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developed and developing countries Tagged Articles
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Values The Key to Effective Ethical Leadership
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| The lack of ethical leadership is a pervading factor in today’s society. Although interest in ethical leadership has increased dramatically, ethics in the global context of leadership has not been a subject of great discourse. Examining the essential role of values and ethics in the quest for effective leadership is the subject of this article.
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Sectoral Trends of FDI in Developing Countries: Background
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| The recent waves of globalisation have substantially transformed the modes of
production and trade in both developed and developing countries. This is reflected in the
changes in the extent of information and technology in the workplace, firm’s production
and organisational strategies, trade and FDI liberalisation policies, and new rules of
international trade and investment. Given these developments, the sectoral trends
(primary, manufacturing and services) in FDI have changed rapidly over the past two
decades. |
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Other developed and developing countries Related Articles
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SME's - interventions in developing countries
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| In my literature review, a pattern developed for developing countries separate to developed countries. |
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Market access: Provisions of Agreement on Agriculture
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| An often-mentioned problem of developing countries’ agricultural export has been the lack
of access to developed countries' markets, due to the institution of a myriad of import
controls and other restrictions. This has largely undermined the growth prospects of
developing countries whose development strategy relied on agricultural exports. |
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Domestic farm support programs in developed countries: Provisions of Agreement on Agriculture
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| A basic source of distortion in the world market for agricultural commodities and primary
products has been the differential level of domestic support that developed and developing
countries can give to the production of these commodities. This has tended to reduce the
price competitiveness of developing countries. |
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Export Subsidies by Developed Countries: Barriers to African External Trade
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| While advocates of liberalization in the economies of the developing countries have
called for reduction in subsidies, the high levels of subsidies in developed countries have
increased significantly especially in the OECD countries. |
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Introduction: HUMAN CAPITAL FORMATION AND FOREIGN DIRECT INVESTMENT IN DEVELOPING COUNTRIES
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| Human resource development (HRD) and foreign direct investment (FDI) are
among the key drivers of growth in developed and developing countries. |
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Human Capital Formation by MNEs and Domestic Firms: Determinants of Enterprise Training
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| It is a general understanding that firms in general underinvest in training in both
developing and developed countries (Batra and Tan, 2002; OECD, 2003; OECD,
forthcoming). |
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Fiscal Policy for a Sustainable Environment
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| In both developed and developing countries, fiscal policy has an important
role to play in assuring sustainable use of natural resources and safeguarding
the environment. This applies to both the tax and spending sides
of the government’s budget. |
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3.1 The public sector: Training priorities, resources and reorientation
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| "While there is long history of poverty-focused training in developed industrial economies, it is still relatively rare in the large majority of developing countries where most of the poor live" (Malik, 1996:46). This seems particularly ironic given that most of the world's poor live in developing countries. The following discussion looks at why public sector training priorities continue to favour non-poor groups. We shall focus in particular on the design of poverty reduction programmes, overall resource availability and competing claims over training resources from other sectors and groups. |
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Does offshoring mean developed countries are losing technical jobs to developing countries?
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| Member Question?
Most of software solutions providing companies in US & UK are well experienced with explicit and undaunted gains of offshore software development outsourcing and thats why outsourcing comes as no surprise to anyone now. Then why are software companies in developed countries giving second thought to outsourcing to developing countries like India, Pakistan, Vietnam & others?
Reasons why you Outsource:
a) Outsourcing can help you share risk
b) Outsourcing can help accommodate peak loads
c) Outsourcing can help develop your internal staff
d) Outsourcing is cost effective and saves you money |
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Intellectual Property Protection Minimum Standards
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| Do the minimum rules or standards for intellectual property protection differ between developed and least developed countries? |
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