Content Chapter 1 1. Introduction 2. Financial Inclusion 3. Rationale for Financial Inclusion 4. Financial Inclusion in India 5. Scope of Financial Inclusion 6. Profile of Syndicate Bank 7. Contribution of Syndicate bank Towards Financial Inclusion 8. Objectives 9. Limitations 10. Methodology 1.1 Introduction A well functioning financial system empowers individuals‚ facilitates better integration with the economy‚ activity contributes to
Premium Bank
REPORT OF THE COMMITTEE ON FINANCIAL INCLUSION January 2008 Preface Access to finance by the poor and vulnerable groups is a prerequisite for poverty reduction and social cohesion. This has to become an integral part of our efforts to promote inclusive growth. In fact‚ providing access to finance is a form of empowerment of the vulnerable groups. Financial inclusion denotes delivery of financial services at an affordable cost to the vast sections of the disadvantaged and low-income groups
Premium Bank Financial services
Econ 252 Spring 2011 Final Exam Econ 252 - Financial Markets Professor Robert Shiller Spring 2011 Professor Robert Shiller Final Exam Instructions: • • • • • • • • The exam consists of a total of twelve pages including this coversheet. There are two parts to this exam. In Part I‚ answer any sixteen of the twenty questions‚ five minutes each. The total for Part I is 80 minutes. In Part II‚ answer all seven questions. The total for Part II is 70 minutes.
Premium Option Futures contract Call option
School of Management‚ The University of Texas at Dallas‚ Richardson‚ TX 75083-0666‚ USA Received 9 December 1999; received in revised form 3 August 2002; accepted 20 January 2003 Abstract A translog function is specified to represent the relation between revenue and human resource inputs in public accounting firms. Estimation of the model using a balanced panel of annual data for 64 large CPA firms for the period 1995–1999 indicates that increasing returns to scale prevail in the public accounting industry
Premium Revenue Economics Input
32 (2001) 237–333 Financial accounting information and corporate governance$ Robert M. Bushmana‚*‚ Abbie J. Smithb a Kenan-Flagler Business School‚ University of North Carolina‚ Chapel Hill‚ NC 27599-3490‚ USA b Graduate School of Business‚ University of Chicago‚ USA Received 4 October 1999; received in revised form 4 April 2001 Abstract This paper reviews and proposes additional research concerning the role of publicly reported financial accounting information in the governance processes
Premium Management Research Economics
The Financial Detective Kyle Cornelius This case set contains information for two separate companies in eight different industries. Our task is to differentiate the companies based on what we know about them from a qualitative stand point and the financial data that we are provided. The first one we will examine is in the healthcare field. One firm develops and manufactures prescription drugs and sells them to healthcare professionals directly using sales people. They have several unique
Premium Asset Balance sheet Inventory
What is a Financial Crime? There is no internationally accepted definition of financial crime. Rather‚ the term expresses different concepts depending on the jurisdiction and on the context. In general‚ financial crime can refer to any non-violent crime that results in a financial gain to the perpetrators and loss to others or the state. It includes a range of illegal activities such as: • corruption (bribery‚ speed money‚ kickbacks etc.) • financial fraud (accounting‚ check‚ credit card‚ mortgage
Premium Finance Debt Investment
in all fields have recognized a need for a simpler set of financial reporting standards for small businesses‚ but regulators have not been willing to provide a second set of standards. Now‚ for the first time‚ there may be an answer for small firms desiring relief from the onerous reporting requirements of GAAP. The AICPA now recognizes the International Accounting Standards Board’s (IASB) recently released International Financial Reporting Standard for Small and MediumSized Entities (IFRS
Premium International Financial Reporting Standards Financial statements Public company
monetary values of financial transactions of a business The reporting of results Providing financial information as a basis for decision making 3 main processes define the accounting process: 1. IDENTIFYING: Selecting evidence of economic / financial activity (transactions) 2. RECORDING transactions to provide a permanent history of the businesses financial activities 3. COMMUNICATING the recorded information to interested users by use of accounting reports IE Financial Statements The Nature
Premium Balance sheet Generally Accepted Accounting Principles Inventory
References: • Dahmash‚ N. (1995). Financial Statements and Accounting Standards Generally Accepted.. Amman-Jordan. • Kieso‚ D. E.‚ Waygandt‚ J. J.‚ & Warfield‚ T. D. (2005). Intermediate Accounting. (11 edition). Wiley Publisher. • ACCPA‚ (2006) Journal of Accountancy‚ (Monthly Journal)
Premium Financial statements Balance sheet Income statement