Introduction The introduction shall include:◦justification of the novelty and relevance of the research,◦formulation of the problem, subject matter, objective, tasks,◦ chosen research methods,◦structure of the work,◦ a brief identification of the difficulties and limitations of the researchthat the student encountered while writing the work. Avoid buzzwords or abstract statements, e.g. The relevance of finance is obvious. Nowadays finance get a very important role Instead:◦ Give statistics.◦ Give facts.◦ Rely on and reveal previous researches, e.g.This analysis has been required since 1997 if the project is to receive funding from the European Union, which is why the regulations prepared by theEuropean Commission are focused only on public projects (European Commission, 2008). However, not only the European Commission delved intothe cost-benefit analysis, but it was also examined by Boardman, Greenberg, Vining, Weimer (2018), who also identified the cost-benefit analysismore for social projects, but the KNA proposed by them can be integrated in non-social projects as well. Another author – McCleskey (2010)described KNA in general, without distinguishing whether the project is carried out in the private sector or in the public sector. Methodology ◦ This part describes the empirical research methods that will be used toconduct the research, based on the academic literature.◦ The objective of the research shall be formulated, the researchmethodology shall be developed, hypotheses or research questionsshall be formulated, the studied variables shall be named, the formulafor calculating the relationships between variables shall be presented,and the reliability of the research shall be justified.
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