INSTITUTE OF BUSINESS ADMINISTRATION MIIS FIINAL PROJJECT E-BANKING IN PAKISTAN: CURRENT SCENARIO FINAL REPORT SUBMITTED BY: ADNAN AHMED ANZAR FASEEH KAMRAN MEMON M NABEEL KHAN 10TH DECEMBER 2004 TH DATED: 0 Acknowledgement First of all we would like to thank ALMIGHTY ALLAH‚ the most Beneficent and the most Merciful for giving us the courage and capability enabling us to complete this Final Project on E-Banking‚ Past‚ Present and Future. . We would like to thank IT Personal at Union Bank and
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The impact of e-banking over the personal and business life of a person or institution Introduction: Growth of Electronic banking in a country depends on many factors‚ such as success of internet access‚ new online banking features‚ household growth of internet usage‚ legal and regulatory framework. E-banking can offer speedier‚ quicker and dependable services to the customers for which they may be relatively satisfied than that of manual system of banking. E-banking system not only generates
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customers’ perception towards adoption and awareness of electronic banking in Pakistan. The outcomes would help the policy makers to develop effective strategies for future outlook of electronic banking in a country. The results suggest that banks’ customers in Pakistan perceive electronic banking as a tool for minimizing inconvenience‚ minimizing risk of carrying cash and time saving. Customers further believe that electronic banking increases chances of government access to public data‚ increases
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2. Analysis of Supply Dynamics Issues When we talk about supply in terms of the banking sector‚ we talk about supply of funds that the bank can loan. This supply of loanable funds come mainly from the customers themselves in the form of deposits. The demand section of this report discusses in-depth about the deposits from the market. This section is used to address the macro-economic aspects of the supply of funds including the money supply of the country‚ major contributors in the supply dynamics
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Australian Journal of Business and Management Research Vol.1 No.4 [108-116] | July-2011 CUSTOMERS’ PREFERENCE FOR E – BANKING SERVICES: A CASE STUDY OF SELECTED BANKS IN SIERRA LEONE R. A. GBADEYAN (Corresponding author) BSc‚ MBA(Zaria) MSc‚ Ph.D(Ilorin) Institute of Public Administration and Management (IPAM)‚ Department of Business Administration‚ University of Sierra Leone‚ A. J. Momoh Street Tower Hill‚ Freetown‚ Sierra Leone. Email: drgbadeyan@hotmail.com(Corresponding) timigbade@yahoo
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Appliances E-Books and the Future of Reading M any of us who work in both the research and the design communities try to assess future directions for technology as part of our day-to-day occupation (or perhaps preoccupation). With the new millennium here it seems particularly appropriate to take a moment to consider where we’ve been and to speculate on what lies ahead. One key area of potential innovation is information appliances. My own interest‚ previously at Xerox PARC and most E-books
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providing various banking services to customers‚ and making loans to individuals and companies. Compared with traditional channels of offering banking services through physical branches‚ e-banking uses the Internet to deliver traditional banking services to their customers‚ such as opening accounts‚ transferring funds‚ and electronic bill payment. E-banking can be offered in two main ways. First‚ an existing bank with physical offices can also establish an online site and offer e-banking services to its
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an accidental occurrence of the lending process‚ one that has enormous potential to deepen the severity and duration of financial crisis and to complicate macro economic management. This is because NPLs can bring down investors’ confidence in the banking system‚ piling up unproductive economic resources even though depreciations are taken care of‚ and impeding the resource allocation process. In a bank-centered financial system‚ NPLs can further thwart economic recovery by shrinking operating margin
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discoveries in the Bay of Bengal. Now it appears that Bangladesh is ready to tempt the worldwide petroleum industry into investigating the untapped gas potential of its offshore acreage. The country is preparing to launch its Third Licensing Round towards the end of the year‚ after the Bangladesh High Court in July 2006 partially vacated an injunction on the signature of Production Sharing Contracts (PSCs) with foreign companies. Background Bangladesh is one of the world’s poorest and most densely populated
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ACCEPTANCE OF E-BANKING AMONG CUSTOMERS (An Empirical Investigation in India) K.T. Geetha1 & V.Malarvizhi2 Professor and Assistant Professor‚ Department of Economics‚ Avinashilingam Institute for home Science and Higher Education for Women Coimbatore -641043‚ TamilNadu‚ India 1 2 Abstract Financial liberalization and technology revolution have allowed the developments of new and more efficient delivery and processing channels as well as more innovative products and services in banking industry.
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