
During the 1900s and the beginning of the new millennium India's government had opened its doors
wide open to foreign investors, but the Coca–Cola Corporation and PepsiCo experienced many
difficult challenges. Both companies were engulfed with unexpected problems and difficult
situations that led to the recognition that India's market was very different and special knowledge,
skills and local expertise was needed to be obtained if the two companies were to succeed. As
Ronald McEachern, PepsiCo's Asia chief, stated, "India is the beverage battlefield".
In 1991, India was in an economic crisis that was triggered by the rise in imported oil prices
following the first Gulf War. During ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ...
In 2007, this new technique was piloted on 100 acres and again in 2008 on 1000 acres. PepsiCo
found that if only 6,000 acres were shifted to the direct seeding, it would offset all of the water used
by PepsiCo in India (PepsiCo, 2008).
Section II:
PepsiCo entered India in 1989 and has grown to become one of the country's leading food and
beverage companies. One of the largest multinational investors in the country, PepsiCo has
established a business which aims to serve the long term dynamic needs of consumers in India.
PepsiCo India and its partners have invested more than U.S. $1 billion since the company was
established in the country. PepsiCo provides direct and indirect employment to 150,000 people
including suppliers and distributors.
The group has built an expansive beverage and foods business. To support its operations, PepsiCo
has forty–three bottling plants in India, of which fifteen are company owned and twenty–eight are
franchise owned. In addition to this, PepsiCo's Frito Lay foods division has three state–of–the–art
plants. PepsiCo's business is based on its sustainability vision of making tomorrow better than today.
PepsiCo's commitment to living by this vision every day is visible in its contribution to the country,
consumers and farmers.
Coca–Cola, the corporation nourishing the global community with the world's largest selling soft
drink concentrates since 1886, returned to India in 1993 after a sixteen year hiatus, giving a new
... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
The 1984 Anti-Sikh Riots in India
The 1984 Anti–Sikh Riots in India
The Anti–Sikh riots in the 1984 year of riots had been anything in particular. People are aggrieved
when they hear of the incident and narrate stories of how runaway crime could have increased on
Sikhs during the time. The main reason for the advent of the riots was the shooting down of Mrs.
Indira Gandhi in morning of 31 October 1984. The riots had started off in the evening just after her
morning death. The information of the riots was already taken by Giyani Jail Singhji that meeting of
congress leaders – Arun Nehru, HKL Bhagat and Jagdish Tytler and more were deciding to give a
slogan called 'khoon ka badla khoon'. The first riot took place in the evening near Delhi market of
INA, near south Delhi.
The riots were a challenge to the government to counter the overt insurgency effects, people security
and unplanned measures. In revenge for the army raid she (Mrs. Indira Gandhi) had approved on
Amritsar's Golden temple the center of Sikh faith, occupied by major Sikh Nationalists, was the
reason purported to be the fact on the riots gaining more fire. Officially, the 492 civilians as well as
83 soldiers had got killed in the operation.
Also CBI the main investigating agency has been of the opinion that many such violence based riots
might have also in this incident been supported with help of police and Central government. Later
on the Rajiv Gandhi government had come to power and he had said about the incident as 'when a
big tree falls,
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The Effect Of Insulin Receptor On The Body
The insulin receptor(IR) was discovered in the 1980's after decades of searching for how insulin
manages to regulate blood sugar and energy levels in the body. As of 2012, about 366 million people
worldwide are estimated to have diabetes, an autoimmune disease that is caused by the bodies
inability to produce or utilize insulin. So the discovery of its receptor and its mechanism for
controlling blood sugar in the body was an important first step to working to treat diabetes.
However, the insulin receptor's has more ligands binding to it than just insulin. Furthermore, these
ligands affect a larger range of physiological processes than insulin and are being thoroughly
researched in the hopes of aiding patients with issues involving the ... Show more content on
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However, unlike hemoglobin, the insulin receptor's affinity for insulin decreases dramatically after
the first one binds, making that 1:1 binding its natural and most ideal state. According to Lee and
Pilch, it takes both alpha subunits to bind to the insulin, so a second molecule binding has absolutely
nowhere to go. Also, the hormone levels needed for insulin to want to bind twice to the same
receptor naturally does not exist physiologically in any known animal.
Function Like few proteins out there, the insulin receptor was searched for extensively by the
medical community and the major reason had to do with the hormone insulin. Insulin is a
polypeptide that when bound to the insulin receptor, it causes the beta subunits in the cell to
dimerize. Dimerization activates the tyrosine residues on the beta subunits of the receptor. These
tyrosines are able to auto phosphorylate themselves. Now activated by the new phosphate bound to
it, the tyrosine residue causes phosphorylation of another tyrosine residue on a target protein and
then this one will phosphorylate another protein all the way down through the cell until it initiates a
cell response. The most well known responses insulin produces is glycolysis and glycogenesis.
However it also affects glucose transport into the cell as well as fatty acid synthesis.
Figure 1. 3–D representation of Insulin Receptor. The four subunits are marked in the cour colors
gold,
... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
The Accidental Prime Minister By Sanjaya Baru
"The Accidental Prime Minister" by Sanjaya Baru, published in 2014, is an account of former Indian
Prime Minister Dr. Manmohan Singh's two terms in office. Sanjaya Baru was appointed as 'Media
Adviser' to Dr. Manmohan Singh during his first term in UPA – 1 from 2004 to 2009. This book is in
the form of a political memoir. The book's narrative follows a chronological format, painting a
picture of Dr. Singh's terms in UPA 1 and UPA 2.
In the introduction to his book, Baru proclaims that none of his predecessors at the Prime Minister's
office ever wrote a full book on his experiences during his tenure. Editors as famous as B G
Verghese, Kuldip Nayar, H K Dua and Prem Shankar Jha chose not to do so. As also bureaucrats
like G Parthasarathi, ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ...
Manmohan Singh and it is UPA chief Sonia Gandhi and her gaggle of yes–men who are shown up in
a poor light. The book does not disparage him in any manner. This book tries to explain plainly the
power equation between Sonia Gandhi and Dr. Manmohan Singh but does not sensationalize the
issue. It only re–affirms what the Indian public knew to be true.
Dr. Manmohan Singh is shown, regrettably, as a helpless, clueless shadow – puppet of Sonia Gandhi
who almost arouses our sympathies because of his ineffectiveness in functioning as the Prime
Minister of India. This sad truth was simply being put on record by the primary witness, ie, Sanjaya
Baru, to this political drama.
Baru tell us that Dr Singh was terrified of losing his place in the scheme of things if he did not
kowtow to the High Command, Sonia Gandhi. For Dr. Singh, the Gandhi family came first,
followed by the political party, prime minister's office and, lastly, the
... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
The Economic Globalization Of India
Economic Globalization has been sweeping across the nation since the end of WWII. Slowly but
surely all the nations across the world have been impacted by Economic Globalization. India for
example has been one of the countries that has been recently hit by the storm and India's economy
can be seen to still be shooting up. In my paper I will be discussing the Economic Globalization of
India, the roots of the globalization to occur, the effects it had and the negative effects it had. Effects
such as foreign trade, economic growth and GDP. From the mid 90's to current times India is seeing
the effects of globalization, bringing India into one of the top countries in the world in terms of GDP
being ranked at 10th in the world.
The economic globalization in India began in the 90's with the economic growth being due too
advances in IT and business. "One of the major forces of globalization in India has been in the
growth of outsourced IT and business process outsourcing (BPO) services" (1). The past few years
have seen more and more educated people due to India's low cost of labor but educated and English
speaking workforce. With economic globalization hitting India in the IT and BPO field it has
allowed companies to expand their operations to India to take advantage of their massive growth
opportunity. The ability for corporations to expand to India has enabled huge corporations to open
up markets in India allowing for great success. "Notable examples of international companies
... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
Indian Movie Making and Its Influence
"South Asia has always been a changing, growing, and diverse cultural area which has witnessed a
great deal of social change over the past years. Over the past decade India has become a rising
global nation. The globalization of India or India's rising involvement with the spreading of
businesses, technologies, and philosophies around the world, has affected and changed the norms of
things such as marriage, family, and gender. A program accepted in 1991 by the prime minister R.V
Narasimha Rao, had lowered the strict borders of foreign trade rapidly leading to higher demands in
imports, exports, and especially capital investment. Also introduced to India in 1991 was
transnational satellite broadcasting or satellite tv while at the same time, due to the laid back
restrictions of exchange across borders, Hollywood movies and films began competing with
Bollywood productions. Due to this economic "liberation" and rapid spread of mass media, a
tremendous social–cultural change and mixing of global and local images and ideologies was and
still can be observed." "Due to the rapidly growing economies of South Asia, which can be blamed
on industrialization and globalization, a high demand in labor has been created particularly in India's
information technology (IT) industries. Not only do you see a rising number of women attending
secondary school but we also see women beginning to infiltrate the workplace. This in turn created a
new group of educated professionals. Because of this
... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
The Economic Development Of China
Introduction: In 1991, when Prime Minister Narasimha Rao agreed to take a loan from the
International Monetary Fund to stave off a financial crisis we witnessed the low–point of the Indian
economy. At that time, the country had dwindling foreign exchange reserves and was months away
from defaulting on its debts. As part of the I.M.F. package, the government passed reforms such as
devaluing the rupee, encouraging private sector competition, and deregulating the economy after 40
years of central planning. By opting for market–oriented reforms in 1991, India's GDP has grown at
a rate of 6.6% annually over the past 20 years. As a rapidly emerging economy and a member of the
BRICS, we must continue to push our strategy of export led ... Show more content on
Helpwriting.net ...
