Archive for July, 2010

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There is a TON of great free stuff you can sell for a profit. Plus, you get to keep 100% of the money without having to buy any inventory, stock any goods, or go out of pocket. This is a GREAT way to try your hand at a business that has the lowest start up costs of anything and it has a HUGE upside potential! Links: Daz 3D Software & Models: www.daz3d.com Public Domain Toolbar: 205a3a74r4u9qd5aegrn-mby5t.hop.clickbank.net Use it to easily find tons of public domain content Public Domain Treasure: 08d452y7m2q5pcf2f4nj6qcw9r.hop.clickbank.net A book on how to best use public domain stuff & make BANK with it! Public Domain Made Easy: ae406a77m6q3v6flnipr4-ryd4.hop.clickbank.net Another resource to look into. Amazon.com: Get the book “The Public Domain” by Stephen Fishman It has tons of information you NEED plus tons of links to places you can get free public domain books, movies, music, art, etc. DISCLAIMER: This information is provided with no warranties or guarantees. Your success may vary andyou are advised to seek professional advice regarding any accounting, business or legal matters as applies to this info. Use this information at your own risk!!! Kinghuman accepts NO liability for any losses or consequences as a result of your use of any information herein. If you spill hot coffee on yourself while watching my videos or taking my advice, Too bad! If youre abducted by aliens while taking my advice, TOO BAD! Its not my fault! Furthermore, Kinghuman accepts no liability
Video Rating: 4 / 5

Famous Bob Proctor from the secret movie explains how we have unlimited potential. ELITE SECRETS ARE REVEALED HERE: bit.ly Here is your chance to finally understand why some people attract all the abundance, love and happines in their life so easy than even a child can do it once he understands and apply all the secrets. When we understand ourself and know how to release the power within us the miracles begins. Unleash your unlimited potential, and apply the secrets to success that only an elite few truly understand. Once you learn how to, you will suddenly find that you can easily: -Guarantee wealth to flow abundantly into your life as the universe begins to provide all your needs -Eliminate the word failure from your life for good (Success will be the word most people use to describe you as they talk about you with admiration) -Have complete control over your destiny and make your prosperous achievements entirely predictable -Eliminate any worry over financial matters for good (The result: A better lifestyle, more money in your bank account. and deep appreciation from your loved ones) -Ignite passion in your life and relationships (no matter what kinds of difficulties you may have had in the past). God bless. To your success
Video Rating: 5 / 5


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A few nice FDI images I found:

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2293217805 aae6c3b417 Nice FDI photos

Image by camerabiyori


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www.OnlineGuru.ws 231 Best business home online opportunity resource. Part 1 best business home online opportunity resource best business home idea internet best business from home making money best build your own web site company best books for home based business best books for motivation and making money best books on home business and internet business and reviews best business ideas in rural communities best business ideas in the uk best business make money online opportunity
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We are super excited about our journey with GiveOpp & so very proud to be part if an amazing community of leaders, entrepreneurs & philanthropists whose passion is to GIVE OPPortunity to all & help those less fortunate. www.highway2wealth.info


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Check out these financial Destination images:

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4792895760 99f467204d DSC01144

Image by lyng883


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A few nice business opportunity images I found:

Rohit Bhargava talks at Network Solutions
2629545150 cc476c6ae5 Cool Business Opportunity images

Image by ShashiBellamkonda


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India Will Overtake China In The Next 25 Years

India will overtake China in the next 25 years

Ten years ago, it was unthinkable to compare China with India. The emergence of India and China as major global players heralds new realities.  Both countries have transformed the global political architecture increasingly shifting power from West to the East. The question issue here is the nature of the India’s economic growth and its potentials to outperform China. 

 

To-day India has become the world’s most debating chamber before economists and entrepreneurs like you, it is not without a reason – it is an exiting love-affair with growing passion which reminds us all that rise of India means that democracy can be good for growth. It also poses a question that can an Indian political model based on democracy and rule of law can overtake rival Chinese political model of unbridled government authority as a formula for making poor countries rich.

