The document outlines the organizational structure of the Ministry of Internal Affairs of Georgia. It details the main departments and subdivisions, including the police department, border police, professional and vocational education, rescue service, and international relations. The police department has several regional police divisions and specialized units like criminal police, patrol police, and security police.
The document outlines the organizational structure of the Ministry of Internal Affairs of Georgia. It details the main departments and subdivisions, including the police department, border police, professional and vocational education, rescue service, and international relations. The police department has several regional divisions and specialized units like criminal police, patrol police, and security police.
This document proposes reforms to Georgia's Ministry of Internal Affairs (MIA) and police system. It recommends separating the state security service from the MIA in order to depoliticize the police. It also suggests establishing a Ministry of Internal Affairs focused on civil services and public order protection, with municipal police forces and a public council for civic control of law enforcement. The reformed system would implement advanced international practices and principles of career progression for police.
This document outlines the condition of Georgia's business environment and proposes concepts for its improvement. It identifies several key problems, including a declining real sector share of GDP, falling business sector turnover and production, low private sector capital formation, and employment indicators that have remained stagnant despite GDP growth. Proposed goals for improvement include developing the legislative and regulatory framework, increasing political stability, qualifying the labor force, creating a fair labor market, economic forecasting, and expanding infrastructure and access to financing. Short-term tasks focus on institutional reforms while medium-term tasks address simplifying taxation, improving credit access, strengthening investor protections, and enhancing business education.
The document summarizes key points about competition policy and economic regulation in Georgia. It discusses international rules and principles related to competition, Georgia's international commitments, the EU's competition law and how it relates to Georgia, issues with Georgia's current 2005 competition law, draft revisions to the competition law being considered, and institutional reforms underway in 2010-2011 to strengthen the competition authority. It also analyzes aspects of the draft law that need improvement, such as its limited scope of application and broad exemptions.
The document summarizes the Georgian Development Research Institute's concept on public service reform in Georgia. It discusses bureaucratic and flexible state models, as well as foreign experiences with public administration reform. Key aspects of reforming Georgia's public service system are addressed, including establishing a professional public servant institution, reforming the state service system, and addressing problems in Georgia's Law on Public Service.
More Related Content
More from Georgian National Communications Commission, GNCC
The document outlines the organizational structure of the Ministry of Internal Affairs of Georgia. It details the main departments and subdivisions, including the police department, border police, professional and vocational education, rescue service, and international relations. The police department has several regional police divisions and specialized units like criminal police, patrol police, and security police.
The document outlines the organizational structure of the Ministry of Internal Affairs of Georgia. It details the main departments and subdivisions, including the police department, border police, professional and vocational education, rescue service, and international relations. The police department has several regional divisions and specialized units like criminal police, patrol police, and security police.
This document proposes reforms to Georgia's Ministry of Internal Affairs (MIA) and police system. It recommends separating the state security service from the MIA in order to depoliticize the police. It also suggests establishing a Ministry of Internal Affairs focused on civil services and public order protection, with municipal police forces and a public council for civic control of law enforcement. The reformed system would implement advanced international practices and principles of career progression for police.
This document outlines the condition of Georgia's business environment and proposes concepts for its improvement. It identifies several key problems, including a declining real sector share of GDP, falling business sector turnover and production, low private sector capital formation, and employment indicators that have remained stagnant despite GDP growth. Proposed goals for improvement include developing the legislative and regulatory framework, increasing political stability, qualifying the labor force, creating a fair labor market, economic forecasting, and expanding infrastructure and access to financing. Short-term tasks focus on institutional reforms while medium-term tasks address simplifying taxation, improving credit access, strengthening investor protections, and enhancing business education.
The document summarizes key points about competition policy and economic regulation in Georgia. It discusses international rules and principles related to competition, Georgia's international commitments, the EU's competition law and how it relates to Georgia, issues with Georgia's current 2005 competition law, draft revisions to the competition law being considered, and institutional reforms underway in 2010-2011 to strengthen the competition authority. It also analyzes aspects of the draft law that need improvement, such as its limited scope of application and broad exemptions.
The document summarizes the Georgian Development Research Institute's concept on public service reform in Georgia. It discusses bureaucratic and flexible state models, as well as foreign experiences with public administration reform. Key aspects of reforming Georgia's public service system are addressed, including establishing a professional public servant institution, reforming the state service system, and addressing problems in Georgia's Law on Public Service.
More from Georgian National Communications Commission, GNCC (20)
ინფლაცია და ლარის მსყიდველობითი უნარიანობა საქართველოში
1. საქართველოს განვითარების კვლევითი ინსტიტუტი
იოსებ არჩვაძე
ინფლაცია და ლარის მსყიდველობითი
უნარიანობა საქართველოში :
2000-2011 წლები
2012
2.
3. 1995 წელი 1990 წელთან
(1990 წ. = 1):
- სამომხმარებლო ფასების ინდექსი - 356936.1;
- მთლიანი შიდა პროდუქტი - 356936.1.
4.
5.
6.
7.
8.
9. საქართველოში 2001-2011 წლების
132 თვიდან დაფიქსირდა:
- ორნიშნა ინფლაცია 12-თვიანი
პერიოდისათვის - 28 თვეში;
- ინფლაციური თვე წინა თვესთან შედარებით
- 92 თვის განმავლობაში;
- დეფლაციური თვე წინა თვესთან შედარებით
- 38 თვის განმავლობაში.