Foreign trade can expedite the growth of an economy through the promotion of exports and
development of national industries. As exports grow, India will be able to amass foreign exchange
reserves to avoid currency and debt crises similar to those that struck India in 1991. Implementation
and benefits: India is a country that is abundant in labor. Export–led industrialization can harness
this enormous workforce and help to eradicate poverty. Furthermore, the government should
subsidize nascent industries that have the potential to become major exporters. We must modernize
the legal code, for us to have less stringent labor laws, which have limited labor force participation
and slowed industrialization. Streamline the process of starting a business by reducing the
bureaucracy and make laws more transparent to encourage private investment. Attract foreign direct
investment to India for export–led industrialization to further India's growth by making it easier to
open, run, and grow a business. Providing a gateway for multinational companies to enter India will
draw foreign capital into the country rather than scare off multinational firms with a difficult and
burdensome regulatory environment. Encourage domestic companies to partner with multinational
firms we can acquire foreign technology and knowledge, which will help boost the efficiency of our
industries. Change our trade policies to reduce tariffs,
... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...

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China And Indi International Journal Of E Business...

  • 1. China And Indi International Journal Of E Business... China and India play a crucial role in the world economy, molding and shaping the global markets, despite the differences in the methods of attaining such global prominence. These differences may appear to set the two countries apart completely, but China and India share a number of similarities. Despite having semblable population curves and similar domestic issues, India has been unable to match China's economic success because of its limited production and distribution capabilities, but its steady investment in its economy appears to give India the advantage for being a superpower in the future. Both nations possess comparable features. Both are rapidly expanding, constituting the most populous regions of the world, and face poverty, a growing rural–urban divide, corruption, expansive bureaucracies, and illiteracy. They also have a seemingly limitless economic potential and "are developing rapidly in certain sectors and represent the largest of the emerging markets," as stated in the International Journal of E–Business Research (Raven 104). But the two nations differ in their method of garnering economic influence, with China attaining this economic growth much more quickly than India. China transitioned from a nation closed to trade to one that excelled in exporting, establishing their status in the world economy. The communist system, established after World War II, underwent reforms around 1978 to become more market based, pushing China into an advanced democracy and ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 2.
  • 3. Learning A Foreign Language : Your Choice Learning A Foreign Language: Your Choice Introduction It is certainly true that English is the 'lingua franca' of the business world, however this does not necessarily equate to "I speak English, so I do not need to learn another language". The movie 'Lost in Translation' received good acclaim in 2003 for the portrayal of two Americans meeting in Japan ponders over themes such as loneliness, alienation, struggles that mono lingual English speakers face when they are forced to rely on the language skills of others. Data suggests that English is spoken only by 4.7% of world population and learning a foreign language has far reaching effects such as increasing our global understanding, sharpen Cognitive skills, Increase employability potential, Increase changes of success while working or studying abroad and overall to appreciate and understand diverse cultures. My personal choice of a foreign language is Spanish. Background I was born and raised in India in an urban setting and I learned to read and write in 3 languages (Tamil – Native language, Hindi and English) even before joining under–graduate college. Experts say that children who have studied a language at the elementary level tend to score higher on tests, language arts and math. Those that have learnt foreign languages tend to show greater cognitive skills towards problem solving, conceptualizing and reasoning. The 10th Prime Minister of India, P.V Narasimha Rao was very widely known as a intellect and he can speak ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 4.
  • 5. india economy Economics is the social science that studies the production, distribution and consumption of goods and services and in general the economy includes all of the country's economic system, or any other area, employment, capital, natural resources, industry, trade, distribution, and consumption of goods and services in that region. The economy could also be described as a spatially limited social network where the exchange of goods and services in accordance with supply and demand among participants through barter or through the medium of Exchange using the acceptable values for debt and credit within that social network and a simplified economy shows how the community provides basic needs, there are different ways to measure the economic performance of the country, such as exchange rate and GDP GNP and the securities market and stock market and national debt, interest rates and inflation, unemployment and balance of trade. There are two of the fastest growing economies in the world, China and India, and also happens to be the two largest in the world and are the two forms must be studied and compared them to figure out how the two countries take advantage of the large manpower development and how to achieve fast economic growth and the well–being of citizens and to provide jobs for them and what economic policies and decisions that have affected the economy in India and China. As mentioned, India is one of the fastest growing economies in the world are China and also the two ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 6.
  • 7. Economic Liberalisation Of India And India Economic liberalisation in India India is a country which was and still is diverse in terms of cultures, languages, ethics and beliefs. During the 1970–1990 when the British rule had just been over in India, it soon started to face problems in their balance of payments. By the end of 1990, it was in a serious economic crisis. The government was close to bankruptcy, the central bank of India had refused new credit and foreign exchange reserves had been depleted to a point where India could barely finance three weeks' worth of imports which made the Indian government airlift the nations gold reserves as a pledge to the International Monetary Fund (IMF) in exchange for a loan to cover its balance of payment debts. The main causes of the crisis was 1) currency overvaluation,2) the current account deficit, and the confidence of investors played a significant role in the sharp exchange rate depreciation/devaluation. The economic crisis was primarily due to the large and growing fiscal imbalances over 1980–1985... During 1985–1886, India started to have balance of payments problems. Precipitated by the Gulf War, India's oil import bill increased, exports decreased, credit dried up, and investors that had invested their money in India took their money out. Large fiscal deficits, over the time, had a huge spill over effect on the trade deficit, culminating in an external payments crisis. By the end of the 90's, India was in deep economic trouble. The gross fiscal deficit of the ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
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  • 9. Favourite Personality In Ramayana Description Hanuman is one of the most important personalities in 'Ramayana'. Hanuman is known as a popular devotee of Lord Rama. His help made Rama to find out Sita devi easily and then defeat Ravana in the war. Hanuman is known as different names such as Anjaneya, Pavan puthra, Maruthi. The name 'Anjaneya' was derived from his mother's name 'Anjana', a female vanara. It is also believed that Hanuman is the incarnation of Lord Shiva. So Hanuman is known as 'Maharudhra' too. Some believes that Hanuman is the son of 'Vayu', the God of wind, so having the name 'Pavan puthra'. Hanuman meets Lord Rama when he was wandering in the forest. Rama was expelled from his country for a period of 14 years. His wife Sita and brother Lakshmana were accompanying ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... Suchindram temple is a pious place lying about 14 km from Kanyakumari, Tamil Nadu In Rajasthan, Hanuman Temples at Mehendipur Balaji in Dausa district (80 km from Jaipur) and Salasar dhaam in Churu district (160 km from Jaipur) attract a large number of devotees from all over India. The idol of Hanuman ji at Hanuman Temple, Mehendipur Balaji is svaymbhu and attracts many devotees for getting rid of evil spirits. Apart from this Sri Balaji Maharaj(Bal– Hanuman) of Mehndipur Balaji give blessings and grants wishes to his devotees. [{Chandraloak Devpuri Balaji}] is located in Dugana 17 km from Laharpur district–sitapur, Uttar Pradesh. Bhaktha Anjaneyar is Temple is located in Vedasandur, Dindigul, Tamil Nadu. Sri Baktha Hanuman Temple, at Ramboda in Sri ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
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  • 11. Banks in India Nationalisation of Banks Despite the provisions, control and regulations of Reserve Bank of India, banks in India except the State Bank of India or SBI, continued to be owned and operated by private persons. By the 1960s, the Indian banking industry had become an important tool to facilitate the development of the Indian economy. At the same time, it had emerged as a large employer, and a debate had ensued about the nationalization of the banking industry. Indira Gandhi, then Prime Minister of India, expressed the intention of the Government of India in the annual conference of the All India Congress Meeting in a paper entitled "Stray thoughts on Bank Nationalisation."[2] The meeting received the paper with enthusiasm. Thereafter, her ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... One may also expect M&As, takeovers, and asset sales. In March 2006, the Reserve Bank of India allowed Warburg Pincus to increase its stake in Kotak Mahindra Bank (a private sector bank) to 10%. This is the first time an investor has been allowed to hold more than 5% in a private sector bank since the RBI announced norms in 2005 that any stake exceeding 5% in the private sector banks would need to be vetted by them. In recent years critics have charged that the non–government owned banks are too aggressive in their loan recovery efforts in connection with housing, vehicle and personal loans. There are press reports that the banks' loan recovery efforts have driven defaulting borrowers to suicide List of Nationalised Banks 1. Allahabad Bank 2. Andhra Bank 3. Bank of Baroda 4. Bank of India 5. Bank of Maharashtra 6. Canara Bank 7. Central Bank of India 8. Corporation Bank 9. Dena Bank 10. IDBI Bank 11. Indian Bank 12. Indian Overseas Bank 13. Oriental Bank of Commerce 14. Punjab and Sind Bank 15. Punjab National Bank
  • 12. 16. Repco Bank 17. State Bank of Bikaner & Jaipur 18. State Bank of Hyderabad 19. State Bank of India 20. State Bank of Mysore 21. State Bank of Patiala 22. State Bank of Travancore 23. Syndicate Bank 24. UCO Bank 25. Union Bank of India 26. United Bank of India 27. Vijaya Bank List of New ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 13.
