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We use the data from World Bank Global Findex for the year 2011 , 2014 and 2017 to understand financial inclusion in India, at the same time we compare India's situation with the other BRICS nations. We fathom the fact that financial inclusion is definitely the way forward for an economy to achieve inclusive growth. Financial inclusion is just not an economic concept rather it is termed as a socio‐economic concept, as it helps people have a security for future life through access to education and health facility, a secure future and better standard of living. In India we see the barriers to inclusion are predominately caused by voluntary exclusion, and though policies will help to reach out but the ultimate goal of financial inclusion could be only achieved through improving awareness and financial literacy in India. Thus financial inclusion should be backed by financial literacy to get the best results. 相似文献
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This study was undertaken to understand the importance of the shadow economy, which is often misunderstood and misquoted. We come to an understanding of why this is an uproar regarding black money generation in India. This paper is an attempt to bring forward past evidences and current situation to understand the system through discussing various points of views in the literature. The paper concludes with bringing out the difference in black wealth and black money and the impact of both on the economy and answers the question—Is black money really bad for the economy? It is a hope that these results will be useful to policymakers and stakeholder to make policies that cater to all. 相似文献
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The advent of Mikhail Gorbachev’sNew Thinking has produce a Soviet strategy toward East Asia that seeks a détente with China and Japan. An essential part of this task
involves settling the territorial disputes that both countries have with the USSR. Present negotiations on the Sino-Soviet
border have produced compromises, yet differences remain. Intractable positions by Japan and the USSR on the Northern Territories
issue have resulted in a standstill that has prevented formal negotiations. This article analyzes the strategic-miliatary
choices that Soviet leaders will have to make as they address the territorial disputes, examine possible compromises and their
consequences for Soviet security, and assess the overall prospects for settlement.
Rajan Menon is associate professor of international relations at Lehigh University and author ofSoviet Power and the Third World (Yale University Press, 1986). During the 1989⊋ash;90 academic year he is serving as a research scholar at the Kennan Institute
for Advanced Russian Studies of the Woodrow Wilson International Center for Scholars, and as a Council on Foreign Relations
international affairs fellow on the staff of Congressman Stephen J. Solarz (D-NY). 相似文献
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