Contribution of education sector toward economic growth Abstract This report is design to show the increase in economic growth of country with the development of its education sector. An increase in the capacity of an economy to produce goods and services‚ compared from one period of time to another is known as the economic growth of a country‚ which shows the development of a country. Nations cannot be developed without investing in education. Education is
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ABSTRACT This research paper presents empirically analysis of the impact of GDP growth rate and employment rate on inflation. For this purpose data from 1995 to 2008 has been collected and analyzed through OLS technique. The result of the model shows that GDP growth rate and employment rate adequately affect inflation. With the increase in GDP and employment‚ inflation decreases. INTRODUCTION Inflation is a burning issue in Pakistan. It is generally felt that for several years Pakistan has
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Evaluate possible economic policies‚ other than increasing the age limit‚ that a government might use to reduce significantly the consumption of alcoholic drinks. The market mechanism should allocate scarce resources to maximise consumer welfare. Alcohol is an example of a demerit good. A demerit good is one which is overprovided by the market mechanism. Apart from alcohol‚ drugs and prostitution are also examples of demerit goods. Consumption of these goods produces large negative externalities
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III. INCREASE RATE OF TOTAL AND ELDERLY POPULATION IV. IMPACT OF THE RISING ELDERLY ON ECONOMIC SOCIAL SYSTEMS V. ECONOMIC EFFECTS ON CHINA’S ECONOMY VI. CURRENT SOCIAL PROGRAMS FOR THE ELDERLY VII. FUTURE SOCIAL PROGRAMS FOR THE ELDERLY VIII. POSSIBLE ECONOMIC IMPACT ON LABOR‚ FAMILY‚ AND WORKING-AGE IX. CONCLUSION INTRODUCTION Thirty-five years ago the proportion
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FDI and Economic Growth: Evidence from Nigeria By Adeolu B. Ayanwale Department of Agricultural Economics Obafemi Awolowo University Ole-Ife‚ Nigeria AERC Research Paper 165 African Economic Research Consortium‚ Nairobi April 2007 THIS RESEARCH STUDY was supported by a grant from the African Economic Research Consortium. The findings‚ opinions and recommendations are those of the author‚ however‚ and do not necessarily reflect the views of the Consortium‚ its individual members or the AERC
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1. Economic Growth‚ Technology and Structural Change Economic Development: Growth is associated with structural‚ social change and change in the important institutions of the economy. These institutions evolve within the development process. Institutions are the result of past historical and social developments. Since different countries have different pasts‚ institutions will vary. “Development is about improving the quality of people’s lives‚ expanding their ability to shape their own
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journals and personnel. 2.0 EXTERNAL ANALYSIS - ENVIRONMANTAL FACTORS Environmental influences and trends can be thought of as layers around an organisation. The most general layer is the macro-environment where an understanding of political‚ economic‚ social‚ technological‚ environmental and legal (PESTEL) can provide an overall picture of the variety of forces at work around an organisation. Understanding the key components of PESTEL is essential to an organisation
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ECONOMIC GROWTH AND DEVELOPMENT Introduction Economies grow and develop‚ they expand and advance‚ and they progress and prosper. There are phases when they decline too‚ and there are economies that experience continuous decay. If one considers long stretches of human history‚ one knows that economies (civilizations) disappeared altogether. We will not take into account such long stretches of time. We shall not consider too distant a past either. We will leave them to historians‚ may be‚ economic
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ALTERNATIVE MEASURES OF ECONOMIC GROWTH AND PROGRESS What are some limitations of the Gross Domestic Product measure and some ideas for improving it? GDP has four major limitations: It includes the replacement of depreciated capital. It measures income produced in a country but not how much income people in that country re-ceive. Since GDP only counts monetary transactions (including esti-mates for those in the shadow economy)‚ it misses many other ac-tivities that people value like caring
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Chapter 29 The Monetary System TRUE/FALSE 1. In an economy that relies on barter‚ trade requires a double-coincidence of wants. ANS: T DIF: 1 REF: 29-0 NAT: Analytic LOC: The role of money TOP: Barter MSC: Definitional 2. Joe wants to trade eggs for sausage. Lashonda wants to trade sausage for eggs. Joe and Lashonda have a double-coincidence of wants. ANS: T DIF: 1 REF: 29-0 NAT: Analytic LOC: The role of money TOP: Barter MSC: Definitional 3. The use of money allows trade to
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