 

India’s economic dynamism constitutes a huge paradox comprising achievements and failures simultaneously. Economic reforms in India over the last few years in particular are promising but not sufficient. India may claim that there is no other country in the world which is so productive and that India’s pluralistic system is in fact strength rather than a weakness, it is not too convincing given the slow pace of development.  India may claim that because of the democratic system it has fallen behind China in terms of both FDI and growth rates, but in fact a lot of problems being experienced in India are not because of democracy but because of bureaucracy, controls and restraints in establishing enterprise and barriers in the way of entrepreneurship and lack of effective governance.    

 

Two years ago the view that India might have a more competitive economy than China was met with incredulity. To-day comparison of the two countries offers valuable insights for us for the global economy. A fundamental distinction is that China’s growth stems from resource accumulation while India’s is rooted in increasing efficiency.

 

China’s rise was due to major investment in infrastructure, when economic liberalization and institutional reforms deserve more credit. China pursued this goal while giving less priority to education. India’s educational system, on the other hand, has steadily improved, especially in rural areas.  

China faces several challenges, such as  corruption, fragile financial system, unemployment, energy security, environment degradation, likely shrinking of the FDI, failure to create enough jobs which is already triggering unrest, its aging society beginning in the 2020 and it is very unlikely that China would be able to place pension and health care system and if by any means the economy takes the down trend it would have devastating affect of political instability, HIV/AIDS and most importantly the Taiwan conflicts. China’s emergence could be severely dented if it faces crisis of confidence.

 

The same rule of law that allowed China to bulldoze homes for skyscrapers, for example, has also led to corruption, rising inequality and social unrest. Conversely, India’s apparent weaknesses – a cumbersome democracy, lack of central planning and unrestrained population growth – could be long-term advantages.

 

China’s economic superpower ambition has flaws, including graft and waste. India, in contrast, enjoys many hidden, long-term advantages. Although India’s literacy rate is much lower than China’s, its technical and management institutes are far better than such schools in China.  It is estimated that that only 10 per cent of Chinese engineers have the skills required to work in a global company, while the comparable number for India is 25 per cent.

 

Moreover, the massive flows of foreign investment into China are a two-edged sword. It has become a substitute for domestic entrepreneurship. Few of the Chinese goods are in fact made by indigenous companies. And the few that exist are besieged by regulatory constraints and find it hard to raise domestic capital. China’s state-owned enterprises remain massive but bloated and possess a frightening number of nonperforming loans from China’s vulnerable banking system.

 

China’s export-led manufacturing boom is largely a creation of foreign direct investment (FDI), which effectively serves as a substitute for domestic entrepreneurship. During the last 20 years, the Chinese economy has taken off, only few local firms have been developed as world class companies to rival the big multinationals.

 

On the other hand, India has managed to spawn a number of companies that now compete internationally with the best that Europe and the United States have to offer.

 

India too faces these challenges that China faces, some challenges are even greater than one can imagine. Corruption is a major issue. However, India is well positioned to tackle these issues through participatory process whereas China can not.   Even though India’s democratic system can be cumbersome and slow, it is stable, which makes investment less risky than in an opaque, authoritarian environment.

 

India’s banking and financial institutions are well established and have long been lending on the basis of market-based analysis, which helps explain their more efficient use of capital.

 

Among the other advantages India has is that the common language of Indians is English, which makes it easier for the country to fit into an international business system.

 

China faces shrinking workforce due to its one child policy. China’s working population will peak at 1 billion by 2025 and then shrink steadily and that providing retiring benefits would be a major problem. On the other hand India will have 1.6 billion population -  220 million more than China. Indians with half its population under 25 years means that the country will have no problem paying for elders’ future health care and pension costs.

