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Working Papers | 1990

Gearing Strategic Public Enterprises for Internationalisation: The Indian Case

Khandwalla P N

In the context of chronic balance of payments problems in most Third World countries, public enterprises (PEs) of the Third World are a major under-utilised source for stepping up exports. In many Third World countries PEs produce an impressive array of goods and services. But their domestic orientation tends to shackle them to domestic rather than global levels of efficiency, enterprise, and customer response. With the help of a successful Indian case of internationalization, and questionnaire date gathered from 119 senior and top level PEs of nearly 50 Indian PEs, it is argues that Third World PEs can be internationalized provided they adopt certain kinds of goals, policies, and practices. Internationalization would result not only in increased foreign exchange earnings, it would also raise the domestic level of efficiency and entrepreneurship of PEs. Several suggestions are made for enabling Indian PEs to get more internationalized.

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Working Papers | 1990

Banking for Rural Transformation: Issues for "90s"

Anil K. Gupta

Banking for rural transformation in nineties will face many challenges that require hard choices. Challenges from demand side include (a) declining profitability and sustainability of agriculture, (b) continued stagnation in rural employment, marginalization of land holdings and thus need for self employment for large rural masses not likely to find productive avenues in far or industrial sector in the near future, (c) rising aspirations of rural disadvantaged people expecting speedy redressal of their historical deprivation, (d) increasing regional imbalances and worsening ecological imbalance in high risk environments triggering in some cases social conflicts and (e) diversification of skills and resource use options requiring flexible eco-specific institutional response. On supply side, the key complexities are : (a) increasing budget deficit and reduced ability of state to subsidise the growth and distribution oriented policies, (b) increasing cost of lending with declining profitability of banking system as a whole, (c) manpower constraints with banks to provide adequate follow up of loans and reduced ability to discriminate between genuine and willful defaulter, (d) weakening of relationship between rural borrowers and bank staff due to very large and wide coverage, and 'lightening of lines of control and weakening of housekeeping', (e) insufficient upgradation of skills of bank officials to deal with group or common property based investments or other means of reducing transaction costs, (f) mismatch between banking technology and work load, (g) lack of suitability of 'standardised organizational design for highly variable environmental needs' etc. We have tried to capture only some of the major trends in the banking and development policies so that pointers for future can be properly identified. The paper is divided into three parts. Part I deals with the major transitions that banking system has experienced. In Part II we list the challenges in agricultural technology system, emerging organizational constraints including the problem of viability, overdues, banking non farm sector and backward regions. Inventory of issues that we have to face in the nineties is given in Part III along with some possible alternatives to overcome the emerging constraints. It is hoped that a wider national debate on these issues will help liberate the banking system from myopic bureaucratic strangleholds and at the same time increase its social accountability. It is also hoped that the unions in the organized sector will rise to the occasion and recognize their historic responsibility towards the rural unorganized sector

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Working Papers | 1990

Correlated Equilibria Under Bounded and Unbounded Rationality

Lahiri Somdeb

In this paper we establish an isomorphism between the set of correlated equilibria of a game on the one hand and the set of ordered pairs of coordination mechanisms and equilibrium decision rules for the same game on the other, in the case of bounded and unbounded rationality. The paper develops a systematic theory establishing an injection from the set of ordered pairs of coordination mechanisms and equilibrium decision rules tot he set of correlated equilibria. The converses follow easily from the methods of the proofs. As an intermediate step, we introduce the concept of a conditionally correlated equilibrium under bounded rationality.

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Working Papers | 1990

Blending Cultural Values, Indigenous Technology and Environment: The Experience of Bhutan *

Anil K. Gupta and Ura Karma

How did an extremely less developed, isolated mountain country succeed in keeping its 64 per cent of the area under forest? How did it succeed in avoiding any case of widespread deprivation and keep ecological balance in a fairly sustainable manner? What problems are it facing in its anxiety to keep its cultural core intact and at the same time improve the level of living of its people. This paper deals with the experience of Bhutan, a tiny land locked Himalayan country which has evolved common property and other collective institutions for resource management. Buddhist ethics plays an important role in blending culture with technology. The paper is divided into seven parts. Part I deals with the culture of conservation and Buddhist ethics. Part II includes a discussion on the framework of institutional emergence in mountain societies. Rules and principles have to be distinguished while dealing with boundaries of moral and ethical responsibilities towards environment. Examples of specific institutions for managing water, grazing land, forest and labour contribution for public and common goods are provided in Part III. The institutional innovations are related to technological innovations. Culture of this innovative ethic is reviewed in Part IV. Specific examples based on water stream driven prayer wheel, architecture and education, alignment of irrigation channel, movement of livestock, prevention of diffusion of animal diseases, generation of cropping system and management of shifting cultivation are covered in this part. Part V includes issues that are emerging in the process of technological transfer given the above context. What are the major risks and how are they perceived by the people is discussed in Part VI. The role played by collective institutions, moral responsibilities and non-monetised reciprocities is particularly highlighted. The policy implication for sustainable development of mountains are listed in Part VII. We believe that bureaucratic or market institutions have failed to conserve natural resources anywhere in the world. The Western conception of resource conservation through complete closure are neither scientifically or socio-ecologically sustainable. The principles of maintaining socio-ecological diversity and complexity through innovative institutions are available in the frame of individuals and groups have to be developed in the changing technological and politico-economic environment. Bhutan's experience can be helpful even for the developed countries.

