be left out of the tax net on the pretext that they grow food for the country. If a farm shows a profit it should be subject to corporate or at least lesser tax rates. A major chunk of Indian farmers are fragmented and have small land holdings. These incomes would anyway fall below the exempted threshold and hence there is no question of impacting the livelihood and employment. It is people earning above the exempted limit and not paying taxes only because the nature of business is supportive of agriculture
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and growth (Umoh‚ 1992). However‚ the performance of banks in the Nigerian banking system does not seem to have been good enough because while some banks appear to have brought dynamism‚ challenges‚ competition‚ and growth in the banking sector‚ others seem to have lost some of the confidence which their clients had in them‚ in addition to poor performance indices in their operations‚ which have resulted into all forms of distress. This unclear nature of the effectiveness of the approaches utilised
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classifies cases into groups or predicts values of a dependent (target) variable based on values of independent (predictor) variables. The procedure provides validation tools for exploratory and confirmatory classification analysis. The procedure can be used for: Segmentation Identify persons who are likely to be members of a particular group. Stratification Assign cases into one of several categories‚ such as high-‚ medium-‚ and low-risk groups. Prediction Create rules and use them to
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Private Sector Interaction in the Decision Making Processes of Public Research Policies Country Profile: Ireland 1. Political‚ institutional and economic framework and important actors After a period of remarkable economic growth‚ the Republic of Ireland has reached a level of GDP per capita which exceeds European average. Ireland has become the second biggest high-technology exporter of Europe. But Ireland’s research intensity has remained at 1.20% of GDP in 2004‚ below EU average. In
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Introduction: “Anyone who can spell Java aspires to be a software professional in India.” This paper aims at finding the impact of this phenomena on the traditional industries such as automotive industry‚ steel industry and infrastructure industry such as Tata Motors‚ Tata Steel and the efforts they are putting to arrest the attrition in the sector. We have tried to look at the problem through the eyes of HR Personnel at Tata Motors who are leaving no stones unturned to make the best of the talent
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Impact of Training programs its effect on ROI in banking industry in Jaffna in Sri Lanka 2. INTRODUCTION : Training & Development is the field which is concerned with organizational activity aimed at bettering the Performance of individuals and groups in organizational settings. There is currently a great deal of discussion on calculating the return on investment (ROI) in Training. ROI is important because it helps to understand whether the training has had an effect on the bottom line of the business—and
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CHAPTER 1 INTRODUCTION OF BANKING SECTOR IN INDIA Banking in India originated in the last decades of the 18th century. The first banks were The General Bank of India‚ which started in 1786‚ and Bank of Hindustan‚ which started in 1790; both are now defunct. The oldest bank in existence in India is the State Bank of India‚ which originated in the Bank of Calcutta in June 1806‚ which almost immediately became the Bank of Bengal. This was one of the three presidency banks‚ the other two being the Bank
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COUNTRY REPORT ON CUSTOMER LOYALTY IN RETAIL SECTOR WITH SPECIAL EMPHASIS ON TESCO Submitted By: Rajat Kaul A1808709003 2009-2011 Submitted To: DAVID OGLE TABLE OF CONTENT Chapter 1 Introduction Introduction Aims and Objectives Chapter 2 Literature Review The Concept of Loyalty Loyalty Programs in India Chapter 3 Methodology Research Methodology Comparative Analysis Chapter 4 Analysis
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Banking Sector in India History‚ Evolution‚ Opportunities & Challenges Submitted by Mayank Kishore B039 Vivek Manjarekar B041 Anshu Kumar Sinha B064 Table of Contents Evolutionary Phase 3 Foundation Phase 3 Nationalization of Banks 4 Effect of nationalization 5 Reformatory Phase 5 First generation reforms 5 Impact of first generation reforms 6 Second generation reforms 7 Review of second generation reforms 10 Opportunities & Challenges 11 New banking licenses & key guidelines 11
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regulation of the private sector? In an economy there are two sectors‚ the public and private. The private sector‚ by definition‚ is the part of a nation’s economy that isn’t controlled by the government.(Investorwords). Several business organizations make up the private sector with the three basic ones being sole proprietorships‚ partnerships‚ and corporations. Most are for profit and part of that profit goes to the government in the form of taxes. The private sector can be referred to as a market
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