  • 14. The Pros And Cons Of Indian Atomic Bombs Not long after May 11, 1998 at Pokhran, a betray site in the Indian province of Rajasthan, gatherings of neighborhood Bishnoi herders–whose traditions prohibit murdering creatures or cutting trees– heard a gigantic blast, and viewed in astonishment as a colossal clean cloud coasted in the sky. What the Indian ranchers did not understand, but rather the representatives in Washington and around the globe soon got a handle on, was the way that India had quite recently joined the United States, Russia, England, France and China as the most up to date individual from the atomic club. On that warm May evening, Indian atomic researchers effectively detonated three nuclear gadgets adding up to around six times the ruinous energy of the American bomb dropped on Hiroshima in 1945. The following day, as the world endeavored to retain the alarming news, India touched off two more atomic blasts. Indeed, even as 90% of Indians acclaimed then–Prime Minister Vajpayee's choice to go atomic, at that point U.S. President Clinton quickly responded to the blasts with stun and reprimanded India's atomic trying. The American President contended that India's activities damaged the Comprehensive Test Ban Treaty supported by 149 countries and the 1970 non–multiplication bargain marked by 185 countries. In spite of the way that neither ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... With the race of the Hindu Nationalist, Bharata Janata Party in 1998, Prime Minister Atal Vajpayee requested Indian researchers to continue with plans for testing at the earliest opportunity. This prompt the arrangement of explosions in May, and the resulting fast reaction by ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 15.
  • 16. Personal Statement Essay: My Love For Mechanical Engineering It all started when I was 10, when my father gifted me a toy car for my birthday. I used to play with it all the time; I opened the parts just to see what it is made up of and how it works. On opening it, I saw various parts of which I had no idea and how each part performed to make my car move. I was eager to know the same then. Hence, the seed to my love for automobiles and machines in general was sown by the little toy car of mine. This passion of mine never subsided and it grew year after year. At the age of 18, I came across the TV show called "Mega Factories", which is an exclusive and amazing documentary television series based on the major factories of popular companies. It gave me a deep insight into the field of machines and manufacturing. ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... I got an opportunity to work with 3 different clients during my 1st year in Wipro. I was privileged to interact with the clients, to understand their requirements and fulfil them. I have a fair idea on how an organisation works and can easily adapt myself for a professional career. Since my work mainly focuses on the Information Technology field I wanted to shift back to Mechanical field. So I decided to fulfil my dream of pursuing a Master's Program. I chose Germany because; it is affirmed to be one of the best destinations for Mechanical Engineering. As a part of this preparation I started with the German language course at 'Goethe Institute' in 'Bangalore' about a month ago and would complete my A1 German by April, ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 17.
  • 18. British Imperialism During The First War Of Indian... British Imperialism in India Indian Independence The first war of Indian independence, also known as the 1857 Indian Rebellion, was not the first challenge to British authority, but it was the first to feature widespread coordination with increased levels of intensity. It began with discontent within the sepoy army. Initially, the soldiers were well–paid to keep their loyalty, but the EIC failed to increase pay to match the inflation rate. Moreover, they received the impression that the Company was attempting to change Indian religions, due to the criticism of missionaries in India, previous violations of Hindu religious conventions, and the introduction of new cartridges that were greased in pig fat and beef tallow, the previous ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... However, India would have to pay for the damages of the mutiny through increased taxes. The next major step toward independence occurred with the founding of the Indian National Congress (INC) in 1885 at Bombay. Despite claims of secularism and religious toleration, the INC was a mostly Hindu organization, and in 1906, the Muslim League was formed. Together, they represented the public opinion for swaraj, or self–rule, and served as a way for Indians to participate in politics in response to rising Indian nationalism. One of their first campaigns was the swadeshi movement, a boycott of British products in favor of Indian domestic goods, which won them autonomy at the provincial level. Mohandas K. Gandhi (1869–1948), also referred to as Mahatma (meaning "Great Soul") Gandhi, entered the INC as its president in 1920. He worked under the principles of ahimsa, non–violence, and satyagraha, truth–struggle, to convince the British that it had wrongfully repressed India, and work together with the them to reverse its effects. From 1930 to 1934, he launched a series of civil disobedience movements. The most notable of these was the Salt March in 1930, to protest the salt tax imposed by the British. Gandhi, along with Sarojini Naidu ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 19.
  • 20. The Unique Social Structure Of Lions In Sub-Saharan Africa Lions Lions are wild mammals classified under Felidae family of Panthera Genus (like of the other big cats) and assigned a specific name Panthera leo. They are found in the Sub–Saharan Africa and parts of Eurasia. Lions are generalist carnivores with mammals, particularly ungulates as their main meal. They are referred to as "the king of the jungle" because of their appearance, raw strength and power, and partly their unique social structure of a pride. An average lion has a 10 to 14 years lifespan but can live up to 20 years in monitored captivity. Distribution of Lions Africa In Africa, lions are live in the Sub–Saharan region except in the equatorial rain forest and in the heavily populated regions along the southern coast of the western portion of the continent. Lions are known to typically thrive in savanna grasslands with scattered Acacia trees where they camouflage well with the surrounding. However, there are unique desert–adapted lions in the southwestern part of Africa which have evolved to withstand the harsh environment of the Namib Desert in Namibia. Most of Africa's wild lions live in Eastern African countries like Kenya and Tanzania as well as the Southern African countries like South Africa, Botswana, Zimbabwe, and Zambia. Eurasia ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... Most lions now live in eastern and southern Africa, and their numbers are rapidly decreasing. The number of mature lions in West Africa is estimated at 850 to 1,160. Another surviving population is in northwestern Africa, with approximately 14 to 21 lions. Both the African and Eurasia lions are under conservation within national parks and game reserves set up to preserve the dwindling species. However, some lions in Africa occasionally find themselves roaming in residential areas. Diseases and human interference have proven to be the major challenges in conservation ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 21.
  • 22. Social Entrepreneurship: Case Study SE01 TERM PAPER 18 AUG 2014 Aanchal Khosla, MA2014SE001 Centre for Social Entrepreneurship, School of Management and Labour Studies TATA INSTITUTE OF SOCIAL SCIENCES ENTREPRENEURSHIP may be defined as a process of organizing any enterprise, a commercial or social venture, managing it with considerable initiative, innovation and risk. Introduction to Entrepreneurship– The course on entrepreneurship was introduced with a Case study of Mamma Mia that helped bring out and refine our preconceived and insufficient understanding of "entrepreneurship". In the case we tried to understand What makes Judy Craymer an entrepreneur, her decision to bounce back, where was the innovation involved were some of the aspects we looked into, however they were understood in more depth as more cases and theories on entrepreneurship were analyzed. Views on entrepreneurship:– There are a number of views on entrepreneurship which may be analyzed through the lens of various disciplines. Such as – Economist 's view, In the economist 's view, an entrepreneur is one who takes a good amount of risk and also uses capital to make profits.. Psychologist 's view says that for a person to become an entrepreneur he/she must possesses some special traits, a certain personality type. The management view lays importance on the presence of skill competence, decision making and opportunity identification ability in an entrepreneur, process view says that entrepreneurship is like a scientific process and ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 23.
  • 24. Enron And Indi Case Analysis Dabhol, India Eric Stob 10/13/14 In theory, both Enron and India would have fared well with the production of a new power plant. Enron was desperate in need of real income and India lacked in sufficient power for its citizens. Littered with bribes, human rights violations, deceit, and many examples of poor moral judgment Enron's behaviors clearly show what not to do in a foreign investment. However, this paper will focus on the violations of human right during the project using the four–component decision making model to assess the situation, options of what could have been done, and the conditions of the stakeholders involved directly and indirectly. From the beginning, Enron was on the wrong foot and by showing examples of each of the components we can see where Enron falls short in ethical standards. At the time India was in a state of change after the Cold War and in need of a new power source. The Soviet Union disintegrated, and India had to start to figure out how to operate in a new world. With their major ally gone and its population soaring, India had to look for new power sources and partners for its inefficient electric grid system. This is where Enron steps in and tries to lay its hands on this tempting opportunity. In order to draw international companies to enter India, Prime Minister P.V. Narasimha Rao had to decentralize "government control over industrial licensing."(Parry, 2001). By decreasing the regulations, foreign companies will find more incentive to ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 25.
