Impact of Pulling Down Regulatory State Barriers on Uranium in Australia: Is There a Need In Order to Maintain and Increase Australia's Global Market Share of Uranium?

2013 ◽  
Author(s):  
Ikhlaas Gurrib
2020 ◽  
Vol 11 (3) ◽  
pp. 4879-4883
Author(s):  
Bhavana B Bhat ◽  
Pavithra Pradeep Prabhu ◽  
Manisha Joshel Lobo ◽  
Anusha ◽  
Prathvi ◽  
...  

Antibiotics are robust medicines that are widely used from centuries together to treat bacterial infections such as UTI, Typhoid, and Cholera etc. The similarity between viral and bacterial infection has resulted in the misuse of these antibiotics, the result of which is the development of resistant strains. Such indiscriminate drug usage has been increasing in a vulnerable geriatric and pediatric population. The increase in per capita health expenditure has enhanced the global market of these class of drugs, and the scope is likely to shoot up in the coming years, paving the way for young investors to emerging. The Global market for antibiotics is highly competitive and has a large number of significant players dominating the market share. During the forecast period experts in the field have evaluated and segment to dominate in LAMEA (Latin America, Middle East and Africa) holding the majority of the Market share. However, Asia Pacific was found to be the highest region for contributing more revenues. Detailed market analysis for / was conducted by doing secondary research where the market segments were compared for antibiotics. The paper discusses several issues related to the area of medicines.


Author(s):  
Sue Saltmarsh

This paper is situated against the backdrop of the global market in tertiary education, and recent moral panics in the Australian press concerning the implications of international education for what is perceived by many as a decline in academic standards and a potential devaluing of Australian tertiary qualifications in the global marketplace. This paper poses a challenge to these notions, and draws on poststructuralist theories of consumption, production and power, to consider how discourses of educational consumption are mapped onto the racialised commodification of tertiary education. The paper argues that racism—under the rhetorical guise of neoliberal ideals such as maintaining academic standards, ensuring institutional accountability and protecting market share in the interest of the national economy— shapes the discursive terrain of international education in the tertiary sector.


2000 ◽  
Vol 1 (4) ◽  
pp. 699-704 ◽  
Author(s):  
Johann Peter Murmann

It is London 1856. William Henry Perkin serendipitously invents the first synthetic dye while he is trying to synthesize quinine, a medicine for malaria. The nineteen-year-old Perkin leaves the Royal College of Chemistry and quickly commercializes his aniline purple dye, launching the synthetic dye industry. From that time on, the industry continues to dazzle the eye with ever new and appealing dye colors. Perkin, along with entrepreneurs from Britain and France, dominates the synthetic dye industry for the next eight years. During this period, British and French firms introduce most other innovative synthetic dyes onto the market, and they hold the largest global market share.


Author(s):  
Md. Sajib Hossian ◽  
Rashedul Kabir ◽  
Enamul Hafiz Latifee

The paper evaluates the competitiveness of Bangladesh Readymade Garments (RMG) sector in the global RMG market through Market share analysis using two-digit classifications of Harmonized System (HS)data for the period covering 2012 to 2016 to understand the actual condition of sector’s export comparison with its competitors. While Trade Entropy index has also been calculated to make an attempt to understand the geographical dispersion of export market scenario using two-digit classifications of HS data for the time period between 2006 and 2016. The findings of the paper based on market share analysis illustrate that Bangladesh’s RMG export share in the global market reached 7.50percentin 2016, a shot up by 2.73 percentage points, indicating an increase in export competitiveness, whereas China’s share declined to 33.75 percentin 2016, with an exception to 2013. During this period, Vietnam and India’s market share increased by 2.24, and 0.72 percentage points respectively, making them the 3rd and 6th largest RMG exporter in the world. Trade Entropyindex calculationindicates that the geographical diversification of Bangladesh’s RMG export has increased considering the value of the index, it has increased more than two times during this time period. But, in spite of increasing geographical diversification of the RMG sector market, itsexport is still heavily concentrated on two markets: the European UnionEU (28), and the United States of America (USA). The paper also provides a set of policyrecommendations that wouldbe helpful to both RMG sector stakeholders and policymakers to move forward the sector towards more export competitiveness.


2001 ◽  
Vol 38 (11) ◽  
pp. 38-5932-38-5932
Keyword(s):  

2011 ◽  
Vol 332-334 ◽  
pp. 1586-1589
Author(s):  
Ling Sun ◽  
Hong Zhao ◽  
Xue Yang

Based on the textile industry, the author utilized the regression analysis theory to conduct the regression analysis of wastewater reduction intensity to capital asserts investment, wastewater reduction intensity to the global market share of textiles and the Revealed Comparative Advantages Index (RCA )respectively, and finally drew a conclusion that the correlation between cleaner production investment and wastewater reduction remains positive, so does the correlation between wastewater reduction intensity and the global market share of textiles. The relationship between RCA of export textiles and the wastewater reduction intensity appears positive, and then negative and eventually positive again. The improvement of Chinese textiles competitive power in the globe is stimulated by cleaner production.


2019 ◽  
Vol 14 (1) ◽  
pp. 104-144
Author(s):  
Chithprabha Kudlu ◽  
Mark Nichter

Abstract India’s share in the global herbal market is dwarfed by that of China. Public and policy discourse in India exhorts Ayurvedic stakeholders to emulate Chinese medicine’s “science-based approach” to expand their global market share. But contrary to popular perception in India, China has been largely unsuccessful in making inroads into the coveted Euro-American herbal medicine market. Chinese medicine’s global footprint is largely the result of historical-cultural links, diasporic influences, and acupuncture practitioners. With national traditional medicine policies increasingly shaped by the evidence-based regulatory paradigm, the future of these informal bottom-up pathways is uncertain. Ignoring the roots of Chinese medicine’s global career has led to a distorted image of its “success” as an outcome of state investment in scientific validation and standardization programs. Our findings underscore the need to critically examine the imaginaries of success that drive stakeholders of non-biomedical traditions toward scientization to earn legitimacy and profits in the global realm.


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