 

India has grown steadily at an average 6 per cent since the country embraced market economy. Last two years have been eventful with more than 8 per cent of growth. While India has an economy that is growing from the grassroots, China’s economy’s roots are not set from the individual up but from the government down. China’s economy is not demand driven but performance/producers under strict guidance set down by the government. Foreign investors have looked China for term opportunity where political and internal unrest can wipe out gains at one blow. India on the other hand offers long-term possibilities for growth, even though the returns may not be that huge in the short term. 

 

India’s population is just 200 million short of China’s 1.4 billion, nevertheless, India’s medium age is just above 24 years while that of china is into thirties.  

In the last decade, India has emerged next to China in their growth rate. Empowered by engine from IT, and exporting its manpower throughout the world that has increased the credibility of India, and made it an economic powerhouse for the 21st Century; and it has shown that it has all the guts to be in that ceremonious position.

 

 

India is world leader in IT Services and BPO off-sourcing with 65% and 46 %  share of the global pie. The World off-shoring market currently is valued at 0 billion, of which 0 billion will be off-shored by 2010 and India has the potential to capture 50% of it employing up to 8.8 million people.

 

The Indian BPO industry has grown at a mind-boggling 60–70 percent annually, with revenues rising from US5 million in 1999–2000 to more than .4 billion now – China’s was only a fraction of it – 0 million.

 

With huge investments flowing into China and with robust domestic demand, it’s a paradox of plenty as far as China is concerned. The higher you go, the harder you will fall. Policy makers in China seem to understand this well as they have taken deliberate measures to slowdown the surging economy.

India is better placed than China for future growth. Its capital markets operate with greater efficiency. They are also much more transparent. Companies can raise the money they need. India’s legal system, while too slow, is much more advanced and is able to settle sophisticated and complex cases. Its banking system has relatively few nonperforming assets.

India’s democracy and news media are alive and vital, which provides a safety valve for the incoherent changes that modern economic growth brings. India has religious riots, secessionist movements, urban squalor and bitter rural poverty. But the voters know they can throw the rascals out, and they regularly do.

For decades China has benefited from the wealth and the investment potential of its Diaspora and the economic energy of Hong Kong and Taiwan. After years of ignoring its Diaspora, India is now welcoming them back – and they have much more “intellectual capital” to offer than China’s. The remittance inflow from overseas Indians during 2005 was more than 21 billion dollar, much more than Chinese Diaspora has remitted.

 

India seems all set to outperform China in the next 20 years. But, hopefully, the biggest beneficiary of the rise of India will be China itself. It will be forced to examine the imperfections of its own economic model and to abandon its sense of complacency acquired in the 1990s. China was years ahead of India in economic liberalisation. Today it lags behind in critical aspects, such as reform that would permit more foreign investment and domestic private entry in the financial sector. 

In the long run, India will overtake China in economic growth owing to home-grown entrepreneurship, stronger infrastructure to support private enterprise and companies which compete internationally with global firms, a media report has claimed.

The real issue is not where China and India are today but where they will be tomorrow. The answer will be determined in large measure by how well both countries utilize their resources, and on this score, India seems to be doing a better job.

 

The danger for both China and India, however is that the race to the top will create such huge income disparities in both countries which will lead to revolution in China and riots in India.  It is not surprising that China is taking active measures to channel some of its huge financial reserves into the rural areas.  India too is addressing the issue aggressively.

 

India has also developed much stronger infrastructure to support private enterprise. Its capital markets operate with greater efficiency and transparency. Its legal system, while not without substantial flaws, is considerably more advanced.

 

Indian policy makers have an opportunity to change India, fortune of its 1.2 billion people. Both India and China are cruising through eight lane super highways. The Chine superhighways are paved well with side walks but it has lots of political bumps and pot holes ahead of it whereas the road for India looks smooth but with several challenges. With foundations of reforms in place and the dreams of all Indians to beat all in this race, I am convinced that India will eventually overtake China.   