  • 26. Modern Technologies Associated With Ceramics Modern Technologies Associated with Ceramics Introduction Ceramics, what are they? It might seem like a simple question, plates and bricks and expensive cooking knives. People use ceramics every day in their lives, but they don't understand the huge amount of technology that goes into a nice plate. Before we can go over the cutting edge of ceramics we have to understand the technology that goes into every ceramic. The technologies associated with traditional ceramics deserve a paper of their own, but they seem vanilla compared to advanced ceramics, which have new and interesting properties that can make them useful and unlike any ceramic you see everyday. We can use the understanding of traditional ceramics as a base on which we build an ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... Plasticity is primarily a property ball clays (Stephenson, 1912, p.13). Stephenson says that because the plasticity of clay is destroyed at 450o, the temperature needed to drive off the water, that plasticity probably has something to do with the combination with water (1912, p.14). The mechanism of this plasticity has not yet been satisfactorily explained by any theory, At present three theories contest the field–the colloid,the soluble salt, and the molecular attraction theories (Stephenson, 1912, p. 14). Traditional ceramics can be divided into three categories based on the chemicals and properties of the clays. These types are china clay which you know to be porcelain, ball clay which is malleable , and fire clay which is refractory (Stephenson, 1912, p.12). China clay is our first type of ceramic. China clay is used to make porcelain (Stephenson, 1912, p. 12). China clay is unique from the other clays because it has large amounts of kaolinite (Stephenson,1912, p.12) Kaolinite is a white mineral, giving porcelain it's unique look, with a chemical formula of Al2Si2O5(OH)4 (Stephenson,1912, p.12). Ball clay is the next type of clay. Ball clay is unique because of its malleability (Stephenson. 1912, p.13). Ball clay is the clay you see potters working on potter's wheels. It's useful to potters because it can be molded into complex forms and made permanent by firing (Stephenson, 1912, p.13). Fire clay is the final type of ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 27.
  • 28. Notes On Medicinal Properties Of Ayurvedic Medicines With... Medicinal Properties: Guna (Qualities) – Laghu (light to digest) Ruksha (dry) Rasa (Taste) – Kashaya (astringent) Tikta (bitter) Vipaka (post–digestive taste) – pungent Veerya (Sheeta) – Coolant Effect on tridosha – balances kapha and pitta dosha Dosage – Decoction 50–100 ml; powder 3–6 gm Pterocarpus marsupium uses: Keshya – improves hair strength, promotes hair growth Medohara – reduces fat and cholesterol levels Rasayana – anti–ageing, causes cell and tissue rejuvenation Indicated in: Raktapitta – bleeding disorders such as nasal bleeding, heavy periods etc. Krumi – worm infestation Visarpa – herpes Kushta – skin diseases Shvitra – leucoderma, vitiligo Meha – diabetes, urinary tract infections Gala dosha – throat disorders Raktamandala – ring worm infestation Ayurvedic medicines with Beejak as ingredient: Asana manjishtadi taila – for treatment of headache and eye disorders Asana cladi taila – for treatment of headache, ear and eye disorders Asana vilwadi taila – for treatment of headache, ear and eye disorders Narasimha Rasayan – for treatment of weakness, weight gain, hair growth and rejuvenation Classical Categorization: Susruta – Salaasaradi gna Vabhata – Asanadi Gana Kaiyadeva Nighantu – Oshadhi Varga Dhanvantari Nighantu – Amradi Varga Bhavaprakasha – Vatadi Varga Rajanighantu – Prabhadradi Varga Pharmacological activities: 1. Analgesic Activity In an investigation, PM leaves were successively extracted with petroleum ether, ethyl ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 29.
  • 30. Compare And Contrast Buddhism And Dalai Lama Throughout the whole world there are world leaders that lead their respected countries into a peaceful era. Presidents, dictators, tsars, monarchs, Kings and queens have been some political leaders that people tend to elect and also look up to for advice and even protection. Even though these figures are known to be very influential in everyday lives, by making decisions that change the face of the world, there are also others that have been known to bring peace to places that others couldn't do. These are religious leaders such as the Pope, the Dalai Lama, and also God figures have been known throughout history to be the solution of problems where the military, and money cannot solve. This essay will go through some of the similarities and differences between the religions, ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... The Dalai Lama is known to be the figurehead to Buddhism. The most recognized Dalai Lama's are probably the 14th Dalai Lama Tenzin Gyatso, and the third Dalai Lama Sonam Gyatso. The 14th Dalai Lama Tenzin Gyatso states: "From one viewpoint, Buddhism is a religion, from another viewpoint Buddhism is a science of mind and not a religion. Buddhism can be a bridge between these two sides. Therefore, with this conviction I try to have closer ties with scientists, mainly in the fields of cosmology, psychology, neurobiology and physics. In these fields there are insights to share, and to a certain extent we can work together." Tenzin Gyatso was appointed as the Dalai Lama the age of two, and was formally recognized when he was 15. Because assassination is a common problem with political leaders and religious leaders, he fled from Tibet and stationed himself and thousands of refugees in Dharamsala Himachal Pradesh, India. He preaches as well as practices the importance of nonviolence and peace and significance of compassion as Ghandi once did. The Dalai Lama has received many types of recognitions, one being the Nobel Peace ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 31.
  • 32. India Super Growing Economic Power India super growing economic power Submitted by: MUHAMMED FAZAL K Preface India is a new emerging economic power in the world. Though the 21st first decade saw a global level financial crisis, India didn't wilt under its pressure due to it's the Government's progressive policies and full–fledged reforms. Particularly, nationalization and liberalisation were the real saviors of India from the recession. Also, the national sectors and global raid helped to maintain the economy in proper way. Introduction India is an exponentially growing economic powering the world. Indian economy stands today as one of the influential and attractive economy. The liberalization move by the Government of India in 1990s has given a boost to the Indian ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... Both imports and exports have taken a leap of 20% on an average. In July 1991 with the announcement of sweeping liberalization dismantled import controls, lowered customs duties, and devalued the currency... virtually abolished licensing controls on private investment, dropped tax rates, and broke public sector monopolies. Yet the aggregate growth data tells us that the acceleration of economic growth began earlier, in the early or mid–1980s, long before the exchange crisis of 1991 and the shift of the government of Narasimha Rao and Manmohan Singh toward neoliberal economic reforms. To the extent that we trust aggregate national–level income accounts, it is clear that by 1985 Indian aggregate economic growth had undergone a structural break. Roles of Sectors Indian Sector analysis Industry and service Economic reforms brought foreign competition, led to privatization of certain public sector industries, opened up sectors hitherto reserved for the public sector and led to the expansion India the production of burgeoning consumer goods. The share of India's IT industry to the country's GDP increased from 4.8% India 2005–06 to 7% in 2008.in 2009 7 Indian firms were listed among the top 15 technology outsourcing companies India the world. Mining also is a major segment of Indian economy as it producing 79 different minerals India 2009–10. Agriculture
  • 33. As for worldwide farm output, India ranks ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 34.
  • 35. Environmental Impact of Textile Production D. Narasimha Reddy 1/11 Environmental Impact of Mechanised and Automated Textile Production Introduction The contribution of mechanised and automated manufacturing to various environmental impacts is enormous. Environmental impacts from manufacturing industries can be seen such areas as toxic chemicals, waste, energy, and carbon emissions. Manufacturing in developed countries is also a heavy user of water, and there have been many cases of air, water and soil contamination which have led to such actions as cleanups, class actions suits and a variety of other corporate liabilities. Environmental impact can be seen in all phases of textile production and use, from growing or making fibres to discarding a product after its useful life ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... Chemicals are also used during fabric formation as fabric processing agents and equipment cleaning and maintenance chemicals. Fabric processing agents include sizing agents and performance enhancing chemicals such as certain glycol ethers, ethylene glycol, and methanol. These chemicals typically volatilize or are washed off during fabric formation. However, some may remain with the fabric throughout the fabric formation process and into the wet processing and finishing operations. Both fugitive and point source air emissions containing chemicals typically occur during the slashing (sizing) operation or during fabric drying operations. This includes chemicals used as sizing agents or performance enhancing chemicals. Dust air emissions may also be generated during fabric formation. Effluents are generated from fabric cleaning and slashing operations; used oil, lubricants, and other machine maintenance chemicals; and equipment cleaning operations. Solid waste is also released from fabric formation. The primary source of solid waste is excess fabric material and scraps that may contain chemicals not volatilized or removed during fabric formation or chemicals brought on–site with the raw material (e.g., antimony oxide used as a fire resistant). Dust containing chemicals is also generated during knitting or weaving operations, which when collected by air pollution control devices or by floor sweepings is a ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 36.
