A Technical Approach of HRM SYSTEM IN BSNL

Authors

  • Satish Kumar

Abstract

We live in a digital age. We all know that the most crucial aspect of human life is communication. An ancient age, we are manipulating business like traditionally. India has many revolutionary changes in business. After indolence India has manipulate slowly business. Because communication is not a broad area. It is not approaching small businessman. Businessman manipulated manually at previous time. After some decade India has change industry. India has adapted likening policy in decade 1990. It is possible to communicate. India has great achieving in industry. We are completely free to business to any other country. India has adapted foreign trade policy in licensing policy 1991. Now these days India has big consumer country. It is the most important roll of communication like as BSNL, TATA TELLY COMMUNICATION, AIRTELL, VODAPHONE etc. are many sources of communication in India. Without communication is not possible for human beings. BSNL is a government communication. It is an innovative source of human beings. We have helped with the coming of globalization and innovative progress, present financial condition has understood unexpected the existing education considers that the human resource development (HRD) observes manipulating occupation approval through different placement to BSNL, Secondary Switching Area (SSA). The goals of the education are to recognize the affiliation and impression in the middle of HRD applies and occupation gratification of staffs with by Job Descriptive Index (JDI) scale. HRD Follows by variables such which are, employment and mixture, corporeal activity and growth, assessment and recompense, concert administration, society people, promotion and transfer, prize successively and well-being degree, member of staff fitness and protection, and trade associations.

References

Abidoye BO, Odusola AF. Climate change and economic growth in Africa: an econometric analysis. Journal of African Economies. 2015 Mar 1;24(2):277-301.

Jain A, O'Sullivan R, Taraz V. Temperature and economic activity: Evidence from India. Journal of Environmental Economics and Policy. 2020 Oct 1;9(4):430-46

Bhattacharya, H. 2019. “Environmental and Socio-Economic Sustainability in India: Evidence fromCO2 Emission and Economic Inequality Relationship.” Journal of Environmental Economics and Policy 9 (1): 57–76. Bruno Lemke, Bruno and TordKjellstrom, Tord. Industrial Health, 50(4):267–278, 2012. doi: 10.2486/indhealth.MS1352. URL http://dx.doi.org/10.2486/indhealth.MS1352.

Burgess, R., O. Deschênes, D. Donaldson, and M. Greenstone. 2017. “Weather, Climate Changeand Death in India.” https://www.michaelgreenstone.com/s/WD_master_170420-1.pdf.

Burke, M., S. M. Hsiang, and E. Miguel. 2015a. “Climate and Conflict.” Annual Review of Economics 7 (1): 577–617.

Carleton, T. A. 2017. “Crop-Damaging Temperatures Increase Suicide Rates in India.” (33): 8746– 8751.

Deschenes O. Temperature, human health, and adaptation: A review of the empirical literature. Energy Economics. 2014 Nov 1;46:606-19.

Deschênes O, Greenstone M. The economic impacts of climate change: evidence from agricultural output and random fluctuations in weather. American economic review. 2007 Mar 1;97(1):354-85.

Diffenbaugh NS, Burke M. Global warming has increased global economic inequality. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences. 2019 May 14;116(20):9808-13.

Gupta, S., Sen, P., & Srinivasan, S. (2014): Evidence from food grain yields. Climate Change Economics, 5(02), 1450001.

Harrington, L. J., D. J. Frame, E. M. Fischer, E. Hawkins, M. Joshi, and C. D. Jones. 2016. “Poorest Countries Experience Earlier Anthropogenic Emergence of Daily Temperature Extremes.” Environmental Research Letters 11 (5): 055007.

Herrera, C., R. Ruben, and G. Dijkstra. 2018. “Climate Variability and Vulnerability to Poverty in Nicaragua.” (3): 324–344.

Hsiang, S. M., M. Burke, and E. Miguel. 2013. “Quantifying the Influence of Climate on Human

Burgess, R., O. Deschênes, D. Donaldson, and M. Greenstone. 2017. “Weather, Climate Changeand Death in India.” https://www.michaelgreenstone.com/s/WD_master_170420-1.pdf.

Burke, M., S. M. Hsiang, and E. Miguel. 2015a. “Climate and Conflict.” Annual Review of Economics 7 (1): 577–617.

Carleton, T. A. 2017. “Crop-Damaging Temperatures Increase Suicide Rates in India.” (33): 8746– 8751.

Diffenbaugh, N. S., and M. Burke. 2019. “Global Warming has Increased Global Economic Inequality.” 201816020–6.

Gupta, S., Sen, P., & Srinivasan, S. (2014): Evidence from food grain yields. Climate Change Economics, 5(02), 1450001.

Harrington, L. J., D. J. Frame, E. M. Fischer, E. Hawkins, M. Joshi, and C. D. Jones. 2016. “Poorest Countries Experience Earlier Anthropogenic Emergence of Daily Temperature Extremes.” Environmental Research Letters 11 (5): 055007.

Herrera, C., R. Ruben, and G. Dijkstra. 2018. “Climate Variability and Vulnerability to Poverty in Nicaragua.” (3): 324–344.

Hsiang, S. M., M. Burke, and E. Miguel. 2013. “Quantifying the Influence of Climate on Human

Published

2024-04-16