Women and Children
F. Maddison has written: 'Participation as a force in British industry'
porter's five force strategy for Indian pharmaceutical industry?
The industry's labor force numbered 168,635 in 2001, including 131,522 production workers. Industry payroll was almost $6 billion, and total industry shipments were valued at $40.9 billion.
The Royal Air Force (RAF).
Pretty sure it was either cotton or tobacco. It was cotton. Tobacco was a luxury item, that one could do without. Cotton, referred to as "king cotton," was a necessity for something much more vital--clothes. More than that, the South was more or less the sole exporter for the entire planet. However, the international cotton demand was satisfied, during the war, by plantations in the relatively new British colonies in India, so whole harvests of cotton went to waste.
General Douglas Haig was in charge of the British force on the Somme in World War I.
The cotton textile industry in Mumbai grew because of its strategic location on the western coast of India, which allowed for easy transportation of cotton from the hinterlands to the city. Additionally, Mumbai had a skilled labor force, access to ports for exporting finished products, and availability of capital for investment in machinery and infrastructure. These factors combined to make Mumbai a hub for cotton textile manufacturing.
a police force in britain duh
a large labor force
Large Labor Force.
The expansion of cotton plantation.
a large labor force