Corporations Questions and Answers

Would you please correct my writing contained by English?

Please correct following to read better in business as my aboriginal language is not English.

As our company brings risk paperwork and cost reduction into our key focus, we will continue working on building up the strength of the business principle in writ to keep the soaring level of corporate earn by providing quality customer service thoroughly surrounded by a constructive manner.


Answers: Although our company's principal focus is risk management and cost fall, we continue to avidly work on building up the strength of our business surrounded by order to hang on to a high plane of corporate earnings. This enable us to provide quality customer service thoroughly within a productive and beneficial manner.



This sounds better to me, it seem like a run-on sentence, so it needed to be broken up but, you did pretty in good health though
As our company brings risk management and cost tightening as our main focus, we will verbs working to build up the strength of the core business in charge to maintain a elevated level of corporate yield by providing thorough high-quality customer service contained by a constructive manner.

Very minor corrections, it be well written.
Yeah, a few more commas are contained by order.

Read it aloud as you would naturally--to the folks. Where within is a pause, affix a comma. Where there's a complete phrase, use a period. When you see the caboose on a train of thought, break it.

That's right, grain free to use a break. ;-)

Good luck.

What contribution could HR specialists be paid contained by jargon of social responsibility in a business?

Thanks in finance.


Answers: By choosing to employ those downtrodden and excluded ancestors who don't actually do a devout job but construct the "profile" of the company seem impartial and equal in statistical surveys. Single mothers who other need to give up early and arrive postponed because of "childcare issues" that legally can't be discriminated against. Old individuals who are forgetful and lack the drive to succeed. Ethnic minorities who expect unusual religious festival off work, call for to leave the bureau 5 times a day to pray (the modern cigarette break), Disabled people who want an elevator especially fitted into a two-storey building so it nearly bankrupts the small business, etc. Young women who find pregnant within 6 months of starting the unsullied job (usually after extensive/expensive company training) after demand compensated leave and commission share when they get hindmost.
All the usual stuff that a small business employer can't discriminate at at interview to try and safe-guard their business and other employees indemnity!!
I'm sure you get the picture..! ;)
Nothing

What is sez? when it establish in india or why ? and the main role in our economy? how many sez in india ?




Answers: Special economic zone is a particular area inside a state which acts as foreign territory for tariff and trade operations. Govt. provides tax exemption (IT, Excise, customs, sales etc.), subsidised water and electricity etc.

SEZ can be sector specific or multi product sez. It helps in the development of infrastructure of the area around the SEZ, provides employment to ppl, makes the exports more viable. All this will helps the country's products to become mor competitive vis-a-vis providing all round development of region.

It should be noted that if 100 acres are alloted for SEZ, then only 30-35% of area is used for setting up plants. rest of the area is used to provide housing facilities, malls, multiplexes etc.
Also Tax exemption is for specific period say for 10 yrs or so.

The central government has approves 237 SEZs in 19 states (occupying 86,107 hectares).
63 of these SEZs have already been notified.
23 SEZs are operational, 18 in the IT sector.
Ultimately there will be 500 SEZs.
Total amount of land to be acquired across India:150,000 hectares (the area of the national capital region). This land -– predominantly agricultural and typically multi-cropped -- is capable of producing close to 1 million tonnes of foodgrain. If SEZs are seen to be successful in the future and more cultivated land is acquired, they will endanger the country’s food security.
The term SEZ has acquired a multi-headed persona in a very short time. It has ignited passions across the country. There are people who are either against SEZs or with SEZs. Very few, mostly the unaffected and the uninformed, have no opinion about the matter. But, otherwise, it has people sharply divided across regions, professions, languages and political affiliations.

But the time has probably come to redefine the popular meaning of an SEZ. Over time, the term has come to denote a special, designated area that’s exempt from the local tax regime and some economic laws, for attracting foreign investment. SEZs included other designated areas as well, such as free trade zones or even export processing zones. For instance, the Indian government has converted some of the existing EPZs in the country into SEZs – such as Falta in West Bengal, Kandla ands Surat in Gujarat, Santa Cruz in Mumbai, Cochin in Kerala. SEZs are typically owned by the government, or by the private sector or can even be in the joint sector.

But then, as is inevitable with any such a contentious issue, the constituent words forming the term SEZ – special economic zone — seem to have pretty much lost their meaning. It could mean any place with a special economic model. Why does it necessarily have to include tax breaks, land-grab, rehabilitation? The term SEZ is now being used loosely to denote a special meaning, wracked by vested interests, hemmed in by a surfeit of laws and rules and generally rendered dry-as-dust by the raging debate surrounding the concept. In all this heated discussion, there is one form of SEZ that actually seems to be working.

It’s a brand of wildlife tourism that’s being practised by a bunch of committed wildlife enthusiasts. These SEZs are all located largely in the eastern part of the country – Sunderbans in West Bengal, Kaziranga and Manas in Assam, Sikkim and a variety of other places. The model is usually all-inclusive and, apart from the bottom-line issues, the success of these projects is usually measured by the improvement in the living standards of the people living in and around these areas. Let’s take the example of Sunderbans, a region chronicled faithfully by numerous hunters of the past and so magically portrayed by award-winning authors in recent times.

The Sunderbans is a deltaic region, marked by a congregation of small islands floating on brown brackish water that’s neither sea nor river but is both. Most of these islands – characterised by mangrove forests and other dense foliage — have sparse habitation. There is wildlife too, largely overshadowed by the presence of the Royal Bengal Tiger, a majestic but fierce beast threatened to extinction by poachers and forced out of its habitat into human settlements frequently by the changing balance of the region’s delicate bio-diversity. The conflict between man and animal is lived out here every living second. Given the hostile terrain, the forest (firewood, honey) is the only source of livelihood for many human beings. For the tiger, human flesh is often the only choice of nutrition. The race to the bottom, therefore, is violent and inexorable

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