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[국제경영] 인도의 경제, 문화 현황과 정수기 시장 진출 전략(영문)에 대한 자료입니다.
목차
1. national flag
2. Location of water purifier
3. Shape of water purifier
4. gab between the poor and the rich
5. Health care in India
6. Precipitation
7. Delivery system
8.Traditions in South India
9.favorite color or pattern
10. India food
11.India water
12. Indian ice consumption
13. India water pollution
14.India kitchen
15. India tea culture
16. India climate
17. India Electricity Generation Capacity
18. Underground water in India
19. Diseases caused by polluted water
20. Booze in India
21. Economy and Buying power in India
22. Eco-friendly products in india
23. Lack of water in India
24. The average height in India
25. Economy of India
26. Indian tea and coffee house
27. The middle class is growing in India
본문내용
4. gab between the poor and the rich
About 100,000 people in India's milrieoneeo (assets over $ 1,000,000), live, and that number is increasing rapidly. India's rapid economic growth, soaring real estate values and resulting property of the Indian rich person has contributed to further disadvantage.
Outstanding college graduates flood the salary received 30,000 to 40,000 U.S. dollars, engineers and technical staff members learned to work in large companies will raise the ransom. In fact, the leading university, IIM-Kolkata (IIM-C) The average salary of MBA graduates and 142 bases of blood this year, the average wage increase rate amounting to 15.2%. Bullish on the future of this emerging affluent consumer in major department stores in the city boldly, and designer handbags and jewelry can easily find a woman dressed elegantly. India is rich but, in fact, far more poor people. India's poverty problem is very serious level, 25 percent of people earning less than 25 cents a day to live in absolute poverty. 75% of them are peasants living in rural areas. Most of the workers is not a form of formal employment are unable to receive proper protection.
5. Health care in India
Indigenous or traditional medical practitioners continue to practice throughout the country. The two main forms of traditional medicine practiced are the ayurvedic (meaning science of life) system, which deals with causes, symptoms, diagnoses, and treatment based on all aspects of well-being (mental, physical, and spiritual), and the unani (so-called Galenic medicine) herbal medical practice. A vaidya is a practitioner of the ayurvedic tradition, and a hakim (Arabic for a Muslim physician) is a practitioner of the unani tradition. These professions are frequently hereditary. A variety of institutions offer training in indigenous medical practice.
Only in the late 1970s did official health policy refer to any form of integration