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Essay / Research Paper Abstract
A 16 page paper arguing that developing nations should encourage the development of the Internet and the necessary infrastructure within their borders. Whether the government should be directly involved is arguable, but the fact that the economy needs the benefits of the Internet is not. The Internet has become nearly as crucial for business operation as has the telephone, and other nations such as Singapore demonstrate that it is business activity and the resulting economic growth that lifts developing nations' peoples out of abject poverty. Bibliography lists 25 sources.
Page Count:
16 pages (~225 words per page)
File: CC6_KSintDevNation.rtf
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Unformatted sample text from the term paper:
Both Nepal and Singapore suffered from abject poverty in 1959. Singapore had not long been independent from Malaysia, and Nepal still was largely closed to
any foreign visitors. Nepal is more open today, but only grudgingly so. There are still regions of the country that are off limits to foreigners, and there are
remote areas that never have had electricity or running water. Singapore, on the other hand, instituted the first of its five-year plans in
1960. In 35 years time, Singapores classification with the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development (OECD) changed from developing to mature. Before the Asian currency crisis of 1997
occurred, Singapore was slated to surpass Great Britain in per capita income. Of course the Internet was not instrumental in Singapores development, at
least not until the last few years before the economy formally was labeled as being mature. The Internet did help to support the last few years of phenomenal growth
before the advent of the Asian currency, crisis, however. Todays international business environment is that which can be described as being hypercompetitive.
Business moves more quickly than at any other time, and it is essential that remote sites be in contact with each other, with corporate headquarters and with vendors and merchants.
The Internet provides this capability as no other medium can, giving businesses choices of using fully public pages; establishing private intranets; or setting up virtual storefronts from which they
can buy and sell. Globalization of business is a fact of todays corporate world. We can be assured that it will continue,
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