Examples of infrastructure in the following topics:
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- The natural resources, infrastructure, and technology of a nation will determine the ease and viability of entering that country's market.
- Infrastructure are basic physical and organizational structures needed for the operation of a society or enterprise, or the services and facilities necessary for an economy to function.
- A country's infrastructure will help determine the ease of doing business within that nation.
- Poor road infrastructure such as this can create difficulties for businesses that rely on road transportation.
- Outline the impact natural resources, infrastructure and technology has on new markets within the global marketing environment
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- In countries such as the United States, with well-developed industries, residents have consistent access to electricity, roads, and other infrastructure that improves their standard of living.
- Factors used to measure a country's development can include: per capita income, level of industrialization, extent of infrastructure, life expectancy, literacy rate, and general standard of living.
- HDI considers these factors, but also accounts for how income is invested in healthcare, education, and other infrastructure.
- Human Development Index (HDI) is a measure of how much of a nation's wealth is invested into local services such as education and infrastructure.
- Because nations have varying levels of wealth, income, and investment in infrastructure, individual populations experience inequality.
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- Economics as a provisioning problem includes the allocation problem but includes and analysis of the social infrastructure, knowledge and ideological framework in which economic behavior occurs.
- Each individual is influenced by the infrastructure of society.
- Roads, books, tools, telephones, the Internet, the legal system, property rights, double entry bookkeeping, dams, energy plants and distribution systems are examples elements of the infrastructure which facilitates individual effort.
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- The infrastructure buyer - This role influences the buying decision at the execution level.
- If a product poses challenges at the installation phase, then the infrastructure buyer and/or DMU steps in to decide whether the return on investment (ROI) is worth the time and money required to set up the infrastructure.
- The infrastructure buyer is typically someone in the IT department.
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- HDI considers a country's per capita gross domestic product (GDP), per capita income, rate of literacy, life expectancy, basic infrastructure, and other factors affecting standard of living to determine how developed a country is.
- Because of such critiques, some scholars use the term less-developed country to describe the present circumstances in countries with relatively small economies and little infrastructure .
- According to research from the World Bank, one challenge facing industrializing nations is how to successfully export products when they do not have pre-existing infrastructures to facilitiate international trade.
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- This topic is covered in detail in the section called "Writing It All Down" in and the chapter Social and Political Infrastructure, but the basic elements of developer guidelines are:
- (See the section called "Forkability" in the chapter Social and Political Infrastructure for why dictatorship in open source projects doesn't have the same implications as dictatorship in other areas of life.)
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- The inexorable rise of zero-cost canned hosting sites (see the section called "Canned Hosting" in Technical Infrastructure) for open source projects has meant that it is increasingly unnecessary for projects to get corporate support for basic project-hosting infrastructure.
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- Since the 2003 Iraq War, the international community has attempted to work with Iraqis to rebuild Iraq's infrastructure.
- In the wake of the Iraq War in 2003, there have been numerous international efforts to rebuild the infrastructure of Iraq, many of which necessitate foreign investment.
- During the 1970s, Iraq made extensive investments in the water sector and other infrastructure using the proceeds of oil revenue.
- Reconstruction efforts loomed for a nation with a severely degraded infrastructure.
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- The ‘change is only and always an expense' argument continues with the supposition that the infrastructure for necessary changes rarely exists and that significant amounts of capital will therefore be required to introduce sustainable activity on a large scale.
- Nevertheless, the financial (and other) benefits of the light bulb outweighed the cost of the infrastructure needed to support it so the necessary capital and investment was eventually – and willingly – putforward.
- A good strategy, therefore, is for a nation to not only continue developing higher standards and better infrastructure, but also to devise a strategy to apply its new and tougher standards consistently and quickly.
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- Secondary objectives were to provide temporary relief programs for those most impacted by the recession and invest in infrastructure, education, health, and renewable energy .
- The Act included direct spending in infrastructure, education, health, and energy, federal tax incentives, and expansion of unemployment benefits and other social welfare provisions.
- However, a sizable number of these projects, many of which pertained to infrastructure, took longer to implement than they had expected by most.
- Tax incentives — includes $15 B for Infrastructure and Science, $61 B for Protecting the Vulnerable, $25 B for Education and Training and $22 B for Energy, so total funds are $126 B for Infrastructure and Science, $142 B for Protecting the Vulnerable, $78 B for Education and Training, and $65 B for Energy.State and Local Fiscal Relief — Prevents state and local cuts to health and education programs and state and local tax increases.