Academic literature on the topic 'Overseas market assessment'

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Journal articles on the topic "Overseas market assessment"

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Howe, Joanna. "Is the Net Cast Too Wide? An Assessment of Whether the Regulatory Design of the 457 Visa Meets Australia's Skill Needs." Federal Law Review 41, no. 3 (September 2013): 443–69. http://dx.doi.org/10.22145/flr.41.3.3.

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With increasing use of skilled temporary migration by employers and its significant influence upon Australia's permanent migration intake, the 457 visa has far-reaching implications — both for the domestic labour market and for the long-term composition of the Australian population. The scheme was introduced in 1996 to facilitate the temporary migration of skilled overseas workers to alleviate domestic skill shortages. Predicated upon a premise of business demand, the scheme allows employers to sponsor overseas workers whose occupations are on the Consolidated Sponsored Occupation List. Verification of whether the employer's attestation of a skill shortage is genuine is provided through employer-conducted labour market testing for certain occupations and the market salary rates requirement. This article questions whether these regulatory mechanisms are effective for ensuring the 457 visa program meets its objectives.
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Williamson, Peter J. "The competitive advantages of emerging market multinationals: a re-assessment." critical perspectives on international business 11, no. 3/4 (July 6, 2015): 216–35. http://dx.doi.org/10.1108/cpoib-02-2014-0008.

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Purpose – The purpose of this paper is to re-assess both the nature and sources of the competitive advantages which multinationals expanding from home bases in emerging economies (EMNEs) may enjoy in the global market. Design/methodology/approach – The paper analyses the results of 12 concurrent studies undertaken by a group of experts who were asked to examine how strategies for innovation, international value chain configuration and foreign mergers and acquisitions contributed to the competitive advantages of multinationals emerging from Brazil, Russia, India and China (the BRICs), respectively. Findings – EMNEs do have competitive advantages that can underpin their expansion abroad, but these are mainly “non-traditional” advantages that have been built by finding innovative ways to leverage advantages of their home countries. EMNE’s internationalisation is as much about accessing new resources and knowledge to enable them to extend their competitive advantage, as it is a route to exploiting existing advantages over a larger set of markets. As a result, the global value chain structure of EMNEs tends to be fundamentally different from that chosen by incumbent multinationals. Research limitations/implications – The study is limited to EMNEs from the BRIC countries, but implications for EMNEs emerging from other countries are discussed. Originality/value – We bring to bear extensive data and a systematic approach to understanding the new breed of multinationals emerging from the BRIC countries; their sources of competitive advantage; and how they are using innovation, foreign investment and overseas acquisitions to transform global competition.
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Oh, Jungkeun. "A Study of Pre-assessment Framework for Business Environment for Delivering Projects in a New Overseas Market." Korean Journal of Construction Engineering and Management 16, no. 3 (May 31, 2015): 78–90. http://dx.doi.org/10.6106/kjcem.2015.16.3.078.

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Fleming, Patricia A., Taya Clarke, Sarah L. Wickham, Catherine A. Stockman, Anne L. Barnes, Teresa Collins, and David W. Miller. "The contribution of qualitative behavioural assessment to appraisal of livestock welfare." Animal Production Science 56, no. 10 (2016): 1569. http://dx.doi.org/10.1071/an15101.

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Animal welfare is increasingly important for the Australian livestock industries, to maintain social licence to practice as well as ensuring market share overseas. Improvement of animal welfare in the livestock industries requires several important key steps. Paramount among these, objective measures are needed for welfare assessment that will enable comparison and contrast of welfare implications of husbandry procedures or housing options. Such measures need to be versatile (can be applied under a wide range of on- and off-farm situations), relevant (reveal aspects of the animal’s affective or physiological state that is relevant to their welfare), reliable (can be repeated with confidence in the results), relatively economic to apply, and they need to have broad acceptance by all stakeholders. Qualitative Behavioural Assessment (QBA) is an integrated measure that characterises behaviour as a dynamic, expressive body language. QBA is a versatile tool requiring little specialist equipment suiting application to in situ assessments that enables comparative, hypothesis-driven evaluation of various industry-relevant practices. QBA is being increasingly used as part of animal welfare assessments in Europe, and although most other welfare assessment methods record ‘problems’ (e.g. lameness, injury scores, and so on), QBA can capture positive aspects of animal welfare (e.g. positively engaged with their environment, playfulness). In this viewpoint, we review the outcomes of recent QBA studies and discuss the potential application of QBA, in combination with other methods, as a welfare assessment tool for the Australian livestock industries.
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Svetlicinii, Alexandr. "The Acquisitions of the Chinese State-Owned Enterprises under the National Merger Control Regimes of the EU Member States: Searching for a Coherent Approach." Market and Competition Law Review 2, no. 1 (September 9, 2019): 99–120. http://dx.doi.org/10.7559/mclawreview.2018.334.

