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2773 items in total found

Working Papers | 1997

Comparative Financial Systems: Financial Liberalisation, The Black Market Exchange Rate and Demand for Money in South Korea, Taiwan and Thailand

Chotigeat Tosporn and Pandey I M

Central to the unbridled economic success of the Pacific-Rim countries is their financial liberalisation from 1981 to 1990, their ratio of M2/GDP (measure of the depth of the financial sector) is as large as the M2/GDP of the OECD economies. The Pacific-Rim countries have also been moving --albeit at different speed-- to liberalise their equity and bond markets and integrate them more closely into international financial markets. This paper first summarises the most essential aspects of the financial liberalisation and innovation process in Thailand, Taiwan and South Korea. Second, it tests at various stages of financial liberalisation for an appropriate overall functional form of demand for money for each country, using the Box-Cox extended auto-regressive model with data from January 1970 through June 1989. Black market exchange rate is used in the model as a key variable, instead of a conventional variable of the official exchange rate. The empirical results confirm that real income, expected inflation and expected inflation and expected depreciation in the black market exchange rate are appropriate scale and opportunity cost variables in the long-run money demand function, especially for South Korea. In addition, depreciation in the black market exchange rate is found to be a negative effect on the demand for money in all cases, but there is no empirical evidence to indicate that the black market exchange rate influences the demand for money differently over the period before and during the on-going financial liberalisation process. Therefore, the Pacific-Rim countries in this study must carefully select an appropriate exchange rate policy to support their economic goals because (a) the black exchange rate is significant to their economies, and (b) neither a decline in the black market nor an alignment of the black market and official exchange rates will occur as long as the financial liberalisation has not reached maturity and/or exchange rate control still exists.

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Working Papers | 1997

Modelling a Vegetable and Fruit Market to Aid Modernisation

Girja Sharan and T. Madhavan

We present in this paper, an operational study of CJ Patel Wholesale Fruit and Vegetable Market of Ahmedabad city using simulation. This market was built in the year 1996 in order to reduce congestion in another older market. Viewed as a dynamic queuing system, simulations suggest that even though the buildings are designed to last a lot longer, utility of this complex as a market place will diminish considerably in just 10 to 15 years. So much so that by the year 2010 A.D., it may become necessary to move out yet again. Such an eventuality can be warded off, if loading, unloading and other handling systems are modernised and made speedier. A more general conclusion is that design procedures for such markets in future need to recognize these as dynamic queuing systems and not just an assembly of buildings and road.

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Working Papers | 1997

Analysing Technology Strategies: Some Issues

Rakesh Basant

A firm's technology strategy is influenced by the 'technology regime' in which it operates. The regime is broadly defined by a combination of variables capturing industrial structure, nature of technical knowledge and the policy environment. Together, these variables determine the opportunity and appropriability conditions faced by a firm in a well defined industry. Given these broad relationships, firms' technology strategies may differ across industry groups. In addition, differences in technology strategies within an industry group may be induced by some form specific characteristics like size, nature and level of diversification, technological and other capabilities. Analyses of strategy using the modified the Strucutre-Conduct-Performance paradigm at the industry level have been unsatisfactory; industry heterogeneity gives rise to significant differences in the strategies of firms within the same industry. Dissatisfaction with the definition of industries has resulted in the use the concept of strategic groups, which differentiate a group of firms from others within a given industry in terms of their strategic choices. The value of the concept of strategic group lies in its role as a meaningful explanatory variable between the level of the firm and the industry. It should be capable of delineating extant structures and explaining (or predicting) conduct of firms within an industry. The major research problem with the strategic group approach is how to identify the different strategic groups in practice and how to allocate firms within an industry to the different groups which make up the industry's industrial structure. The present paper attempts a selective review of studies pertaining to technology strategy to explore parameters which can be used to define strategic groups within an industry. It is argued that nature of technology, industry and firm characteristics have major implications for theory and action related to the content of technology strategy and for the processes through which it is developed and implemented.

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Working Papers | 1997

Economic Analysis of Industrial Agroforestry: Popular (Poulus Deltoides) in Uttar Pradesh (India)

Jain S K

To meet raw material requirements. Wimco.the biggest match industry in India, has been promoting popular based agroforestry thorough agroforestry projects approved by National Bank for Agricultural and Rural Development (NABARD) in the northern region of India since 1984. This study aims at evaluating the performance of polular based agroforestry in terms of income, employment and environmental impact. Popular based agroforestry is economically viable and relatively more profitable in comparison to many of the crop rotations followed in the study are. Popular plantations with intercrops are more remunerative in a plantation of seven years instead of eight years. This land use system is capable of providing employment opportunities on farms and the preserving ecological system as well. The cost charged by Wimco for technical advice, however, reduces the income from poplar plantation substantially. With farmers gaining experiences, farmers can expect high dividends in subsequent rotations.

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Working Papers | 1997

Econometric Modelling of the Indian Cotton Sector: Disaggregate Analysis

Naik Gopal and Jain S K

Keeping in view the magnitude, importance, interlinkages among the variables and the high involvement of a large number of decision makers and the government intervention in Indian cotton sector, this study aims at understanding and quantifying the interrelationship among the important variables of this sector through an econometric simulation model. This model explains interlinkages among cotton farming, spinning and weaving sub-sectors through 27 equations. The estimated model performs satisfactorily in terms of goodness of fit, sign, significance of the coefficients and short-and long-term predictability. Forecasts were made for the period 1992-93 through 2001-2002. The trends indicate that the production of cotton would grow slightly slower growth rate than its consumption. The production of long staple cotton will increase faster than that of medium staple cotton. In the spinning sector, the export of cotton yarn will increase substantially. Therefore, the production of cotton yarn will increase at a higher growth rate than its consumption. The growth rates in the production of medium and coarse count yarn will be almost same. The demand for and production of decentralised fabric will increase at the growth rate of 3.63 per cent. However, the demand for and mill fabric will increase but the export of decentralised fabric will grow faster. The demand, production and price of khadi fabric will remain more or less stagnant. The simulation results of two different policy variables namely, export of cotton and yarn show that the promotion of export of yarn is more beneficial for the Indian cotton industry and raw cotton export does not have any impact on fabric export.

