BoP (Bottom of the Pyramid)
The group which is the largest, but poorest group
2.5 billion people living by less than $2.50 per day
Base of Pyramid
Unable to purchase daily necessities
South Asia and Central-South Africa
Bath BoP Market : Central-South AFRICA
Central-South Africa
Poor water supply, unable to use washing tools
Village and towns on the high reaches
Washing bod
Jane - awakens the morning of her wedding day, rises quickly to dress for the ceremony. Rochester surveys Jane quickly; she is "fair as a lily“, and two dark figures emerge from the back of the church, …
Mr. Biggs and Mr. Mason - object to their marriage since it is a bigamous marriage. Rochester's first wife is Bertha whose brother is Mason, the madwoman living in Mr. Rochester's attic.
(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
00 million Indians have no mains electricity at all. While 80% of Indian villages have at least an electricity line, just 44% of rural households have access to electricity. Acity. Acity.a sample of 97,882 households in 2002, electricity was the main source of lighting for 53% of rural households compared to 36% in 1993.Some half of the electricity iecttolen, compared with 3% in China. Thecttolen
Drinking culture in Korea
Koreans, like their neighbours across the water in Japan, like a drink and a good time. The Japanese consume 70 litres of beer per person compared with 40 litres per capita in South Korea. Drinking has always enabled Koreans to cut loose from the rather stiff constraints of their hierarchical Confucian culture and a few drinks and a singalong are a big part of modern Ko