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With the rapidly unfolding China’s Belt and Road Initiative (BRI ) and the ongoing reform of the State-owned enterprises (SOEs), the number of overseas acquisitions by the Chinese SOEs in various industrial and services sectors is gradually on the rise. These transactions have raised a number of questions in terms of the assessment of the economic concentrations’ potential impact on competition and challenged the traditional assessment tools employed by the merger control regimes. The paper examines the evolving experience of Chinese SOEs’ acquisitions in the European Union (EU), which are subject to ex ante assessment under both EU and national merger control regimes. The analysis of the merger assessment practice of the EU Commission culminating in the recent conditional approval of the ChemChina/Syngenta merger indicates that the traditional assessment tools, when applied to the acquisitions by Chinese SOEs, may no longer be adequate to grasp the essence of their corporate governance and decision-making. The review of the merger control practice of the national competition authorities (NCAs) also demonstrates the absence of a coherent assessment approach to the cases involving Chinese SOEs, which may lead to the inconsistent enforcement and strengthening of the foreign investment screening on grounds other than market competition.
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Mao, Da, Kai Zhou, Shu Jing Zheng, Ya Dong Liu, and Yan Pu Liu. "Research on Evaluation System of Green Building in China." Advanced Materials Research 224 (April 2011): 159–63. http://dx.doi.org/10.4028/www.scientific.net/amr.224.159.

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In pace with the high-speed development of real estate, green building has a good prospect in China. As a rising concept, green building is accepted by more and more Chinese people. There are too many standards in the market, whether overseas or internal. As time goes on, the development of green building will be stagnated. The biggest obstacle is lacking a suitable evaluation system for green building. Too many new buildings need a authoritative assessment. Therefore, it is necessary to pay more attention to evaluation system of green building. The paper introduces some evaluation systems for green building and analyze them in China especially, and then makes some recommendations to solve the problems of evaluation system of green building, and discusses how to promote the green building.
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Barakoti, Tanka P., Narendra N. Tiwari, and Minoba Yonzon. "Quality of Chiretta (Swertia chirayita) in Cultivated and Wild Samples Collected from Different Districts of Nepal." Nepal Journal of Science and Technology 13, no. 2 (March 8, 2013): 57–62. http://dx.doi.org/10.3126/njst.v13i2.7715.

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An experiment under the scaling up project of ARS Pakhribas was conducted to identify quality and compare the cultivated and wild Chiraito (Swertia chirayita) samples collected from eastern, central and western regions hill districts during 2004. This work aimed to identify best sites/ districts for quality production of this important medicinal herb through cultivation and conservation for initiating export of value added quality product in a sustainable way. Processed product is cheaper to send the overseas market as the volume and weight are decreased. Quality analysis is necessary to ensure quality standard of international market in the context of WTO. Assessment of the collected samples was done by quantifying the extract content and analyzing bitter principle in the Herbs Production and Processing Company lab, Kathmandu. The result revealed that extract content and bitter principle percent varied depending upon different agro-eco growing conditions and extraction method. Hot extraction gave more extract of the plant than cold percolation method. Wild samples, in general, contained higher bitter principle than cultivated, whereas extract content was higher in cultivated Chiraito. The international market could be better ensured with such study result. Nepal Journal of Science and Technology Vol. 13, No. 2 (2012) 57-62 DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.3126/njst.v13i2.7715
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Taheripour, Farzad, Thomas W. Hertel, and Navin Ramankutty. "Market-mediated responses confound policies to limit deforestation from oil palm expansion in Malaysia and Indonesia." Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences 116, no. 38 (September 3, 2019): 19193–99. http://dx.doi.org/10.1073/pnas.1903476116.

