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Working Papers | 2000

No Mandate for Drastic Change: UB2K

Singh J P

Working Papers | 2000

The Organizations of the Future

Parikh Indira J

The paper “The Organizations of the Future” explores the movement of organizations in India the past to the organization of the future. The last five decades Indian organizations have moved from 1. An ancient civilization of vast richness to contrasting poverty and scarcity to the present of increasing plenty. 2. Idealistic socio-political systems to a self centered, power-centered and greed. 3. Indian corporation movement from manufacturing, production, selling of shabby goods to increasing focus on quality and services. 4. A society with rigid structures to possibilities of freedom. 5. Communities deeply embedded in narrow role definition to give expression to ones own aspirations and 6. Individuals responding to the world with capabilities and competencies. The interplay of the above impacting the masses. The paper examines the Indian corporations transforming given the changes occurring globally. Three critical shifts are highlighted. (1) The individuals fragmentation of home and work space and redefinitions due to net explosion. (2) Women's entry into work and broadening of the role boundaries impacting the relationships. (3) The Concept of life space of men and women andsearch for humanising relationships. The paper identifies the new paradigms of people which the corporations would require at the level of collectivity of employees, systems and the individual.

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Working Papers | 2000

Conclave on Family Business Strategising the Future

Parikh Indira J

The Paper “Conclave on Family Business Strategising the Future” explores the family owned organization where many success stories have been written of fathers, sons and brothers. Today these organizations are at the cross-roads as new paradigms of managing organizations are emerging. The paper explores the first generation entrepreneurs, the second generation inheritors and the third generation successors. The paper then examines the people profile in family owned organization and the interplay of the three generations as well its employee. Both groups have a long history of association and relationships with each other and the organization. The paper examines the growth of family owned organizations, organization culture, organizational issues, managerial issues and the expectations of different constituencies from each other. The organizations are encountering and addressing the issues of professionalism and professional leadership. Finally, the paper raises some questions as to the ownership and management, the new paradigms of leadership the new employees and the direction which the family owned organizations are taking given the transformations occurring both in the internal and external environment of the organizations.

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Working Papers | 2000

Symbols, Themes and Liking: A Study of Advertisements

Kaushal Geetika

Advertisers use various strategies to make an advertisement effective. The use of symbols and themes is one of these strategies. This is a qualitative study aiming to understand whether the presence of some symbols and particular themes in an advertisement affects the liking for that advertisement. 48 subjects were given 20 advertisements to analyze in terms of the symbols present. Themes were then drawn from the symbols mentioned by the subjects. It was concluded that certain themes make an advertisement more likable.

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Working Papers | 2000

Threshold and Median Rank Solutions for Transitive Abstract Games

Lahiri Somdeb

The idea of a function which associates with each set and a binary relation a non-empty subset of the given set has a long history whose exact origin is very difficult to specify and in any case is unknown to the author. In Laslier (1997) can be found a very exhaustive survey of the related theory when binary relations are reflexive, complete and anti-symmetric. In a related paper (Lahiri [200b]) we extend the above set of binary relations to include those which are not necessarily anti-symmetric. Such binary relations which are reflexive and compete are referred to in the literature as abstract games. An ordered pair comprising a non-empty subset of the universal set and an abstract game is referred to as a subgames. A (game) solution is a function which associates to all subgames of a given (nonempty) set of games, a nonempty subset of the set in the subgame. Lucas (1992) has a discussion of abstract games and related solution concepts, particularly in the context of cooperative games. Moulin (1986), is really the rigorous starting point of the axiomatic analysis of game solutions defined on tournaments, i.e. anti-symmetric abstract games. Much of what is discussed in Laslier (1997) and references therein carry through into this framework. In Lahiri (2000c), we obtain necessary and sufficient conditions that an abstract game needs to satisfy so that every subgame has atleast one von Neumann-Morgenstern stable set. In this paper we consider solutions defined on the class of transitive games. A solution is said to be a threshold solution, if for every subgame there exists an alternative such that the solution set for the subgame coincides with the set of feasible alternatives which are no worse than the assigned alternative. Such solutions are closely related to the threshold choice functions of Aizerman and Aleskerov (1995). We provide an axiomatic characterisation of such solutions using three properties. The first property says that if one alternative is strictly superior to another, then given a choice between the two, the inferior alternative is never chosen. The second property is functional acyclicity due to Aizerman and Aleskerov (1995). The third property requires that if two feasible alternatives are indifferent to each other, then either they are both chosen or they are both rejected. In order to make the presentation self contained we also provide a simple proof of an extension theorem due to Suzumura (1983), which is used to prove the above mentioned axiomatic characterization.

