trade show
(noun)
A trade fair
Examples of trade show in the following topics:
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Promotional Objectives
- These items are usually imprinted with a company's name, logo or slogan, and given away at trade shows, conferences, and as part of guerrilla marketing campaigns.
- These items are usually imprinted with a company's name, logo or slogan, and given away at trade shows, conferences, and as part of guerrilla marketing campaigns.
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The Promotion Mix
- Examples of sales promotion include: Coupons, sweepstakes, contests, product samples, rebates, tie-ins, self-liquidating premiums, trade shows, trade-ins, and exhibitions.
- Examples: Coupons, sweepstakes, contests, product samples, rebates, tie-ins, self-liquidating premiums, trade shows, trade-ins, and exhibitions.
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The Promotion Mix
- Examples: Coupons, sweepstakes, contests, product samples, rebates, tie-ins, self-liquidating premiums, trade shows, trade-ins, and exhibitions.
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The General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade (GATT)
- The General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade (GATT) is a multilateral agreement regulating international trade.
- The General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade (GATT) is a multilateral agreement regulating international trade.
- GATT was replaced by the World Trade Organization (WTO) in 1995.
- This map shows membership in the WTO in 2005.
- Outline the history of the creation of the General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade (GATT)
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Organized Labor
- Provision of benefits to members: Early trade unions often provided a range of benefits to insure members against unemployment, ill health, old age, and funeral expenses.
- Industrial action: Trade unions may enforce strikes or resistance to lock outs in furtherance of particular goals.
- Political activity: Trade unions may promote legislation favorable to the interests of their members or workers as a whole.
- In some countries, trade unions may be invited to participate in government hearings about educational or other labor market reforms.
- Economic surveys show that union negotiate salaries that are 15% to 20% higher than nonunion salaries.
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Absolute Advantage and the Balance of Trade
- Absolute advantage and balance of trade are two important aspects of international trade that affect countries and organizations.
- Absolute advantage and balance of trade are two important aspects of international trade that affect countries and organizations .
- A positive balance is known as a trade surplus if it consists of exporting more than is imported; a negative balance is referred to as a trade deficit or, informally, a trade gap.
- The balance of trade is sometimes divided into a goods and a services balance.
- The European Free Trade Agreement has helped countries international trade without worrying about absolute advantage and increases net exports.
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Technological Barriers
- Standards-related trade measures, known in WTO parlance as technical barriers to trade play a critical role in shaping global trade.
- As tariff barriers to industrial and agricultural trade have fallen, standards-related measures of this kind have emerged as a key concern.
- These standards-related trade measures, known in World Trade Organization (WTO) parlance as "technical barriers to trade," play a critical role in shaping the flow of global trade.
- But standards-related measures that are non-transparent, discriminatory, or otherwise unwarranted can act as significant barriers to U.S. trade.
- Most countries are now part of the World Trade Organization.
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Economics
- Trade barriers are government-induced restrictions on international trade, which generally decrease overall economic efficiency.
- Trade barriers are government-induced restrictions on international trade.
- Man-made trade barriers come in several forms, including:
- Most trade barriers work on the same principle–the imposition of some sort of cost on trade that raises the price of the traded products.
- If two or more nations repeatedly use trade barriers against each other, then a trade war results.
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The paradox of skill
- Understanding this difference is the key to the classic distinction between a trade and a profession.
- Both trades and professions require the practice and perfection of significant skills, but a trade is completely defined by its commensurate skill; a profession is not.
- Once, the trades were a source of enormous pride and distinction.
- Through the guild structure, the skills of trades were passed from generation to generation, and the pride of association with quality and integrity maintained.
- He showed me the very worrisome pictures of several partially blocked arteries, and told me that, in his opinion, I had no choice but to have quadruple bypass surgery.
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Balance of Trade
- Suppose the USA imported $1 billion worth of goods and services in 2008 and exported $750 million dollars worth of goods and services, then its trade deficit would be $1 billion minus $750 million, which equals a trade deficit of $250 million.
- A positive balance is known as a "trade surplus," if it consists of exporting more than is imported; a negative balance is referred to as a "trade deficit" or, informally, a "trade gap."
- The balance of trade is sometimes divided into a goods and a services balance.
- Factors that can affect the balance of trade include:
- In addition, the trade balance is likely to differ across the business cycle.