Tourism in India - 13 million child labour in tourism sector India Booming in Child Labour! Its shameful to know that India as an emerging market or power has rampant growth of child labour as well. Tourism in India is booming….growing….scaling new heights…country is earning well in foreign exchange but there is dark side to this story. As per the International Labour Organisation‚ 13 million children are employed in tourism sector in India which is gross violation of law and illegal. The law
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Yes it is good and poor. Both well‚ there is stressed on theoretical Part of course only not on a practical part. India is much developed and developing very fast these days but didn’t have technology to give better practical training on secondary and Higher education level. Even the children in primary and secondary Education are burdened with lots of books. Homework given to them and the students copied them as it is from books ; they even don’t tried to extract knowledge from that course. This
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“Globalization in India” Globalization affects nearly every country in the world in both positive and negative ways. Investigate and discuss this phenomenon based on the country that you are familiar with. You will have to present your findings/arguments by using empirical data/evidence identified from other sources. Globalization “The shift towards a more integrated and interdependent world economy” “The close integration of countries and peoples of the world”( vuw‚2013 )In regards
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Illiteracy in India (disadvantages; propositions) Education acts as a refuge in adversity. It empowers the people. It is the tool that breaks the chains that resist a nation’s development. If the growth of a nation is to be people-centric‚ and if development is to be whole‚ then the people must be empowered and stimulated through education. Current situation (disadvantages): India is the largest democracy in the world. Quite interestingly‚ 30% of the world’s illiterate population
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By CONTENTS PAGE Section 1 – introduction Section 1.1 – Executive summary Section 1.2 – Introduction to report Section 2 – Theoretical background Section 2.1 – Theories Section 2.2 – India Section 2.3 – McDonald’s in India Section 2.4 – Dunning Eclectric Paradigm applied Section 2.5 – Vernon Life-Cycle applied Section 3 – eMPIRICAL EVIDENCE Section 3.1 - Findings Section 4 – iNTERPRETATION/DISCUSSION Section 4.1 – Interpretation/discussion Section 5 – conclusion
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India and Iran: Contemporary Relations The authors are dealing with the following sub-issue. 1. Political Transformation in Iran – Prospects for Peace‚ Stability and Prosperity i.) Modernization‚ Islam and Iran ii.) Role of Extra Regional Powers (US‚ EU‚ and China) - Impact on India – Iran relations iii.) Impact of Intra-regional Conflicts in West Asia on Indo-Iranian relations – Iran’s and the Gulf States – Iran and the Arab – Israel Conflict. iv.) India – Iran Bilateral Relation’s
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most populous city in India‚ and the fifth most populous city in the world‚ with a total metropolitan area population of approximately 20.5 million. Along with the neighbouring urban areas‚ including the cities of Navi Mumbai and Thane‚ it is one of the most populous urban regions in the world. GEOGRAPHIC POSITION: Mumbai lies on the west coast of India and has a deep natural harbour. In 2009‚ Mumbai was named an alpha world city. It is also the wealthiest city in India‚[9] and has the highest
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Strategic Management A Case study On Ornamental Fish Trading in India Submitted by- Group 4 Srinivas Hegde Chandni.C.S Sharon Barboza Yashovardhan Sinha Sneha Pujari Mohammed Zooheb Ornamental Fish Trading in India Introduction Keeping colourful and fancy fishes known as ornamental fishes‚ aquarium fishes‚ or live jewels is one of the oldest and most popular hobbies in the world. The growing interest in aquarium fishes has resulted in steady increase in aquarium
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McDonald’s in India McDonald’s uses a multidomestic strategy in India. This can be seen from its use of local suppliers‚ its adaptive pricing strategies and the removal of the company’s representative product‚ the “Big Mac”‚ and replacing it with a range of new products specifically catered to the Indian culture and preferences. Unlike in other countries‚ a large proportion of Indians do not eat pork or beef‚ and many others are vegetarians. It is therefore practically impossible for McDonald’s
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Taxation in India The Indian Tax Structure is quite elaborate‚ with clear distinction in authority between Central‚ State and local governments. The taxes levied by the Central government are on income (other than tax on agriculture income which would be levied by the state government)‚ customs duties‚ central excise and service tax. The State government levies Value Added Tax (VAT)‚ sales tax in states where VAT is not applied‚ stamp duty‚ state excise‚ land revenue and tax on professions. Local
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