Refine
Document Type
- Book chapter (21)
- Journal article (4)
- Book (3)
- Conference proceeding (3)
- Working Paper (2)
- Anthology (1)
- Journal (1)
Is part of the Bibliography
- yes (35)
Institute
- ESB Business School (35) (remove)
Publisher
- Hochschule Reutlingen (35) (remove)
In recent years Indonesia has been confronted with an excessive generation of municipal solid waste (MSW), predominantly present in the form of organic refuse. While moving towards integrated solid waste management (ISWM) is an important strategy used to control its generation, it is also now recognized that economic approaches need to be promoted as well in order to tackle the problem concertedly. In this case study, empirical approaches are developed to understand how market instruments could be introduced into environmental services and how to apply co-benefit approach in a green economy paradigm for Indonesia. We investigate the feasibility of introducing market instruments in Indonesia by appliying local co-benefit initiatives adapted from German experiences in integrating market instruments into MSW management practices. Currently co-benefit activities are undertaken in the Sukunan village (Yogjakarta) to promote waste composting using market incentives in the framework of community-based solid waste management (CBSWM). This scheme aims at reducing MSW generation at its source and mobilizing people to be involved in waste separation (organic and non-organic) at household levels. As a result, about 200,000 t of CO2 emissions could be successfully reduced annually. By integrating market instruments into waste management practices, the result of our studies sugggests that Indonesia could make positive changes to its environmental policy and regulation of MSW at local levels. The country's policymakers have played important roles in promoting the effectiveness of urban development with co-benefits approaches to facilitate its transition towards a green eccnomy.
Die KI trägt schon heute wesentlich mit zu unserem Wohlstand bei und wird dies in Zukunft immer mehr tun. Aber sie treibt wie alle technologischen Erfindungen seit der Dampfmaschine das Wirtschaftswachstum weiter an. Weil die Grenzen des Wachstums auf dem Planeten Erde aber längst überschritten sind, müssen wir hier gegensteuern. Dieses Steuern kann und soll nicht durch ein Verbot der Forschung erfolgen. Denn der Wissensdrang von uns Menschen ist gut und wichtig. Verbote sind wichtig zum Beispiel beim Einsatz von autonomen Kampfrobotern, aber nicht bei einzelnen Produkten und Dienstleistungen.
Das Mittel der Wahl zur Steuerung der Wirtschaft ist das Wirtschaftssystem. Die Wirtschaft hat in erster Linie dem Gemeinwohl zu dienen und nicht dem Kapital oder dem Geld. Darin sind sich die großen Wirtschaftspioniere Adam Smith, John Maynard Keynes und Karl Marx einig. Gefragt ist daher eine Reform von Wirtschafts- und Finanzsystem.
This is the first copy of JIEBS. The papers it presents are the result of a call for papers CEBS made in 2011. We actually received far more interesting papers and research reports than expected.They all passed a double blind review and the papers naturally are the original work of the named authors. The choice we finally made was also influenced by the topic of the CEBS annual conference 2011, namely the influence of infrastructure and skilled labour on Indo-European Business. The papers analyse structure and explain many issues related to this, they raise questions and point towards areas for further research and they form the nucleus of this new and currently only scientific platform for Indo-European business studies.
India’s growth: perspectives for Indo-European business “Skilled labour in India: bridging the gap”
(2011)
The following paper is based on a survey conducted for ESB Business School and will show how German companies perceive India’s labour market. Besides existing geographical and sectoral gaps we will reveal gaps in the required qualification profile. Thinking merely of hard qualification factors like education levels, skills etc., though, would be short-sighted. Often cited intercultural qualifications also play an important role.
What can be done? What should be done to bridge these gaps? These will be the leading questions of this chapter. We will discuss some solutions – not forgetting that the problems German companies face are complex and knowing there is no ideal way. However, we will see that some of the most urgent problems can be solved or reduced by Indo-European or Indo-German co operation models in the field of vocational training and institutions of higher education.
Since 2000, Indian special economic zones were established with the intention to attract foreign direct investment. We present a first empirical assessment with new data from 1980 to 2010 and evaluate the outcome after 10 years. In general, our empirical results confirm that special economic zones attract FDI statistical significantly. Another finding of the study is that open economies with stable inflation attract more FDI than small and closed economies.