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...AGENCY: Import Administration, International Trade Administration... Page 20629 . Department's standard policy to assign all exporters of the merchandise subject...Department select Bangladesh as the surrogate country, as well as. Bangladeshi ...
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...AGENCY: Import Administration, International Trade Administration...Bangladesh, whereas the SVs placed on the record by. Page 12...It is the Department's policy to assign all exporters of merchandise subject to ...
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... through' into new markets equally important? . This paper aims to shed light on the above ques... local economic environment and government policy as opposed to internal factors such as the entrepr...Indians, Pakistanis, and Bangladeshis, were three of the categories identified by the Ce...
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...AGENCY: Import Administration, International Trade Administration..., stating India, the Philippines, and Bangladesh may be appropriate surrogates if their data are pu... from Import Administration's Office of Policy (``OP'').\19\ The OP determined that Bangladesh, G...
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... of payments adjustments by considering imports and exports as being dependent on relative prices ...Aghevli, B.B. & M.S. Khan (1980). Credit Policy and the Balance of Payments in Developing Countrie...Parikh, A. (1993). Monetary Policy in Bangladesh, 1973-85. In Page, Sheila, ed. (1993). Monetary Po...
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On February 1, 2005, the Department of Commerce (``Department'') published in the Federal Register the antidumping duty order on certain frozen warmwater shrimp (``shrimp'') from the Socialist Republic of Vietnam (``Vietnam'').\1\ The Department is conducting a new shipper review (``NSR'') of the Order, covering the period of review (``POR'') of February 1, 2010, through January 31, 2011. If these preliminary results are adopted in our final results of review, we will instruct U.S. Customs and Border Protection (``CBP'') to assess antidumping duties on entries of subject merchandise during the POR for which the importer-specific assessment rates are above de minimis. ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
...Page 1055. Department's standard policy to assign all exporters of the merchandise subject... suggesting that the Department select Bangladesh as the surrogate country, as well as Bangladeshi S...
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... conclude with some reflections on the important role that comparative law may play in "legitimizin...For instance, in Saipem v. Bangladesh, the Arbitral Tribunal made reference to a case of...
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... restaurant, food and drink, entertainment, import and export, language school, and consultancy (Nati... from South Korea, China, India, Bangladesh, Pakistan, Afghanistan, and other countries to exp...2010 Migration Policy Institute. Washington D.C., Retrieved April 29, 20...
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This paper applies the sequential Malmquist index to calculate multi-lateral, multi-factor productivity (MFP) indices for agriculture in 16 regions of Bangladesh from 1964 to 1992 and examines convergence amongst regions. Productivity grew at an average rate of 0.9% per annum, led by regions with high level of Green Revolution technology diffusion. The growth mainly occurred due to technological progress estimated at 1.9% per year. Overall technical efficiency declined steadily at 1.0% per year due to falling efficiency in most of the regions in later years. Both cross-section and time-series tests confirm that divergence among regions disappeared and agricultural productivity reached convergence in the long-run. Policy options to reverse declining efficiency are considered. These inclu...
... new technology itself will become an important source of inter-regional variation in food product...
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The author provides a descriptive and analytic examination of the nature, magnitude, and structure of U.S. trade with Muslim countries. From the U.S. point of view, two-way trade with Muslim countries is small in dollar terms: the U.S. is a more critical market to Muslim countries than the imports from Muslim countries are to the U.S., except for oil and gas. The U.S. imports roughly one-third of its petroleum from Muslim countries, whereas its non-petroleum trade deficit with Muslim countries is only about $15 billion. Although trade disputes with Muslim countries are rare, and several Muslim countries benefit from free or preferential trade agreements with the U.S., the author lists others whose exports cannot compete in the U.S. market against rival producers under present U.S. trade...
... the Bush administration has assigned trade policy a major role to combat terrorism and win peace. Du...Indonesia, Malaysia, and Bangladesh are the major Muslim source countries for SITC 8. ...