  • 37. A Brothel Is Against Public Policy ILLEGAL CONSIDERATION Introduction : Mr. Kamal rents his house to Mr. Baazi for one year. Mr. Baazi uses the house to run a brothel. Mr. Kamal has decided to evict Mr. Baazi. When Mr. Kamal comes to know about the intentions about Mr. Baazi, he wants to evict him from his house. Now Mr. Kamal seeks to you to know whether he can evict Mr. Baazi on lawful grounds. Issues : 1) Whether the consideration and object is lawful? 2) Whether, running of a brothel is against public policy? 3) Is the usage of the house as a brothel will render the contract void? Arguments : For Plaintiff : The object used in the case is absolutely lawful. Plaintiff is the offeror and defendant is the offeree. Plaintiff was getting rent as the consideration in ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... Any contract whose consideration or object is immoral or opposed to public policy is void. In the case of V. Narasimha Raju Vs. V. Gurumurthy Raju & Ors. , Supreme Court decided that the contract violating the public policy is void. In Uphill v. Wright , plaintiff sued the defendant for recovering the rent of the flat with the knowledge that she was the mistress of a person who used to visit her. The court held that the plaintiff can't recover the money as the contract was for immoral purpose and is void. So when the consideration becomes illegal the contract becomes void and the plaintiff is the owner of the house and he has complete right to evict defendant lawfully. For Defendant: The parties are competent. There is an offer and acceptance between the parties, the object is the house and the consideration is the rent of the house which is valid. So, the contract between the parties is valid under the ICA . The contract was for the period of one year and due to which the defendant has complete right over the house for the period of one year. If the plaintiff wants the defendant to evict the house it should be done by the mutual consent of both the parties. If it is not done mutually and then the contract is broken it will be a breach of contract, and the plaintiff is liable to pay damages . The object in this case ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 38.
  • 39. India 's Foreign Direct Investments Despite its deceleration over the past few years, India has become one of the most attractive places to outsource operations for corporations due to several important factors: Its young, well–educated low cost labor (Median age 27, according to the World Fact Book, CIA), the gradual economic liberalization and industry deregulation and their several technical skills are only to mention a few of the characteristics that make, along with China and certain other rising Asian nations, serious candidates for hosting big corporation's foreign direct investments (Ranker, 2014). But India has had to come a long way to stand to where it is now. Several events throughout history have made the nation struggle, from religious to political issues, from ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... Under this system, Nehru sought to strengthen the agricultural and power sectors, providing agriculture 45% and industry 5% of the resource during the first Five–Year Plan. It initially gave India an increase of 3.6% (Exhibit 10a) on its gross domestic product during the first five years. Following this the government isolated the country from foreign investment (as nationalist leaders feared a dependency on it) and trade in an effort to promote domestic production and as a strategy to reduce imports. Since the government had also created a complex system of licensing through the Permit Raj, resources became scarce, the complexity of its bureaucracy fostered corruption and became a reason of delay for companies. This made it hard for other important areas of the country to help increase its economic growth. Also, the government gradually came into possession of most of the private sectors: By 1956, it already had control of commercial banking, oil, insurance and some important resources such as steel and mining. The government, along with the large family conglomerates controlled almost all Indian economy and could arbitrarily choose how each industry would be ran; it regulated the where, the how, the how much and the whether or not a company would be given permission to produce. Price regulation and ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 40.
  • 41. The Economic Reforms in India Since 1991 It has been over twenty years since the unlikely combination of P.V. Narasimha Rao as Prime Minister and his Oxford–educated finance minister finally liberated (so they claim) the Indian economy from overwhelming government control. It was a rotting edifice based on institutionalized scarcity, wildly illogical price controls, hilariously shoddy products, protectionism and endemic underperformance was swiftly demolished in 100 days of inspired action. The Socialist Utopia powered by the fevered imaginations of Nehru and Mahalanobis which seemed forever doomed to rot at the so called 'Hindu Rate of Growth' was now dead and buried, just like them. In the iconic Union Budget of 1991, Singh tabled the New Economic Policy or NEP, which ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... But one can argue that 'modern' India has always dispossessed and ignored its poorest of the poor who are routinely bullied by the state. Now the dominant discourse has framed the so–called 'Great Development Challenge' as an effort to extend the 'dynamism of liberalism' to 'those denied access and equal opportunity' (Tripathi 2011). This does not make accounts of horrendous poverty any less legitimate, not does it make the suicides of farmers any less tragic. But some argue that the statistics speak for themselves. In 1991, 35.8% of India's population of 846 million, that is, about 300 million people, lived on less than one dollar a day, which is the generally accepted measure that economists use worldwide to define absolute poverty (in a strictly global context, as opposed to relative poverty, which is necessary an intra–state indicator) . Ten years later, the figure dropped to 27.5%. By 2006, with India's population at 1.02 billion people, that necessarily implied that there were 270 million people living in absolute poverty. In the intervening years, when India added 115 million people, those living in absolute poverty fell by 30 million. Had the poverty rate remained as it was, that is 35.8% , there have been 365 million poor people. Thus we are able to argue, with some fairly reasonable certainty that the economy, within this timeframe lifted 95 million people out of absolute poverty. I now move to the last ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 42.
  • 43. Fig. System Model III. Implementation Details System Model Fig.System Model The system consists of three main components. Data owner that can be organization basically exhibit sensitive data to be stored in cloud. An organization that offers services to customer from a remote facility connected via internet. A cloud service provider which control cloud server and distribute paid storing area on its framework to store the owner's data. Cloud service provider that provide client storage along with public or private cloud. Authorized user these are group of owner's client which have right to obtain the remote data. The system model use in this work can be accepted by numerous practical applications. To give an example such as e–Health application ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... Ateniese, R. D. Pietro, L. V. Mancini, and G. Tsudik, "Scalable and efficient provable data possession," in Proc. 4th Int. Conf. Secur.Privacy Commun. Netw. (SecureComm), New York, NY, USA, 2008, Art. ID 9. [11] C. Wang, Q. Wang, K. Ren, and W. Lou. (2009). "Ensuring data storage security in cloud computing," IACR Cryptology ePrint Archive, Tech.Rep. 2009/081. [Online]. Available: http://eprint.iacr.org/ [12] C. Erway, A. Küpçü, C. Papamanthou, and R. Tamassia, "Dynamic provable data possession," in Proc. 16th ACM Conf. Comput. Commun.Secur. (CCS), New York, NY, USA, 2009, pp. 213–222. [13] Q. Wang, C. Wang, J. Li, K. Ren, and W. Lou, "Enabling public verifiability and data dynamics for storage security in cloud computing,"in Proc. 14th Eur. Symp. Res. Comput. Secur. (ESORICS), Berlin, Germany, 2009, pp. 355–370. [14] Z. Hao, S. Zhong, and N. Yu, "A privacy–preserving remote data integrity checking protocol with data dynamics and public verifiability," IEEE Trans. Knowl. Data Eng., vol. 23, no. 9, pp. 1432–1437, Sep. 2011. [15] A. F. Barsoum and M. A. Hasan. (2010). "Provable possession and replication of data over cloud servers," Centre Appl. Cryptograph. Res., Univ. Waterloo, Waterloo, ON, USA, Tech. Rep. 2010/32.[Online]. Available: ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 44.
  • 45. Judy Craymer Case Study Case Studies SE01 TERM PAPER 18 AUG 2014 Aanchal Khosla, MA2014SE001 Centre for Social Entrepreneurship, School of Management and Labour Studies TATA INSTITUTE OF SOCIAL SCIENCES ENTREPRENEURSHIP may be defined as a process of organizing any enterprise, a commercial or social venture, managing it with considerable initiative, innovation and risk. Introduction to Entrepreneurship The course on entrepreneurship was introduced with a Case study of Mamma Mia that helped bring out and refine our preconceived and insufficient understanding of "entrepreneurship". In the case study we tried to understand what makes Judy Craymer an entrepreneur, her decision to bounce back,in what ways was she innovative and creative, how did she manage risk. These were some ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... With Amrita Ramachandaran's interview, a lot of clarity on the correlation between the theory and practice of entrepreneurship was obtained through her journey and experiences as an entrepreneur. Amrita with two of her friends started Right–click, a brand communication company in 2010 and by what I understood she followed a model of effectual entrepreneurship. According to Saras D. Sarasvathy "All entrepreneurs begin with three categories of means: (1) who they are―their traits, tastes, and abilities; (2) what they know―their education, training, expertise, and experience; and, (3) whom they know―their social and professional networks. Using these means, the entrepreneurs begin to imagine and implement possible effects that can be created with them." 2 In the case of right click, Amrita knew that she possesses the traits and abilities to become an entrepreneur because she always desired to do something of her own. Her education and training was in mass media and communication which sought her experience and expertise in the fields of communication and branding. Her social network comprised of her colleagues from her previous jobs, clients, family and friends. All this combined enabled Amrita to take the plunge into entrepreneurship. To check if her idea is implementable She started off with taking small steps such as hiring just one employee who worked from
  • 46. ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 47.