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The global demand for palm oil has grown rapidly over the past several decades. Much of the output expansion has occurred in carbon- and biodiversity-rich forest lands of Malaysia and Indonesia (M&I), contributing to record levels of terrestrial carbon emissions and biodiversity loss. This has led to a variety of voluntary and mandatory regulatory actions, as well as calls for limits on palm oil imports from M&I. This paper offers a comprehensive, global assessment of the economic and environmental consequences of alternative policies aimed at limiting deforestation from oil palm expansion in M&I. It highlights the challenges of limiting forest and biodiversity loss in the presence of market-mediated spillovers into related oilseed and agricultural commodity and factor markets, both in M&I and overseas. Indeed, limiting palm oil production or consumption is unlikely to halt deforestation in M&I in the absence of active forest conservation incentives. Policies aimed at restricting palm oil production in M&I also have broader consequences for the economy, including significant impacts on consumer prices, real wages, and welfare, that vary among different global regions. A crucial distinction is whether the initiative is undertaken domestically, in which case the M&I region could benefit, or by major palm oil importers, in which case M&I loses income. Nonetheless, all policies considered here pass the social welfare test of global carbon dioxide mitigation benefits exceeding their costs.
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Lei, Ting, and Yan Wang. "The Study of Influencing Factors of the Online Banking Information Security Products Service Quality." Applied Mechanics and Materials 644-650 (September 2014): 5703–9. http://dx.doi.org/10.4028/www.scientific.net/amm.644-650.5703.

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The service quality of the online banking information security product has become the important bottleneck of every financial institution to further explore online market and development potential customers. Through study the domestic and overseas scholars about the quality of service fields putting the part of the research extends to the service quality of the online banking information security product measurement process, and trying to build the measurement model suit for the service quality of the online banking information security product. We survey the university student of shaanxi Xian and use the internet to investigation while using the factor analysis and multiple regression method to verify the evaluation model and assessment index of rationalities. We extract the main influence factors of the service quality of the online bank information security products, preceding a deeper analysis. Finally, we derive the main influence factor of the service quality of the online bank information security products.
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Bogatyrev, Semen Yu. "THE DIAGRAM OF MOODS: THEORY AND REALITY." Vestnik of the Plekhanov Russian University of Economics, no. 3 (June 30, 2019): 17–29. http://dx.doi.org/10.21686/2413-2829-2019-3-17-29.

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The article studies the issue of identifying business market value in deals on merges and acquisitions, which is connected with identifying the discount rate by using the method of cash flows discounting. During the post-crisis period after 2009 not only Russian value analysts but also overseas ones have been facing this problem. Only now we can observe a sharp increase in the Federal Reserve System rate, though not long ago valuers did not know how to build the discount rate with the negative figures of the interest rate in Europe and its minimum figures in the US. This research investigates the problem from the point of view of behavioral finance. Crisis and prosperous years are analyzed in view of the emotional background, which gives a certain line in shaping the mood of M & A market participants. To solve the problem value assessment was carried out by the method of cash flow discounting of a great number of Russian banks put up for sale and later quantitative methods of finance decision-making were applied for processing numerous findings. The novelty of obtained findings is connected with the fact that today methods of behavioral research are not used in finance practice and in scientific developments in Russia. They are rather limited abroad. Theoretical works, which formed the foundation for the empiric research, were used earlier by foreign scientists at the stock exchange. Such research is a pioneer on the Russian M & A market.
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Dissertations / Theses on the topic "Overseas market assessment"

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Gould, Richard Robert, and RichardGould@ozemail com au. "International market selection-screening technique: replacing intuition with a multidimensional framework to select a short-list of countries." RMIT University. Social Science & Planning, 2002. http://adt.lib.rmit.edu.au/adt/public/adt-VIT20081125.145312.

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The object of this research was to develop an international market screening methodology which selects highly attractive markets, allowing for the ranges in diversity amongst organisations, countries and products. Conventional business thought is that, every two to five years, dynamic organisations which conduct business internationally should decide which additional foreign market or markets to next enter. If they are internationally inexperienced, this will be their first market; if they are experienced, it might be, say, their 100th market. How should each organisation select their next international market? One previous attempt has been made to quantitatively test which decision variables, and what weights, should be used when choosing between the 230 countries of the world. The literature indicate that a well-informed selection decision could consider over 150 variables that measure aspects of each foreign market's economic, political, legal, cultural, technical and physical environments. Additionally, attributes of the organisation have not been considered when selecting the most attractive short-list of markets. The findings presented in the dissertation are that 30 criteria accounted for 95 per cent of variance at cross-classification rates of 95 per cent. The weights of each variable, and the markets selected statistically as being the most attractive, were found to vary with the capabilities, goals and values of the organisation. This frequently means that different countries will be best for different organisations selling the same product. A
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Books on the topic "Overseas market assessment"

