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Table 2 Distribution of innovative SMEs by industry and size class Size class

in THE FRUIT FLIES OF INNOVATION: A TAXONOMY OF INNOVATIVE SMALL FIRMS
by Jeroen P. J. De Jong, Orietta Marsili 2005
"... In PAGE 6: ... Another 383 firms did not implement any innovation recently, while 14 firms were discarded because of incomplete answers. Table2 shows how the innovative firms are distributed according to their sector of activity and size class. Of the 1,234 innovative firms, 776 firms are micro- firms, with less than 10 employees (63 per cent).... In PAGE 6: ... Yet, our sample gives a much larger representation than other innovation surveys (the CIS excludes firms below the threshold of 10 employees). --- Insert Table2 about here --- ... ..."

Table I Definition of SMEs in Malaysia

in Dr. Syed Shah Alam is a Senior Lecturer in the Faculty of Business Management at
by unknown authors

Table 1: The participating SMEs in the study.

in Size Does Matter - SMEs special barriers in adopting e-business
by Carina Ihlström, Malin Nilsson

Table 1: Characteristics of the respondent SMEs

in Requirements for the Integration of UE Methods in SE Processes from the Perspective of Small and Medium-sized Enterprises (SMEs)
by Daniel Kerkow, Karin Schmidt, Frank Wiebelt
"... In PAGE 5: ... Often standard solutions were developed and customised. Table1 shows an ... ..."

Table II: Criteria of the SMEs in the EU

in Patrik Paetau Object-Oriented Reuse – On The Benefits and Problems Object-Oriented Software Reuse – On The Benefits and Problems
by Patrik Paetau

Table 22: Sector of activity Variable 1993 1999

in Wages and Productivity in Mexican Manufacturing
by Gladys Lopez-Acevedo, Gladys López-acevedo (lcspe, Col San, José Insurgentes
"... In PAGE 23: ... Sectors Industry-specific factors were measured by including dummy variables for each of the nine major manufacturing sectors: (1) food, beverages, and tobacco; (2) textiles, clothing, and leather; (3) wood and wood products; (4) paper and paper products; (5) chemicals, oil derivatives, and coal; (6) non-metallic mineral products; (7) basic metal industries; (8) metal products, machinery, and equipment; and (9) other manufacturing industries. Controlling for other firm and individual characteristics, the estimations show that in 1993 employees working in sectors other than the food, beverages, and tobacco sector earned around 10 percent more than them, except for the wood and products and the other manufacturing industries (see Table22 ). However, only basic metal industries showed superior productivity compared to the food sector by 21 percent more.... ..."

Table 4. FDI by sector, 1998 (% of total flows)

in FOREIGN DIRECT INVESTMENT AND REGIONAL DEVELOPMENT:
by unknown authors
"... In PAGE 8: ... Foreign direct investors could find it worthwhile to locate in provinces other than the coastal areas on which they had been concentrating as an easier and less costly base for exports to the rest of the country. Better exploit FDI to import technology As in most Asian countries, and in South-East Asia in particular, foreign investment is heavily concentrated in the manufacturing sector, with over 75%, which is higher than the average for developing countries (67%) and far higher than the world-wide average (44%, see Table4 ). The investment has primarily been channelled into labour-intensive export industries, textiles in particular (Dunning, 1997) and as a result subsidiaries of foreign companies have played a growing role in Chinese exports.... ..."

Table 2: Variations of textile geometries used in the experiments

in ABSTRACT Textiles for Signal Transmission in Wearables
by Tünde Kirstein, Didier Cottet, Janusz Grzyb, Gerhard Tröster
"... In PAGE 2: ...rom thread to thread). At the level of fabrics e.g. the distance between yarns varies ( Table2 ). As textile material has viscoelastic behavior, inner tensions relieve over time and the geometry may change (especially in washing treatments).... ..."

Table 2: Tariff Escalation in Textile and Leather Products

in From The Joint Editor’s Desk
by A. K. Sengupta, Cdr Satish Seth, Dr. Roger, R. Stough, Prof David Arrell, R. A. Sharma, Reena Gupta, Manvi Gupta, Reema Gupta, S. Das, Mino V. T, Kamal Kundra, Rinku Dixit, Manish Gupta
"... In PAGE 41: ...2 per cent in 2003-4) and share of agriculture declined (32 per cent in 1990-91 to 22 per cent in 2003-04) in proportion to the total GDP. However, share of industrial GDP, though improved marginally, has been stagnant around 22 percent during nineties (see Table2 ). During post- crisis period, the growth contributing role of services is substantial.... In PAGE 86: ...06 4.90 Source: CLE, Chennai Table2 illustrates the tariff levels on leather and textile products in a few key country / blocs. The reduction in the tariff rate for these groups of products over the years is well-known, although tariff escalation, i.... In PAGE 114: ... However, FDI inflows in India have shown significant improvement on the onset of twenty-first century. The FDI index (base year 1991) discerns very interesting picture ( Table2 ). For developing countries, the growth of FDI over 1991 is higher than developed countries in nine years out of twelve Table 2.... In PAGE 114: ... The FDI index (base year 1991) discerns very interesting picture (Table 2). For developing countries, the growth of FDI over 1991 is higher than developed countries in nine years out of twelve Table2 . FDI index for various regions/countries and world (Base year 1991 = 100) Year Developed Developing South, East World China India India* countries countries and South East 1991 100.... ..."

Table 1. Description of Textile items characteristics.

in data-mining techniques, for the textile
by Denimal Jean Jacques, Boussu François
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