  • 48. The Indian Insurance Industry : India Chapter 1 – The Indian Insurance Industry. It was the 10th Prime Minister of India, P. V. Narasimha Rao and his then Finance Minister Dr. Manmohan Singh, who set into motion, Phase 1 of the privatisation of the Indian Insurance Industry. The government was forced to act on the 'globalization of India' due to the country being economically weak and was suspected to be on the verge of bankruptcy. After the privatisation of the banking sector was looked into, the government setup a committee led by Chairman R. N. Malhotra in 1993 to propose change and reforms to be made in the Insurance Industry. The findings and recommendations of the committee in 1994 eventually led to the formation of the Indian Insurance regulator, the minor yet ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... Although not conclusive, in 2005, 2009 and 2013, Dr. Singh Government, seemed to have expressed interest in bringing about the reforms on a few occasions. India in March this year, pushed through with Phase 2 of reforms. The Insurance Laws (Amendment) Act 2015 now enacted, is widely expected to seamlessly remove archaic and redundant provisions in the legislations which existed till now and incorporate certain provisions to provide the IRDAI with the flexibility it requires to discharge its functions more effectively and efficiently. The relatively low 26% cap on foreign investment had been a widely discussed affair. The Amendment Act, now been enacted, introduces key changes to the Insurance Act, 1938, the General Insurance Business (Nationalization) Act, 1972 and the Insurance Regulatory and Development Authority (IRDA) Act, 1999. The major transformations include but are not limited to the following: – Increasing the foreign investment cap to 49%. – Permitting overseas reinsurers to open branch offices to carry out reinsurance business in India. – Facilitating the entry of Lloyd 's of London, under regulations yet to be finalised. As the first step to implement these changes, the Ministry of Finance introduced the Indian Insurance Companies (Foreign Investment) Rules 2015 (Rules) on 19 February 2015. The Rules require that approval from the Foreign Investment Promotion Board, Department of Economic Affairs, Ministry of Finance (FIPB) will ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 49.
  • 50. DBQ 23 Decolonization and Revolution DBQ 23: Decolonization and Revolution From 1945 and beyond, leaders have selected different paths to affect change. Some encouraged independence through violence, peaceful actions, diplomacy, and the commitment of their struggling nation. Others sparked revolutions by appealing to the peoples' needs. Through policy, and sometimes uniting a people, trailblazers changed the face and structure of their nation. A column from a journalist during the time period would help to see a broader perspective during such varying and exciting time. Decolonization, revolution, and nation building are all goals of any effective leader willing to make a change. Spanning from 1945 to 1975, countless independence movements have changed societies ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... The method applied by Zedong focused on uniting China under one belief in order to implement communist ideas in the country, widely changing the country's structure. (Doc 7). At his defense trial, Cuban revolution leader Fidel Castro appealed to those struggling in his country. He spoke to those who hoped for a brighter future and who have been betrayed by their country. By addressing their battle, Castro urged them to fight for a better Cuba. His relentless and undying commitment ultimately granted Castro his wish for a revolution. (Doc 8). An additional document consisting of a diary entry from a Chinese citizen during the communist revolution would create a clearer vision as to how convincing Mao Zedong truly was. Some modern leaders look more inward as to their nations' policies and people to affect change. Hosni Mubarak, former President of Egypt, aimed to unite his country and better certain systems to strengthen the nation. When in a hard and confusing time, Mubarak provided Egypt with a steady guiding hand. In the midst of this chaos, instead of addressing the questions and wants of the people, Hosni Mubarak demanded they offer themselves to supply the needs of their country and support their leader. This mindset calmed Egyptians as Mubarak reopened Egypt to the Arab world, tried to reaffirm the constitution and judicial system, and tackled social issues. (New Leaders of Nations #1). Former prime minister of India ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 51.
  • 52. Comparing Hinduism And Islam Many people tend to confuse Muslims from Hindus and vice versa. After visiting each place of worship and examining each person individually, and listening to each person speak so highly about their religion and culture, you can clearly distinguish between the two. They have many similarities and differences, which establish a relationship between the two. Although in the past there has been many disputes over the two, this is due to their dissimilarities. The most common dispute between the two are because of the gods. Hinduism, think that gods are present in everything and anything while Islam believes in the holiness of Allah alone. I find it interesting, when it comes to eating certain things both religions don't consume a certain ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... The Islamic religions follows five pillars from the prophet. 1. Testament that there is one God and Muhammad is his messenger; 2. prayer five times daily mainly before sunset and after; 3. fast during Ramadan– you can eat after sunset; 4. charity to the poor at least 2.5% of their overall wealth; 5. Pilgrimage– journey to the holy place in India, the Mosque. The goal of Hinduism is to break the cycle of rebirth, in attempt to attain salvation. On the other hand, the goal of the Islamic religion is to fulfill their responsibility of life by following the Quran and Hadith, and to live life with compassion towards all of Gods creations. When it comes to the place of worship, both religions differ in regards to statues and pictures. Shiva Vishnu contained many statues of their gods and it is a common practice to have these images. Although, ISOM does not contain any drawings, paintings, or statues regarding their gods. God cannot be seen, but sees all. They only have calligraphy and the temple is angled in such a way that it faces Mecca. Islam comes from the Arabic root word of 'Salema' which translates to– peace, submission, and obedience. Islam is submission to the will of God and obedience to His rules. The Muslims follow the Qur 'an, and traditions of the Holy Last messenger Muhammad, called 'Sunnah ' which is found in prayers or 'hadiths ' by the men around him. Hindus follow the Vedas and Gita, Smrti and Sruti are oral ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 53.
  • 54. Publica Administration in the Age of Globalization in India PUBLIC ADMINISTRATION IN THE AGE OF GLOBALIZATION IN INDIA The aim of this paper is to acquaint the reader about the influence of globalisation on the Public Administration of India. But before I proceed I feel it is absolutely necessary to define the two terms–"Globalisation" and "Public Administration". I will then discuss the changes that Globalisation has brought about on the Indian Public Administration. Globalisation is the process of international integration arising from the interchange of world views, products, ideas, and other aspects of culture. Globalisation is an umbrella term and is perhaps best understood as a unitary process inclusive of many ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... The practices of traditional Public Administration are under increasing attack from neo–liberal economists and rational choice scholars who have provided the intellectual inputs to the politicians determined to reduced the state and scope of the public sector. As a result of Globalization, the national economies are gradually opening up. So as the economies lose their discrete, self–contained character they become harder for National control and management. Globalization in India began essentially in the year 1991 when the deficit in the balance of payments prompted India, under Prime Minister, P. V. Narasimha Rao and his Finance Minister, Manmohan Singh (currently the Prime Minister of India) to undertake a series of structural economic reforms as a part of the bailout deal with the International Monetary Fund. Since 1991, the context of administration has again been changing under the impact of the New Economic Policy. Concepts like 'globalisation', 'liberalisation', and 'privatisation' have gained wide cur¬rency that are indicative of more openness of government to international competition, deregulation and dismantling of a series of government controls, and downsizing of government by handing over selected activities to the private sector, and by encouraging the non–government organisations to work more and more in the social development sector, particularly in such ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 55.
  • 56. Comparative Religion Throughout this semester in Comparative Religions I have learned about many different religions and how they used to and are now practiced. Before taking this class I had general knowledge about all the religions we learned about but knew the most about Christianity. From this class and going on the field trips I gained a larger understanding of the world's major religions. The two religions I had the chance to understand more were Evangelical Christian and Hinduism. I am fortunate to have gotten to be apart of their services and have a better understanding of their religion. The first service Brent and I visited was a Evangelical Christian service at Compass Church 95th Street location. The church was a very modern setting places right next ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... Before the questions she gave us a lot of information about their beliefs at ISKCON which answered some of our questions. She started by telling us about how the knowledge has been passed down. They believe that certain personalities can translate the word of god through the descending process. Only certain knowledge is shared at times because at different periods of time people are more receptive while at others they aren't. She then tells us that they are just like other religions in the aspect that they teach about the love of god. Unlike what most think they are a monotheistic religion. They believe that g_d is Krishna. Krishna means all attractive and it isn't idol worship they worship his spiritual energy.The biggest point she made was about the science of the soul. The soul is the life giving force to our body. The physical body is just a covering for the soul. While the physical appearance of the body may change, the soul stays constant. She also puts emphasis on the fact that the soul has a spiritual connection to g_d. G_d is like a fire and we are the sparks from it. While we are not the fire we come from it and share similar qualities. The first question we asked was, "Is it harder for you to do daily activities while keeping your religion in mind?" She replied by saying that it isn't any harder because her whole life is centered around worshipping god. She does everything everyone else does but just keeps Krishna in the center of focus. ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 57.