 

The international system is changing towards an age where human and trade union rights will be an important currency of power. Military and economic might alone would not do. Although China has 450 million people in its globalize economy compared to India’s 250 million, the participation of Chinese workers in the economic progress is limited only to “production” without any rights. Chinese workers are denied their basic trade union rights. China does not respect internationally recognized core labour standards. 

 

India finds its strength in democracy whereas China believes in imposing laws. In fact, to those who doubt the universal application of democracy and its economic virtues, I say that in spite of India’s sizeable challenges it faces, it is a remarkable example of what democracy can achieve. Lastly, in my view one of the important reasons for India having an edge over China is the lack of democracy and one party rule in China.   

 

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Networks turn to sprawling big-budget miniseries to lure in fickle viewers
TORONTO – With their epic storylines, expansive casts and exploding production budgets, there’s nothing mini about the modern TV miniseries.
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Calories, nutritional information required by new law
Section 4205 of the federal health-care-reform law contains provisions requiring certain retail food establishments selling ready-to-eat items to make calorie and other nutrition information available at the point of purchase.
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Five Ideas to Start a Home Based Business

Starting a home based business is an exciting venture. It can be liberating to run an online business. If not at first, it can eventually replace your day job as your main source of income. Working from home eliminates the hassles of dealing with office politics, being passed over for promotion or worrying about company downsizing. Running a home based business puts your future in your hands. You control how much you work and how much income you earn. Your profit is a direct result of your efforts. Here are five ideas for starting a home based business.

1. Do your research. Work at home opportunities flood the Internet. It is important to understand how each online business works. You need to be able to quickly determine if a job is scam or a legitimate work from home opportunity. The only way to know what is out there or to see the kind of competition your home based business has is to do some research. A little research done before starting a business can save a lot of time and money down the road. You can avoid scams altogether by creating your own work from home opportunity. Starting an online home based business from scratch takes a little more work, but it ensures that you will have a legitimate business based on your personal interests and experience.

2. Find a niche. The best way to ensure a successful home based business is to find a lucrative niche that suits you. Make a list of your interests and work experiences. Research the items on your list for profitability and to see if there is a hole in the market that you can fill. Keep in mind that if you sell a product that earns less than a dollar profit per piece you will have to sell thousands of them to make a decent living working from home. It is more profitable to include some higher priced items or services.

3. Set it up. Another way to start a successful home based business is to set it up right from the beginning. Using a system to automate many of the tasks of an online home based business makes it less time consuming, less frustrating and more profitable. An autoresponder is one example of making things easier. Set up an email autoresponder to welcome new customers, tell potential customers about new products or sale items and follow up with them to make sure they are happy with their purchase.

4. Be prepared. Customers look for quality products and services. They also look for a website that is easy to use and good customer service. Never show your customers that you are a new business. It is better to be prepared before making your online business available to customers. Work out any glitches, perfect your site and make sure the checkout process works before going live and advertising your business.

5. Advertise your online business. You can not sell a product if no one knows your business exits. Internet marketing allows you to spread the word about your products and services to people who are already interested in your niche. It includes a variety of advertising concepts. Internet marketing includes email campaigns, pay per click ads, posting in forums related to your niche topic, article marketing and more. Combine several or all of these marketing strategies to increase the flow of targeted traffic to your website and increase your bottom line.

Dominic Boykin is the owner of Work from Home Based Business and reviews popular home business ideas and opportunities. Dominic’s favorite home business is the Plug-In Profit Site where you can get your own home business website setup to earn multiple streams of income within 24 hours. Click Start Home Based Business to learn how to start your own home based business today!

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Real Estate Industry

1. Overview

In India, the real estate industry is fast becoming a mature industry due to increasing demand from both residential and commercial customers and the entry of corporate players. The Indian real estate industry is expected to touch USD 50 billion by 2010 which is around 5% of India’s GDP. The real estate market can be divided into the following categories

 

Residential space

 

Commercial office space

 

Retail space

 

Hospitality space

 

 

Among these, residential real estate is the biggest one having almost 80% of the real estate market.