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Mondal, Abdul Hye. An assessment of the overseas labour market for Bangladesh: A case study of six countries - Azerbaijan, Iraq, Italy, Japan, Jordan and Qatar. Dhaka: International Organization for Migration (IOM), Dhaka, 2014.

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United States. Office of Strategic Industries and Economic Security., ed. European diversification and defense market assessment: A comprehensive guide for entry into overseas markets. 2nd ed. [Washington, D.C.]: U.S. Dept. of Commerce, Bureau of Export Administration, Office of Strategic Industries and Economic Security, 1997.

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European diversification and defense market assessment: A comprehensive guide for entry into overseas markets. Washington, D.C: U.S. Dept. of Commerce, Bureau of Export Administration, Office of Strategic Industries and Economic Security, 1995.

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United States. Office of Strategic Industries and Economic Security., ed. European diversification and defense market assessment: A comprehensive guide for entry into overseas markets. Washington, D.C: U.S. Dept. of Commerce, Bureau of Export Administration, Office of Strategic Industries and Economic Security, 1995.

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European diversification and defense market assessment: A comprehensive guide for entry into overseas markets. 2nd ed. [Washington, D.C.]: U.S. Dept. of Commerce, Bureau of Export Administration, Office of Strategic Industries and Economic Security, 1997.

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United States. Office of Strategic Industries and Economic Security., ed. European diversification and defense market assessment: A comprehensive guide for entry into overseas markets. 2nd ed. [Washington, D.C.]: U.S. Dept. of Commerce, Bureau of Export Administration, Office of Strategic Industries and Economic Security, 1997.

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United States. Office of Strategic Industries and Economic Security., ed. European diversification and defense market assessment: A comprehensive guide for entry into overseas markets. 2nd ed. Washington, D.C: U.S. Dept. of Commerce, Bureau of Export Administration, Office of Strategic Industries and Economic Security, 1997.

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United States. Office of Strategic Industries and Economic Security., ed. European diversification and defense market assessment: A comprehensive guide for entry into overseas markets. Washington, D.C: U.S. Dept. of Commerce, Bureau of Export Administration, Office of Strategic Industries and Economic Security, 1995.

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United States. Office of Strategic Industries and Economic Security., ed. European diversification and defense market assessment: A comprehensive guide for entry into overseas markets. Washington, D.C: U.S. Dept. of Commerce, Bureau of Export Administration, Office of Strategic Industries and Economic Security, 1995.

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United States. Office of Strategic Industries and Economic Security., ed. European diversification and defense market assessment: A comprehensive guide for entry into overseas markets. 2nd ed. [Washington, D.C.]: U.S. Dept. of Commerce, Bureau of Export Administration, Office of Strategic Industries and Economic Security, 1997.

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Book chapters on the topic "Overseas market assessment"

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Pauly, Louis W. "9. Financial Openness and the Challenge of Global Governance." In Global Political Economy, 222–46. Oxford University Press, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/hepl/9780198820642.003.0009.

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This chapter studies the globalization of finance. The world economy today reflects a systemic experiment involving, on the one hand, the unleashing of cross-border capital movements and, on the other, the dispersion of the political authority necessary to oversee and, when necessary, stabilize the markets through which vast amounts of capital now flow. Resulting tensions become most obvious during financial crises, when those flows suddenly stop or reverse their direction. In the late twentieth century, most such crises began in emerging-market or developing countries and had limited systemic consequences. In 2008, however, the global experiment capital market openness, now far along in its evolution, almost failed catastrophically when policy mistakes in the United States combined with large national payments' imbalances and a broad economic downturn to spawn a worldwide emergency. Shortly thereafter, Europeans at the core of the system narrowly escaped a similar disaster at the regional level. The chapter then explores key implications for contemporary global governance. It calls particular attention to the increasingly difficult and variegated politics of systemic risk assessment, emergency management, and future crisis prevention as the experiment continues.
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