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Searching with a thematic focus on Trade Policy, Regional Trade in India

Showing 41-50 of 111 results

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  • Document

    Unemployment burden and its distribution: Theory and evidence from India

    Indira Gandhi Institute of Development Research, India, 2014
    This paper develops a measure of unemployment that takes into account both the level and intensity of unemployment and that satisfies several desirable properties, including distribution sensitivity (dealing with differences among the unemployed). It can also be decomposed into mean and distributional components and contributions to unemployment by various subgroups of the population.
  • Document

    Development Banks from the BRICS

    Institute of Development Studies UK, 2015
    The BRIC acronym was created at the beginning of the 2000s to represent a group of four fast-growing economies –Brazil, Russia, India and China – and was changed to BRICS in December 2010 with the inclusion of South Africa.
  • Document

    South Africa, Africa, and the BRICS: progress, problems, and prospects: policy brief

    Centre for Conflict Resolution, University of Cape Town (UCT), 2014
    The Centre for Conflict Resolution (CCR), Cape Town, South Africa, hosted a two-day policy advisory group seminar in Tshwane (Pretoria), South Africa, 2014.
  • Document

    South Africa and the BRICS: progress, problems, and prospects

    Centre for Conflict Resolution, University of Cape Town (UCT), 2014
    The BRICS countries played a pivotal role in enabling other developing and emerging economies to weather the impact of the global financial crisis of 2008–2009. Participation in the BRICS grouping offers an opportunity for South Africa to deepen and broaden its bilateral engagement with Brazil, Russia, India, and China.
  • Document

    Prospect of India-Ethiopia investment and trade cooperation

    Knowledge Partnership Programme, 2015
    In recent years, with the opening up of the Ethiopian and India economy, investment and trade ties between the two countries have grown significantly. While Ethiopia’s major exports are food and live animals, coffee and tea, crude materials and vegetable and fruits, India’s major import items are manufactured products and fuels.
  • Document

    India - Africa Business Innovation Meeting (Intellecap)

    Knowledge Partnership Programme, 2014
    The Knowledge Partnership Programme (KPP) funded by UK-DFID, in collaboration with Sankalp Forum organised a meeting to bring together the Indian and African Government leaders and business groups. The meeting included High Commissioners from Kenya and Ethiopia; and representatives from Ghana and Rwanda.
  • Document

    Promoting resource efficiency along the supply chain of key sectors in South Asia: options and opportunities

    Knowledge Partnership Programme, 2014
    Small and medium enterprises (SMEs) are engines of economic growth, providing livelihoods to large populations in South Asian countries. However, over exploitation of natural resources can severely impact sustainability of industrial production systems.
  • Document

    Prospects of India-Ethiopia investment and trade cooperation

    Knowledge Partnership Programme, 2014
    Both India and Ethiopia have emerged as the two fastest growing developing countries in the world. In recent years, bilateral trade between the two countries increased significantly since the Bilateral Investment Promotion and Protection Agreement was signed in 2007.
  • Document

    Managing India's trade deficit with large trading partners: lessons and prospects

    Knowledge Partnership Programme, 2014
    India’s trade deficit with China, South Korea and Indonesia has widened considerably in recent period and is becoming unsustainable. Together, these countries accounted for 24 percent of India’s overall trade deficit in 2007 that has increased to 29 percent in 2012.
  • Document

    Deepening India’s engagement with the least developed countries: a critical analysis of India’s Duty-free Tariff Preference Scheme

    Knowledge Partnership Programme, 2014
    India became the first among emerging economies to announce a duty-free facility for LDCs. It did so during the first India-Africa Forum Summit in April 2008. This is not a coincidence, for Africa is home to 34 of the 49 LDCs, and is therefore the one region where international development efforts should be focused.

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