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state owned enterprises Tagged Articles
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IV. C. Private Contractors and Builders: THE ROLE OF THE PRIVATE SECTOR
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| Private Chinese companies compete actively for construction contracts in Africa. When
Chinese companies first entered the market, they tended to be large and state-owned (e.g.,
China Overseas Engineering Corporation, China Roads and Bridges Corporation, China
Railway Construction Corporation, and Harbin Power Corporation). |
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IV. B. Private Investors: THE ROLE OF THE PRIVATE SECTOR
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| While the deals of Chinese state-owned oil companies such as CNPC, CNOOC, and
SINOPEC in Angola, Equatorial Guinea, Nigeria, and Sudan caught headlines, millions of
U.S. dollars were being invested by Chinese private enterprises in Africa with little fanfare
(Box 1). These investments are not confined to textiles and mining. They cover a variety of
services from agriculture to processing and manufacturing. |
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Other state owned enterprises Related Articles
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5.0 Micro Enterprises - What are they?: Entrepreneurship and Small Business Enterprise Growth in Uganda
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| Discussion of small enterprises has a definite reference to micro enterprises. What are they? Are they different from small enterprises? |
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4.0 The state of women’s enterprises in Tanzania: Support for Growth-oriented Women Entrepreneurs in Tanzania, 2005
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| Currently, there is no comprehensive data on the number of women in the MSME
sector, the size of their enterprises, or their distribution by sector. Only proxies are
available. In NISS (1991) women accounted for about 35 per cent of informal
enterprises. By 1995, it was estimated that the proportion of women in the sector could
have risen to 70 per cent of the informal sector labour force. In a 2000 Economic and
Social Research Foundation (ESRF) study, 55 per cent of the enterprises in the sample
were owned by women (as reported in Mlingi, 2000, p. 89). Swisscontact (2003)
estimated that women owned 43 per cent of MSEs. |
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4.0 The Role of Governments: Microfinance in Africa - Experience and Lessons from Selected African Countries
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| In several African countries—for example, Ghana, Guinea, Tanzania and Uganda—
governments have in the past relied on state-owned banks to extend rural credit and
microfinance services. |
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How to Make a Start
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| One good way to get started with creating social business enterprises would be to launch a design
competition for social business enterprises. There can be local competition, regional competition
and global competition. Prizes for the successful designs will come in the shape of financing for
the enterprises, or as partnership for implementing the projects. |
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II.D. Foreign Direct Investment: TRADE AND CAPITAL FLOWS BETWEEN CHINA AND AFRICA
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| China’s direct investment in Africa, as reported by the National Bureau of Statistics of China,
amounted to US$392 million in 2005, up from US$317 million in 2004. Data from other
sources show significantly higher figures: in 2004, Chinese FDI was estimated to be more
than US$900 million; total FDI in Africa was US$15 billion (Table 2). China’s Ministry of
Commerce puts China’s direct investment to Africa for 2000–06 at US$6.6 billion. Among
the 800 Chinese enterprises investing in Africa, only about 100 are state-owned. The rest are
private businesses with interests ranging from trade, manufacturing and processing, services,
and communications to agriculture and natural resource development. |
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IV. B. Private Investors: THE ROLE OF THE PRIVATE SECTOR
| |
| While the deals of Chinese state-owned oil companies such as CNPC, CNOOC, and
SINOPEC in Angola, Equatorial Guinea, Nigeria, and Sudan caught headlines, millions of
U.S. dollars were being invested by Chinese private enterprises in Africa with little fanfare
(Box 1). These investments are not confined to textiles and mining. They cover a variety of
services from agriculture to processing and manufacturing. |
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Methodology : Exploring entrepreneurship in a declining economy
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| A sample of 160 entrepreneurs located in different parts of Borno State in the North Eastern part of Nigeria was randomly selected from a list of small businesses furnished by the Ministry of Trade and Industry. The ministry is the main agency responsible for registering small and medium enterprises and addressing issues related to their development in the state. Since the focus of this study was on business start-ups after the economic decline had began, only those entrepreneurs who had started their businesses after 1983 qualified for inclusion in this study. |
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For Entrepreneurs And Small Business Owners: How To Avoid Six Big Business Expansion Mistakes
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| The number of entrepreneurs, family owned businesses and small business enterprises are growing in both Canada and the United States. This article gives you six funding and growth mistakes to avoid whether you are building, selling or passing ownership to the next generation. |
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Prior Business Experience Can Be Helpful When Starting a Small Business
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| We recently worked with a client who wanted to open a new restaurant. After several discussions, we learned that not only had she owned one restaurant but she had owned several restaurants in the past and had sold her last one in the late 90's. Would she still be considered a start up business? Maybe, because it had been quite some time since she last owned a restaurant but her prior Business Experience would help her significantly when applying for Small Business Financing, especially in today's tough economy. |
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The Statism Of The Union
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| The state of America is dreary; the country's in a downward spiral toward statism. We live in a nation where all influential institutions, regardless of how they're chartered, are "owned" by the statists... from the Democrat echo-chamber that our media have become to the boot camps for "progressives" that are our colleges and universities.... |
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