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Working Papers | 1990

Career Paths of Women in Management in India

Parikh Indira J

This paper examines the entry of women in management and their career paths in the organization. Three phases can be distinctly identified. The first phase appears in the fifties. In this phase women, men and organization related to women in management with social structures and modes of relationship. It was a phase of societal transition where women's entry was related to job, economic autonomy or finding engagement in activities to do justice to the education received. The second phase emerged around mid sixties till early seventies. The women created opportunities for career paths. Career paths implies a task orientation and management of competition, collaboration being evaluated and formal work roles. It also meant management of home and work interface and work acquiring significance in the life space. The third phase is the decade of the eighties. The concept of professionalization meant clarity between social and formal work roles and the systems. It also meant emergence of new choices and actions. This paper then examines organizational context and issues of women in management. These issues revolve around task allocation, authority, evaluation and promotion, relationship with superiors, colleagues and subordinates and the concept of membership the women hold. It then reflects upon the current and future scenario of women in management in the cultural, organizational and role context.

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Working Papers | 1990

A Two-Stage Heuristic for Designing Data Communication Networks

Sridharan R

In this paper, we present a two-stage heuristic which identifies the most economical way to connect the nodes of a date communication network. We formulate this network design problem as a star-star concentrator location problem. To solve this problem, a Lagrangin relaxation procedure is proposed. The first stage of the procedure, namely the solution to the relaxed problem, identifies the optimal locations of the transit nodes. Then a greedy type heuristic, as well as an optimal procedure are used to identify the linkage of these transit nodes to the other nodes. Computational results are provided and the results are also compared with another method.

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Working Papers | 1990

Trade Union Praxis -4 Modalities of the Alienation of the Working Class

Joseph Jerome

The praxis of work organizations is linked inextricably with the politicoeconomic context of the larger society in which the organization is located. The organizational structures and processes given the relations of production constitute the alienation of activity whether it is a capitalist, socialist or a mixed economy. It is within the above framework that this paper tries to examine the implication of the alienation of activity for the alienation of labour. The paper will also examine whether the modalities of alienation vary depending upon the profile of the socio-economic formation within which alienation is experienced.

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Working Papers | 1990

Diffusion of Improved Chula Technology: Strategies and Policies

Moulik T K and Mehta Swati

The National Project on Improved Chulhas has been taken up by the Department of Non-Conventional Energy Sources with a view to reducing deforestation and meeting the cooking energy crisis particularly in the rural areas. The Project is designed as a programme for women for mitigating their drudgery and health hazards and also saving precious fuel in the bargain. The project also provides local employment opportunities for the persons who will be involved in the construction and maintenance of the chulha. India is know for unity in diversity. The diversity exists in every walk of life, right from cultural habits to languages. 'Food habits' are no exception. We find differences in tastes, foods, cooking habits etc. In this context, it is necessary to have different chulhas according to different needs. Various design of chulhas have been approved by the DNES having thermal efficiency above 20%. Under the project, which has a multi-model and multi-agency approach, several models of improved chulhas, both fixed and portable type, which have been approved by the DNES, are being demonstrated and installed all over the country through the Nodal agencies/Departments identified by the State Governments. The improved chulha programme has established itself as a symbol of scientific and technological development reaching even the poorest household in the country.

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Working Papers | 1990

Cooperatives and Rationalisation of Indian Agriculture

Gupta V K and Gajanana T M

Indian economy is still predominantly agrarian and over 70 per cent of the workforce is still engaged in agriculture. Small and marginal farmers predominate the agricultural scenario in India. However, relative neglect of agriculture in the recent past has resulted in its dwindling share in net national product (NDP). This decline has been the result of declining productivity of agricultural inputs. Investment in agriculture (as is evident from gross capital fomation (GCF) in agriculture) has also declined considerable during the 80s. Added to this is the adverse terms of trade and the growing unemployment in agriculture. Further, share of agriculture in total export earnings has also been going down. However, production and productivity requirements are going to be of a high order by 2000 A.D. In such a deterirating situation, rationalization of Indian agriculture becomes very important. An attempt is made in this paper to examine as to how cooperatives can arrest this trend and bring prosperity to farmers besides accelerating the pace of economic development.

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Working Papers | 1990

Trade Union Praxis -6 Role of Trade Unions in Society

Joseph Jerome

This paper re-examines the role of trade unions in society utilizing the framework of the praxis of alienation. The concepts of "fundamental" alienation and "peripheral" alienation help in clarifying the praxis of trade unionism.

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