Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
Labour force availability (as of 2006) map. Nepal has a labour force of 16.8 million workers, the 37th largest in the world as of 2017. [1] Although agriculture makes up only about 28 per cent of Nepal's GDP, it employs more than two-thirds of the workforce. [2]
Nepal Communist Party: 16 March 2018: 20 November 2019: Minister of Labour, Employment and Social Security 6 Rameshwor Raya Yadav [12] Nepal Communist Party: 20 November 2019: 25 December 2020 7 Gauri Shankar Chaudhary: Nepal Communist Party: 25 December 2020: 20 May 2021 8 Bimal Prasad Shrivastav: People's Socialist Party, Nepal: 4 June 2021: ...
The Public Service Commission (Nepali: लोक सेवा आयोग) of Nepal was established on 15 June 1951. It is the main constitutional body involved in selecting meritorious candidates required by Government of Nepal for Civil Service Vacancy. [1] It is regarded as one of the most credible modes of recruitment by Nepalis.
The Government of Nepal (Nepali: नेपाल सरकार) is the federal executive authority of Nepal. Prior to the abolition of the Nepalese monarchy in 2006, it was officially known as His Majesty's Government. The head of state is the president and the prime minister holds the position of the head of executive.
Nepal Red Cross Society; Nepal Agricultural Research Council (NARC) Nepal Telecom; National Information Technology Center (NITC) Nepal Academy of Tourism and Hotel Management; Nepal Airlines Corporation; Nepal Academy of Science and Technology (NAST) Nepal Health Research Council; Nepal Medical Council; Nepal Standards and Metrology Department
The Fourth Oli Cabinet is the current Government of Nepal, formed on 15 July 2024 after KP Sharma Oli was sworn in as the new Prime Minister of Nepal by president Ram Chandra Poudel. [ 1 ] [ 2 ] Oli was appointed prime minister as per Article 76(2) of the constitution , following the ouster of the government of Pushpa Kamal Dahal after a failed ...
The economy of Nepal is a developing category and is largely dependent on agriculture and remittances. [6] Until the mid-20th century Nepal was an isolated pre-industrial society, which entered the modern era in 1951 without schools, hospitals, roads, telecommunications , electric power, industry, or civil service.
The government continually failed to use all committed foreign aid, however, probably as a result of inefficiency. In the Rs26.6 billion budget presented in July 1991, approximately Rs11.8 billion, or 44.4 percent of the budget, was expected to be derived from foreign loans or grants.