  • 58. Lord Vishnu Research Paper Lord Vishnu is one of the most important and influential Gods in Hinduism. He is able to take on many different avatar forms and obtain special powers. Lord Vishnu is the protector of the universe meaning he was set out to conserve the world we live in. Lord Vishnu has been incarnated nine times, the tenth time is predicted to happen, it is said that he will return in the form for Kalki at the age of decline. Lord Vishnu's consort is Lakshmi, the goddess of wealth and prosperity. Hinduism has four main aims of life and Vishnu's implements, powers, symbolism, and stories relate directly back to those four aims of life. Lord Vishnu is one of the three Gods in the triumvirate, the other two are Brahma and Shiva. Their goal is set out to ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... Vishnu has been incarnated nine times, each time is a different energy for a different purpose but generally his returns have the same underlying theme. The first incarnation was into Matsya, which is a fish. The second is Kurma, a turtle, he became this when the churning of the ocean was happening. The third is Varaha, a boar, he returned the Vedas after they were stolen in this incarnation. The fourth is Narasimha, who is half man half lion, in this incarnation he defeated a demon that had gained immunity from pain against human force. The fifth is Vamana, which is a dwarf like creature that has the ability to grow great heights. He convinced the demon Bali to let him have as much land of Bali's new empire in three steps, then he transformed into a large giant and covered the world in 1 step, defeating the demon Bali. The sixth Parasurama which is the form of a fierce hunter, in this form he ridded all the sinful monarchs. The seventh is Rama, this is probably the most known incarnation of Vishnu, in this form he defeated the demon king Ravana who captured one of his wives, Sita. The eighth is Krishna, also one of the more known stories because in this form he brought forth the Bhagavad Gita, which is his famous message. His most recent incarnation was as Buddha the all knowing one, who appeared in the 5th century ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 59.
  • 60. Hinduism Essay Hinduism Hinduism, known today as Sanatana Dharma, originated primarily in India and is the oldest religion in history. Unlike Christianity, Hinduism cannot be dated back so it is unknown exactly when this religion came about. Hinduism is often broken down into three different groups which express Brahman in different forms. Hindus recognize one God known to them as Brahman. Brahman is the creator of everything and is present in everything. Brahman represents many different gods. There are three gods that have a major influence over the religion, they are Vishnu, who is the preserver along with his three incarnations Rama, Krishna and Narasimha; Shiva, the destroyer; and Sakti, the Mother of Goddesses, also known as Parvati, ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... On thing that has remained relatively the same is the organized functioning of India's society which includes a clear division of labor among four major occupational groups; this later became known as the caste system. The purpose of the caste system is to uplift people from worldly concerns and to encourage them to behave according to the higher laws. This division of labor that is represented by the caste system is a strong part of Sanatana Dharma's emphasis on social duties and the sacrifice of an individuals desires for the sake of the social structure. This religion consists of many other things that influence the culture as well. Such as arranged marriages which are different than a forced marriage. In an arranged marriage both parents of each the bride and the groom believe that there son and daughter are compatible and could form a lifelong partnership. The bride and the groom both must agree to the ceremony before it occurs. Hindu scriptures prohibit any use of physical punishment or blackmail should either party disagree to the marriage. Hindu's believe in a cycle of birth, death, and rebirth also known as samsara. This cycle they believe is controlled by what they call karma. They believe that each time they are reborn they are born again as a hire being than there last form on earth. This is because of karma. If in a person's life they perform, think, and desire only good things than when death comes they ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 61.
  • 62. The Business Cycle Model : A Diagram That Shows How... The business cycle model is a diagram that shows how economic activity fluctuates over time. There are four phases of this activity known as boom, recession, upswing and downswing. Overtime, the theory is that economic activity will increase and that living standards, employment and the quality of life to rise. The boom or peak stage of the business cycle is when the level of economy is at its highest. It occurs after the upswing stage. The levels of expenditure, output income and employment are also at their highest. Inflation in prices also increase as there is more demand in goods and services. The government might use policies to try slow down or contract economic activity to stabilise inflation. India is a developing country that is believed to be falling into the boom period of the business cycle. At a GDP percent of 7.3% currently, India is believed to be one of the fastest growing countries. "With China slowing, India is certainly carrying the day in terms of best growth rates," said Peter Boockvar, Lindsey Group 's chief market analyst. On the other hand, China's growth rate is starting to slow. China's real GDP growth is currently sitting at 6.3%. With an aging population, and low fertility rates, it is believed China's Economy will soon start to fall and go into a downswing. The Down and Upswing stages occur when an economy is rising and falling. The downswing stage includes fallings levels of expenditure, income, output, and employment. As the economic activity ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 63.
  • 64. The Main Role Of Lord Vishnu And Lord Shiva Vishnu is the middle god in the Hindu triumvirate (or Trimurti). The trio consists of three gods who are responsible for the creation, upkeep and destruction of the world. The other two gods are Brahma and Shiva. Lord Vishnu's job is to protect the people of Earth, restore, and to preserve. So his overall theme is to protect the people of Earth. He reigns in Heaven with his wife, Lakshmi, the goddess of wealth. Lord Vishnu weirdly enough originated when Lord Shiva rubbed nectar on his ankle1 (Shiva Purana) .The Shiva Purana is one of eighteen Sanskrit texts in Hinduism. It primarily centers around the Hindu god; Lord Shiva and the goddess Parvati, but references all gods. What makes Vishnu one of the Trimurti, and so important to praise? Vishnu's purpose is to protect the people who live on Earth. So his main theme is to protect people, specifically the people of the Hindu belief. So everything Lord Vishnu does should boil down to, protecting Earth or the people of Hindu belief 2. Vishnu lives in Param Padam, the supreme abode. In this place, liberated souls spend eternity living in supreme bliss. He promises people who are well, eternal bliss which comes with protection in the Param Padam. Vishnu would constantly come down to earth in the form of Lord Narayana in order to deliver messages or to make sure that things are going according to the Divine plan. Lord Shiva would protect people from doing bad and ruining their chances of going to Param Padam. Vishnu is the ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 65.
  • 66. The Economic Globalization Of India Economic Globalization has swept across the world since the end of WWII. Slowly but surely all the nations across the world have been impacted by Economic Globalization. India for example, has been one of the countries that has been recently hit by the storm, and India's economy can be seen to still be shooting up. In my paper I will be discussing the Economic Globalization of India, the roots of the globalization to occur, the effects it had and the negative effects it had. Effects such as foreign trade, economic growth and GDP (Gross Domestic Product). From the mid 90's to current times India sees the effects of globalization, bringing India into one of the top countries in the world in terms of GDP being ranked at 10th in the world. The economic globalization in India began in the 90's with the economic growth being credited to advances in IT (Information Technology) business. "One of the major forces of globalization in India has been in the growth of outsourced IT and business process outsourcing (BPO) services" (1). The past few years have seen more and more educated people due to India's low cost of labor but educated and English speaking workforce. With economic globalization hitting India in the IT and BPO fields, it has allowed companies to expand their operations to India to take advantage of their massive growth opportunity. The ability for corporations to expand to India has enabled huge corporations to open up markets in India allowing for great success. ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 67.
  • 68. Coke and Pepsi Learn to Compete in India Coke and Pepsi Learn to Compete in India Section 1: During the 1900s and the beginning of the new millennium India's government had opened its doors wide open to foreign investors, but the Coca–Cola Corporation and PepsiCo experienced many difficult challenges. Both companies were engulfed with unexpected problems and difficult situations that led to the recognition that India's market was very different and special knowledge, skills and local expertise was needed to be obtained if the two companies were to succeed. As Ronald McEachern, PepsiCo's Asia chief, stated, "India is the beverage battlefield". In 1991, India was in an economic crisis that was triggered by the rise in imported oil prices following the first Gulf War. During ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... In 2007, this new technique was piloted on 100 acres and again in 2008 on 1000 acres. PepsiCo found that if only 6,000 acres were shifted to the direct seeding, it would offset all of the water used by PepsiCo in India (PepsiCo, 2008). Section II: PepsiCo entered India in 1989 and has grown to become one of the country's leading food and beverage companies. One of the largest multinational investors in the country, PepsiCo has established a business which aims to serve the long term dynamic needs of consumers in India. PepsiCo India and its partners have invested more than U.S. $1 billion since the company was established in the country. PepsiCo provides direct and indirect employment to 150,000 people including suppliers and distributors. The group has built an expansive beverage and foods business. To support its operations, PepsiCo has forty–three bottling plants in India, of which fifteen are company owned and twenty–eight are franchise owned. In addition to this, PepsiCo's Frito Lay foods division has three state–of–the–art plants. PepsiCo's business is based on its sustainability vision of making tomorrow better than today. PepsiCo's commitment to living by this vision every day is visible in its contribution to the country, consumers and farmers. Coca–Cola, the corporation nourishing the global community with the world's largest selling soft drink concentrates since 1886, returned to India in 1993 after a sixteen year hiatus, giving a new ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 69.