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Working Papers | 1997

Determinants of Total Factor Productivity in Indian Agriculture

Desai B M and Namboodiri N V

Past literature shows that technical change in agriculture is determined by non-price like government expenditure on R&D and infrastructure. But more recent literature also considers relative farm prices that would provide incentives for technical change. This has been reinforced by the present policy in the wake of reforms that reduce protection to trade and industry for advocating its prime role for technical change. This paper therefore develops a more comprehensive framework of price and non-price factors for studying this change. Among the non-price factors it separately considers government investment in R&D, inputs, credit, rural literacy, and marketing and banking infrastructure density in addition to land reforms. Contrary to the official view technical change is influenced more by non-price factors than relative farm prices. Moreover, these prices have deleterious impact on technical change as when they increase farmers consumption also increase with a consequent decline in their investment in acquiring new knowledge which seem to outbid their positive incentive effect. Among the non-price factors government expenditure on agricultural R&D is the single most important factor accounting for as much as 87 per cent of the variation in total factor productivity. And it has a marginal internal rate of return of over 20 per cent.

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Working Papers | 1997

Ethics, Values and Corporate Governance

Venkiteswaran N

In the context of the ongoing debate on corporate governance in India, this paper discusses the importance of ethics and values in corporate governance and underscores their importance in fulfilling the raison detre of the business enterprise, viz. delivering shareholder value. The paper examines the principal dimensions of corporate ethical conduct, particularly actions involving the less obvious conflict of interest problems, reasons for corporate deviance and concludes with a few suggestions to improve corporate ethical standards.

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Working Papers | 1997

International Transfer of Technology to India : Problems, Prospects and Policy Issues

Chaudhari Shekhar

Transborder movement of technology is being increasingly felt in international business. A large proportion of worldwide international transfer of technology (ITT) occurs between industrially advanced countries. But for developing countries ITT is considered critical as it is seen to be an important route for acquiring technological capabilities necessary for industrial development and economic growth. India has had a fairly long history of acquiring technology from abroad. Since the adoption of the New Economic Policy in mid 1991 the government has placed considerable emphasis on ITT with the expectation that it would enhance the international competitiveness of the country's industries through technological upgradation of the country's industries. The policies of the government have undergone changes over the past four decades in response to the overall philosophy of development as well as industry's needs and conditions characterizing the supply of technology. This paper analyses the trends in international technology transfer to the country, discusses the government's policies on technology import in an evolutionary framework and evaluates the technological capabilities of Indian industries. It also presents a picture of the prospects of ITT to India and discusses the major problems and policy issues that need to be addressed by policy makers.

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Working Papers | 1997

Share Equivalent and Equitarian Allocations for Problems of Fair Division

Lahiri Somdeb

In this paper we begin with a given social endowment. A profile of shares (which could very well all be equal), is part of the environment. This is the planner's contribution to the economic environment, as conceived in this paper. First we formulate the concept of an envy free allocation as was done by Schmeidler and Vind [1972]. Then we propose the concept of a share equivalent allocation which is a generalization of the concept of an egalitarian equivalent allocation due to Pazner and Schmeidler [1978]. An allocation is share equivalent if every agent is indifferent between his allocation and what would result if an identical change in entitlement were affected for all the agents. (An agent's entitlement is his share of the social endowment in physical units). If the identical change is a multiple of the social endowment vector, we say that the allocation is naturally share equivalent. We prove the existence of a naturally share equivalent allocation which is also Pareto efficient and prove that such allocations correspond to maximization of the minimum utility over all feasible allocations. For two agent economies we show that naturally share equivalent allocations are envy free and all envy free allocations are share equivalent. In a final section to this paper we introduce the concept of an equitarian allocation (Yound 1993). This is a feasible allocation such that each agent is indifferent between what he/she received and a multiple of his entitlement, where the multiple is common to all the agents. The proof that a Pareto efficient equitarian allocation exists is similar to the proof which established the existence of a Pareto efficient and naturally share equivalent allocation. Hence we omit it. Subsequently, we observe that such allocations are the only ones which maximize the minimum utility over all feasible allocations, where the utility representations are once again suitable constructed. Thus, we manage to generalize an existing notion of economic equity, by incorporating possible asymmetries that may need to arise for the sake of obtaining (final) distributive justice. As observed by Moulin (1995), problems of fair division arise perpetually in managerial contexts. With these results, perhaps a new insight would be gained in resolving such problems.

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Working Papers | 1997

Trends in Sales Promotion Literature

Kureshi Sonal and Vyas Preeta

The objective of this study is to gain an insight into the trends of sales promotion literature published over 25 years. Data from 9 well-known foreign journals has been analyzed to provide a classification of framework, compute the trends and identity the gaps in sales promotion literature. A total of 171 articles is classified and is used for further categorization. The study reveals that a significantly larger number of articles are in the area of planning and evaluation of sales promotion schemes mainly targeted at consumers. Also consumer non-durable category is extensively researched. Most of the articles in the literature predominantly are using survey method of research design. The analysis reveals several lacunaes in the literature. As the available literature does not address all the issues pertaining to various aspects of sales promotion, it is hoped that this study would trigger much felt need for research in this area.

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