2. Sub Segments

2.1           Residential Space

Increasing urbanization and decreasing average household size have increased  demand for the residential space. Also the increase in the number of rich households, working people and a maturing home financing market have resulted in a growth of around 18% CAGR for residential real estate. Though the market is still very much fragmented and controlled by small regional players, a few regional players are trying to expand their pan-India presence. The market is further sub-divided into low cost, mid market and premium housing categories depending on the price and facilities available in those dwelling units.

2.2           Commercial Office Space

Rapid growth of services, particularly that of IT/ ITES industry, has fuelled the demand for commercial space. Though the market is dominated by large national players, some  regional players are also trying to catch up with the market. Also more and more real estate players are moving away from upfront sales model to lease and maintenance model to create more flexibility in the business. This sector is growing at a CAGR of 20% to 22%.

2.3           Retail Space

With the rapid growth of Indian retail industry, the demand for retail space also has increased a lot. The possibilities of allowing foreign direct investment in retail will also accelerate the demand for retail space.

 

2.4           Hospitality Space

The tourism sector is growing very rapidly in India due to increasing demand for medical tourism, emergence of India as a meeting/ exhibition destination, international events like commonwealth games, government initiative like “Incredible India” campaign etc. Though the major corporate players are present in the high end sector, the budget hotel market is still dominated by small players particularly in the tier-II and tier-III cities.

3. Regulation

To accelerate the growth of real estate industry and reduce the shortage of housing units as well as quality commercial units, the  government has allowed FDI in real estate with some conditions. For FDI, a minimum of 10 hectares should be developed for serving housing plot or minimum 50,000 sq ft has to be developed for construction-development project. Also 50% of the project should be completed within 5 years from the date of statutory clearances.

There is also a minimum capitalization requirement for FDI. For wholly owned subsidiaries it is USD 10 million and for joint ventures with Indian partner, it is USD 5 million. The funds should be invested within six months of commencement of business. To avoid speculation, there is a lock-in period of three years from the date of completion of minimum capitalization and within this period, the original investment cannot be repatriated.

 

4. Challenges

One of the biggest challenges in the real estate industry is the lack of a clear tile for a good number of properties in India. Also varying tastes of population across various geographies, difficulties in mass land acquisition in new areas, absence of proper business infrastructure to market projects in new locations, a huge difference in local laws in terms of land acquisition and construction and several approvals needed from local authorities at various stages of construction have prevented the real estate players from expanding their operations across India.

Another big challenge is the heavy fluctuation in the price of raw material used for construction. In most of the cases, the booking starts before construction which means the revenue is pre-determined and the realization of the revenue is staggered across the period of construction. So the adverse price changes in the cost of raw materials like cement, steel, bricks, wood, sand, gravel, paint etc. affect the bottom line of the developers

Though the housing finance market is mature enough in India, the cost of financing is still high due to high interest rate. Tax benefits on home loan is one of the driving factors in fuelling the demand for residential units and the removal of these benefits will adversely affect the real estate business.

Some state governments have still not amended the Urban Land Ceiling Regulation Act which prevents big corporate houses from purchasing big pieces of land for real estate development. The rental law for residential properties in some states is also not favourable to the owner which discourages people from purchasing  residential property for any use other than personal use.

Debipriya Sengupta Das writes on behalf of TopCoaching.com. www.topcoaching.com is a portal for Online Coaching for career in real estate and finance courses


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PayPal tips online retail surge in 2012
Australia’s online retail industry is set to grow 40 per cent by 2012, PayPal Australia says.
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2010 race for governor is about jobs
At 13.6 percent, Michigan’s unemployment rate is no longer the highest in the country. The state was passed in the latest monthly report by Nevada.
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City commission idles ‘anti-idling’ car policy
A new “anti-idling” rule, along with other changes to the city’s vehicle use policy, were brought before city commissioners at their July 6 meeting but was set aside for revisions due to one commissioner’s complaints.
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