  • 70. The 1984 Anti-Sikh Riots in India The 1984 Anti–Sikh Riots in India The Anti–Sikh riots in the 1984 year of riots had been anything in particular. People are aggrieved when they hear of the incident and narrate stories of how runaway crime could have increased on Sikhs during the time. The main reason for the advent of the riots was the shooting down of Mrs. Indira Gandhi in morning of 31 October 1984. The riots had started off in the evening just after her morning death. The information of the riots was already taken by Giyani Jail Singhji that meeting of congress leaders – Arun Nehru, HKL Bhagat and Jagdish Tytler and more were deciding to give a slogan called 'khoon ka badla khoon'. The first riot took place in the evening near Delhi market of INA, near south Delhi. The riots were a challenge to the government to counter the overt insurgency effects, people security and unplanned measures. In revenge for the army raid she (Mrs. Indira Gandhi) had approved on Amritsar's Golden temple the center of Sikh faith, occupied by major Sikh Nationalists, was the reason purported to be the fact on the riots gaining more fire. Officially, the 492 civilians as well as 83 soldiers had got killed in the operation. Also CBI the main investigating agency has been of the opinion that many such violence based riots might have also in this incident been supported with help of police and Central government. Later on the Rajiv Gandhi government had come to power and he had said about the incident as 'when a big tree falls, ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 71.
  • 72. The Effect Of Insulin Receptor On The Body The insulin receptor(IR) was discovered in the 1980's after decades of searching for how insulin manages to regulate blood sugar and energy levels in the body. As of 2012, about 366 million people worldwide are estimated to have diabetes, an autoimmune disease that is caused by the bodies inability to produce or utilize insulin. So the discovery of its receptor and its mechanism for controlling blood sugar in the body was an important first step to working to treat diabetes. However, the insulin receptor's has more ligands binding to it than just insulin. Furthermore, these ligands affect a larger range of physiological processes than insulin and are being thoroughly researched in the hopes of aiding patients with issues involving the ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... However, unlike hemoglobin, the insulin receptor's affinity for insulin decreases dramatically after the first one binds, making that 1:1 binding its natural and most ideal state. According to Lee and Pilch, it takes both alpha subunits to bind to the insulin, so a second molecule binding has absolutely nowhere to go. Also, the hormone levels needed for insulin to want to bind twice to the same receptor naturally does not exist physiologically in any known animal. Function Like few proteins out there, the insulin receptor was searched for extensively by the medical community and the major reason had to do with the hormone insulin. Insulin is a polypeptide that when bound to the insulin receptor, it causes the beta subunits in the cell to dimerize. Dimerization activates the tyrosine residues on the beta subunits of the receptor. These tyrosines are able to auto phosphorylate themselves. Now activated by the new phosphate bound to it, the tyrosine residue causes phosphorylation of another tyrosine residue on a target protein and then this one will phosphorylate another protein all the way down through the cell until it initiates a cell response. The most well known responses insulin produces is glycolysis and glycogenesis. However it also affects glucose transport into the cell as well as fatty acid synthesis. Figure 1. 3–D representation of Insulin Receptor. The four subunits are marked in the cour colors gold, ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 73.
  • 74. The Accidental Prime Minister By Sanjaya Baru "The Accidental Prime Minister" by Sanjaya Baru, published in 2014, is an account of former Indian Prime Minister Dr. Manmohan Singh's two terms in office. Sanjaya Baru was appointed as 'Media Adviser' to Dr. Manmohan Singh during his first term in UPA – 1 from 2004 to 2009. This book is in the form of a political memoir. The book's narrative follows a chronological format, painting a picture of Dr. Singh's terms in UPA 1 and UPA 2. In the introduction to his book, Baru proclaims that none of his predecessors at the Prime Minister's office ever wrote a full book on his experiences during his tenure. Editors as famous as B G Verghese, Kuldip Nayar, H K Dua and Prem Shankar Jha chose not to do so. As also bureaucrats like G Parthasarathi, ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... Manmohan Singh and it is UPA chief Sonia Gandhi and her gaggle of yes–men who are shown up in a poor light. The book does not disparage him in any manner. This book tries to explain plainly the power equation between Sonia Gandhi and Dr. Manmohan Singh but does not sensationalize the issue. It only re–affirms what the Indian public knew to be true. Dr. Manmohan Singh is shown, regrettably, as a helpless, clueless shadow – puppet of Sonia Gandhi who almost arouses our sympathies because of his ineffectiveness in functioning as the Prime Minister of India. This sad truth was simply being put on record by the primary witness, ie, Sanjaya Baru, to this political drama. Baru tell us that Dr Singh was terrified of losing his place in the scheme of things if he did not kowtow to the High Command, Sonia Gandhi. For Dr. Singh, the Gandhi family came first, followed by the political party, prime minister's office and, lastly, the ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 75.
  • 76. The Economic Globalization Of India Economic Globalization has been sweeping across the nation since the end of WWII. Slowly but surely all the nations across the world have been impacted by Economic Globalization. India for example has been one of the countries that has been recently hit by the storm and India's economy can be seen to still be shooting up. In my paper I will be discussing the Economic Globalization of India, the roots of the globalization to occur, the effects it had and the negative effects it had. Effects such as foreign trade, economic growth and GDP. From the mid 90's to current times India is seeing the effects of globalization, bringing India into one of the top countries in the world in terms of GDP being ranked at 10th in the world. The economic globalization in India began in the 90's with the economic growth being due too advances in IT and business. "One of the major forces of globalization in India has been in the growth of outsourced IT and business process outsourcing (BPO) services" (1). The past few years have seen more and more educated people due to India's low cost of labor but educated and English speaking workforce. With economic globalization hitting India in the IT and BPO field it has allowed companies to expand their operations to India to take advantage of their massive growth opportunity. The ability for corporations to expand to India has enabled huge corporations to open up markets in India allowing for great success. "Notable examples of international companies ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 77.
  • 78. Indian Movie Making and Its Influence "South Asia has always been a changing, growing, and diverse cultural area which has witnessed a great deal of social change over the past years. Over the past decade India has become a rising global nation. The globalization of India or India's rising involvement with the spreading of businesses, technologies, and philosophies around the world, has affected and changed the norms of things such as marriage, family, and gender. A program accepted in 1991 by the prime minister R.V Narasimha Rao, had lowered the strict borders of foreign trade rapidly leading to higher demands in imports, exports, and especially capital investment. Also introduced to India in 1991 was transnational satellite broadcasting or satellite tv while at the same time, due to the laid back restrictions of exchange across borders, Hollywood movies and films began competing with Bollywood productions. Due to this economic "liberation" and rapid spread of mass media, a tremendous social–cultural change and mixing of global and local images and ideologies was and still can be observed." "Due to the rapidly growing economies of South Asia, which can be blamed on industrialization and globalization, a high demand in labor has been created particularly in India's information technology (IT) industries. Not only do you see a rising number of women attending secondary school but we also see women beginning to infiltrate the workplace. This in turn created a new group of educated professionals. Because of this ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
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  • 80. The Economic Development Of China Introduction: In 1991, when Prime Minister Narasimha Rao agreed to take a loan from the International Monetary Fund to stave off a financial crisis we witnessed the low–point of the Indian economy. At that time, the country had dwindling foreign exchange reserves and was months away from defaulting on its debts. As part of the I.M.F. package, the government passed reforms such as devaluing the rupee, encouraging private sector competition, and deregulating the economy after 40 years of central planning. By opting for market–oriented reforms in 1991, India's GDP has grown at a rate of 6.6% annually over the past 20 years. As a rapidly emerging economy and a member of the BRICS, we must continue to push our strategy of export led ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... Foreign trade can expedite the growth of an economy through the promotion of exports and development of national industries. As exports grow, India will be able to amass foreign exchange reserves to avoid currency and debt crises similar to those that struck India in 1991. Implementation and benefits: India is a country that is abundant in labor. Export–led industrialization can harness this enormous workforce and help to eradicate poverty. Furthermore, the government should subsidize nascent industries that have the potential to become major exporters. We must modernize the legal code, for us to have less stringent labor laws, which have limited labor force participation and slowed industrialization. Streamline the process of starting a business by reducing the bureaucracy and make laws more transparent to encourage private investment. Attract foreign direct investment to India for export–led industrialization to further India's growth by making it easier to open, run, and grow a business. Providing a gateway for multinational companies to enter India will draw foreign capital into the country rather than scare off multinational firms with a difficult and burdensome regulatory environment. Encourage domestic companies to partner with multinational firms we can acquire foreign technology and knowledge, which will help boost the efficiency of our industries. Change our trade policies to reduce tariffs, ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...