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Searching with a thematic focus on Finance policy, Domestic finance in China, India
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BCIM economic cooperation: prospects and challenges
Centre for Policy Dialogue, Bangladesh, 2007This study is an attempt to explore the potentials for expanding trade and investment under the ambit of sub-regional cooperation comprising four contiguous countries of Eastern South Asia, which includes the two fast growing economies – India and China, and the two developing economies – Bangladesh and Myanmar (BCIM).DocumentChina's manufacturing success: lessons for India
Institute of Economic Growth, India, 2014For India to achieve its stated goals of reviving its manufacturing sector and providing jobs to the tens of millions of its unemployed youth, it must design policies targeted at low cost mass manufacturing, and will need massive investment, including major contributions from foreign investors. There are crucial lessons for India in China's success in the manufacturing sector.DocumentBuilding BRICs by building stadiums: preliminary reflections on recent and future sports mega-events in four emerging economies
International Research Institute for Sport Studies, UK, 2014Research on sports mega-events throughout the world has demonstrated that the benefits of staging them tend to be overestimated and the costs underestimated.DocumentReserve Management in Asia: changing contours and challenges
Research and Information System for Developing Countries, 2012Reserve management assumed centre stage in policymaking in Asia after the massive collateral damage caused during the 1997-98 East Asian financial crisis spreading all over the region.DocumentThe dynamic south, economic development and inclusive growth: the challenges ahead
The Brazilian Center for Analysis and Planning, 2013High wage inequality is a major policy concern in Brazil, India, China and South Africa. Recent literature points to the need to examine the role of minimum wages or unionisation and their links to inequality within labour markets and the role of social protection.DocumentPensions at a glance
Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development, 2012In addition to giving insights on the sustainability of public pensions and the pressures they face with the mounting demographic issues, Pensions at a Glance – Asia/Pacific Edition 2011 aims to enhance interaction between OECD member countries and non-member Asia/Pacific countries and economies.DocumentThe time to lead is now: the adoption of ESG analysis by Asian government pension funds
The Association for Sustainable & Responsible Investment in Asia, 2009Asia's pension funds are among the largest and fastest growing pools of capital in the region and their influence in the capital markets will continue to grow, especially as asset allocations diversify.DocumentPension systems for the informal sector in Asia
Social Protection and Labor, World Bank, 2009The unprecedented speed at which Asian populations are ageing requires a rapid forward looking response from governments in the region to provide protection against the risk of poverty in old age.DocumentPension coverage and informal sector workers: international experiences
Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development, 2009Pension reform around the world in recent decades has focused mainly on the formal sector. Consequently, many of those working in the informal sector have been left out of structured pension arrangements, particularly in developing countries.DocumentPensions at a glance: Asia/pacific edition
Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development, 2009Asia's pension systems need modernising urgently to ensure that they are financially sustainable and will provide adequate retirement incomes. A core concern of this study is the social sustainability of pensions - the future adequacy of pension benefits, the impact of pension reforms on the distribution of income among older people, and ways of combating old-age poverty.Pages
