EXPORT FINANCE FEDERATION OF INDIAN EXPORT ORGANISATIONS SOUTHERN REGION‚ CHENNAI EXPORT FINANCE “Export or perish” Our imports are more than exports. Hence there is a necessity to encourage exports. Govt. and RBI extend various concessions to boost exports. EXPORT FINANCE Some of the concessions include: 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. 10. Cheap credit to exporters. Minimum of 12% of net credit should go to exports. Refinance to Banks on eligible portion of export credit outstanding
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4 Bangladesh* – Dr. Atiur Rahman and Mohammed Abu Eusuf1 B angladesh 2 is one of the most densely populated countries in the world. The poor Bangladeshi economy‚ with a low per capita income and a large population‚ reveals some clue to the abject humanitarian situation in the country. PROFILE Population: GDP (Current US$): 51.9 billion*** Per Capita Income: (Current US$) Recently‚ Bangladesh has introduced a freely floating exchange rate system. Since the abandonment of the
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McLeod Russel world’s largest tea plantation Company‚ accounting for 8% of India’s total tea production and 2% of the world’s tea production. McLeod Russel has been growing tea in India since 1869. They manage 47 tea estates in the Assam Valley‚ 6 tea estates in the Dooars region of West Bengal‚ 3 factories in Vietnam and 6 estates in Uganda and we have management control of the world renowned Gisovu estate in Rwanda. It is undisputedly the single largest private sector tea company in the world with
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THE DIFFERENCE BETWEEN COFFEE AND TEA. 1. Acidity Profoundly acidic drinks can contribute to digestive troubles‚ for example‚ indigestion and heartburn. So which is more acidic‚ tea or coffee? Acids are acrid and destructive. They turn out to be more unbiased when blended with a base (soluble). The pH scale depicts chemicals extending from extremely neutral (7.0)‚ acidic (0) and to a great degree soluble (14.0). Coffee beans grown in mineral-rich soil and high altitudes frequently deliver more
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Indian Tea Research Saji M Kadavil Indian Tea Research Indian Tea Research Chapter Section Contents Page No. List of tables and figures Glossary 1 Introduction 7-13 2 Production Profile of Indian Tea Industry 14-32 2.1 2.2 2.3 2.4 2.5 2.6 2.7 2.8 2.9 2.10 3 World Tea Production Production profile Production in North and South India Productivity of tea cultivation Types of Tea Production Bough Leaf Factories Quality Constraints of Green
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TEA INDUSTRY ADITYA REDDY.P 1226112201‚SEC-B SUMMARY: Based on the consumption the total turnover of the tea industry in India is expected to rise to 33‚000 crores by 2015 from 19‚000 crores oing to increased production over the past to decades.In trading aspect india is an important tea exporter‚ accounting for around 12-13% of
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The 2013 Import and Export Market for Tea in Sri Lanka By Professor Philip M. Parker‚ Ph. D. Chaired Professor of Management Science INSEAD (Singapore & Fontainebleau‚ France) www.icongrouponline.com ©2013 ICON Group Ltd. ii COPYRIGHT NOTICE 00059467-4G All of ICON Group Ltd. publications are copyrighted. Copying our publications in whole or in part‚ for whatever reason‚ is a violation of copyrights laws and can lead to penalties and fines. Should you want to copy tables‚ graphs or other materials
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WORKING PAPER NO. 72 EXPORT INCENTIVES IN INDIA WITHIN WTO FRAMEWORK RAJEEV AHUJA JULY‚ 2001 INDIAN COUNCIL FOR RESEARCH ON INTERNATIONAL ECONOMIC RELATIONS Core-6A‚ 4th Floor‚ India Habitat Centre‚ Lodi Road‚ New Delhi-110 003 Contents Foreword 1. Introduction............................................................................................................1 2. WTO Agreement on Subsidies and Countervailing Measures (SCM) ...................4 (A) Multilateral Discipline
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enter new overseas markets or export certain products; state-sponsored trading companies‚ like American Trading Companies; and government research and information services‚ particularly services that help exporters identify potential markets and the risks inherent to those markets. Exports can also be stimulated through trade missions‚ whereby political figure and business leaders from one nation visit another nation to explore markets and make contacts. Since exports create jobs‚ local economic development
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James Taylor planted the first 19 acres of tea in Loolecondra Estate near Kandy‚ Ceylon and this marked the birth tea industry in Ceylon (Sri Lanka) 1872 First sale of Loolecondra teas in Kandy 1873 Export of Sri Lanka’s first tea consignment of 23 lbs from Loolecondra Estate to London 1876 Founding of the first Broking firm John Brothers & Co. 1877 Manufacture of first “SIROCCO” tea drier by Samuel C. Davidson 1880 Manufacture of first tea rolling machine by John Walker & Co
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