precise moment – General Elections 2013 – are lots of breathlessly red faces. Generally‚ election year produces diametrically opposing reactions within the public and private sectors. While the incumbent seeks to woo fickle voters through last ditch spending (think: poverty alleviation‚ development projects‚ etc.)‚ the private sector often buries its head and its wallet in the sand until the storm of unpredictability has passed. Consequently‚ the business outlook for 2013 will remain depressingly unexciting
Premium Government Economy Economics
public to the private sector. This means the enterprise which already posses by the Government and to new project which normally have been carry out by the public sector. This transfer takes the form of issue and sale or outright distribution of shares to the general public. Broadly used‚ the term privatization includes other policies such as "contracting out" that is‚ the process by which activities‚ while publicly organized and financed‚ are carried out by private sector companies. For example
Premium Privatization Public sector Economics
surge of informality as it grew prominently in the untouchable private sector. The informal economy posed a conundrum of the relationship between power and authority of the state and the objects of that power. However‚ when IOs and NGOs with their structural adjustment programs enter the development realm‚ we begin to see a historical shift in the roles of power relations amongst the public private state and the private sector of NGO’s. Once the IO’s were able to establish the criteria of informality
Premium Economies Economics Informal sector
Models Public Service Port Strength: • Superstructure development and cargo handling operations are the responsibility of the same organization (unity of command). Weaknesses: • There is no role or only a limited role for the private sector in cargo handling operations. • There is less problem solving capability and flexibility in case of labour problems‚ since the port administration also is the major employer of port labour. • There is lack of internal competition‚ leading to inefficiency
Free Capitalism Economics Government
Mixed economy Features 1. Co-existence of public and private sectors: Both public and private enterprises exist in this economic system. The role and areas of both the sectors arc well defined. The relative roles assigned to the public and private sector differ from economy to economy. But generally the public sector is expected to perform certain basic functions such as: (i) Development of economic infrastructures. (ii) To promote basic industries that require huge investment and are of
Premium Planned economy Economic system Economics
THE SMALL AND MEDIUM ENTERPRISES (SME) IN BANGLADESH: AN OVERVIEW OF THE CURRENT STATUS DR. MOMTAZ UDDIN AHMED VICE CHANCELLOR STATE UNIVERSITY OF BANGLADESH 1.0 The Case for the SMEs The SMEs1 worldwide are recognized as engines of economic growth. The commonly perceived merits often emphasized for their promotion especially in the developing countries like Bangladesh include their relatively high labour intensity‚ dependence on indigenous skills and technology‚ contributions
Premium Industry Private sector Economics
maintenance‚ and municipal management." This situation is not new‚ and it have ringed the alarm in many sectors of the population‚ such as educational or medical systems‚ who have reacted to this kind of ``reforms´´ with strikes‚ demonstrations‚ and so on. So‚ as we can be able to see‚ it is very important to highlight the dangers of these continuous and progressive privatizations in many sectors. According to what Kevin R. Kosar (Analyst in American National Government and Finance Division) says
Premium Privatization Public services Infrastructure
Public Management and the Queensland Police Service Introduction The early 1990s saw a change in the way business was conducted and services delivered by Australian public sector organisations. This change was in synchronisation with the rising tide of globalisation that hailed in the ongoing necessity for the public sector to put into practice the processes that deliver effective and efficient public management (Brunetto and Farr-Wharton 2004‚ p. 221). Mention of globalisation brings to mind
Premium Police Management Constable
on salmon and cod. This study aims to address the following questions: How has the legal regime for GIFT material developed since leaving WorldFish? How has this affected the use and dissemination of GIFT material by the aquaculture sector (private and public sectors)? How has the transfer from WorldFish affected access and benefit sharing of GIFT material? And what are the effects on further developments and innovation of this breeding material? The report concludes that there is no doubt that the
Premium Private sector Fish Public sector
Public Private Partnership (PPP or simply P3) - Nigeria’s New Paradigm for infrastructure Development By Bob M. Achanya President‚ Kogi PPP Forum Cooperative‚ North Central Nigeria. Introduction Public private partnership (PPP) has recently gained prominence as a term to describe a business relationship in which public and private resources are blended to achieve a goal or set of goals judged to be of mutual benefit both to the private entity and to the public. According to the UNECE (2008)
Premium Public services Public sector Public–private partnership