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Working Papers | 2000

Economies of Scale and Scope of District Central Co-operative Banks

Namboodiri N V

The main object of this study is to explore the cost relationship of District Central Cooperative Banks (DCCBs). This is examined in terms of economies of scale and cost complementarities of joint production or economies of scope. Deasi and Namboodiri (1996) have very comprehensively examined the viability of cooperative rural financial institutions at the grass root level. But there is hardly any attempt to study the issue of product specific scale and scope economies of DCCBs. Moreover, unlike commercial banks, the behaviour of their cost structure is different because of the nature of their banking operations. The loan portfolios of these banks are in the hands of the members of these institutions, i.e. primary co-operative societies, individuals and other institutions. Similarly they are their major depositors as well as the users of the credit advanced to them. They mainly cater to the local financial deficits and surpluses as agriculture is characterised by such a phenomenon. Yet the viability of these institutions are important not only from the point of view of their own growth but also for the development of cooperative institutions down the stream served by them and agricultural growth in general. An empirical analysis based on a multi-product cost function approach as is done here could reveal the cost structure of these banking institutions and economies of scope for future expansion in their banking operations. The paper is divided into 6 sections. Section 2 briefly reviews the application of various methodologies in examining the cost attributes of multi product banking firms. Section e describes the methodology employed and the data utilized. Section 4 presents a brief description of DCCBs and the composition of their various portfolios. Section 5 presents the results of the estimated equation on scale and scope economies. Section 6 summarises the major findings and their implications.

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Working Papers | 2000

A Consequence of Chernoff and Outcasting and Solutions for Abstract Games

Lahiri Somdeb

The purpose of this paper is to prove by induction the theorem (in Aizerman and Malishevski [1981]) that a choice function which satisfies Chernoffs axiom and Outcasting can always by expressed as the union of the solution sets of a finite number of maximization problems. In this paper we also show that the Slater solution for abstract games (see Slater [1961]) satisfies the Chernoff, Outcasting and Expansion axioms. On the other hand the solution due to Copeland [1951], which has subsequently been axiomatically characterized Henriet [1985], does not satisfy any of these three properties.

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Working Papers | 2000

The Institution of Agricultural Extension in the New Socio-Economic Order: Some Issues and Hypotheses

Punjabi Meeta and Vinod Ahuja

This paper has presented an economist's perspective to the institution of agricultural extension and raised some issues that have recently assumed importance. Focusing on three main components of the extension system – the providers, the people and the price, the paper has argued that there is enough room for priv(ate sector participation in delivery of these services. While the information with strong public good component will need to be supplied by the public sector, there are sufficient opportunities where private sector can play a complementing role. In addition, a number of other innovative models of service delivery have emerged across the world in the recent past which need to be examined in detail. The paper also argues that the practice of delivering pre-packaged generalised prescriptions/recommendations to all categories of farmers has resulted into wasted efforts. The service providers need to understand the clients better in order to minimize losses due to mismatch between demand and supply. For example, the paper points out that small and marginal farmers, landless labourers, women, rural youth and so on need differentiated extension input and a targeted approach would be necessary to maximize the potential of information and knowledge as a factor of production. While acknowledging the question of who should pay for these services and how much is a complex one and more research is needed in Indian context on these issues, the paper also points that there is enough international evidence to build on where the commercialization of agricultural services has helped reorient the extension services to be farmer oriented, to balance demand and supply of information and to provide services in an efficient manner.

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Working Papers | 2000

Axiomatic Characterizations of Some Solutions for Abstract Games

Lahiri Somdeb

An abiding problem in choice theory has been one of characterizing those choice functions which are obtained as a result of some kind of optimization. Specifically, the endeavour has concentrated largely on finding a binary relation (if there be any) whose best elements coincide with observed choices. An adequate survey of this line of research till the mid eighties is available in Moulin [1985]. More recently, the emphasis has focused on binary relations defined on non-empty subsets of a given set, such that the choice function coincides with the best subset corresponding to a feasible set of alternatives. This problem has been provided with a solution in Lahiri [1999], although the idea of binary relations defined on subsets is a concept which owes its analytical origins to Pattanaik and Xu [1990]. The idea of a function which associates with each set and a binary relation a non-empty subset of the given set has a long history whose exact origin is very difficult to specify and in any case is unknown to the author. In Laslier [1997] can be found a very exhaustive survey of the related theory when binary relations are reflexive, complete and anti-symmetric.

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Working Papers | 2000

Abstract Games Admitting Stable Solutions

Lahiri Somdeb

An abiding problem in choice theory has been one of characterizing those choice functions which are obtained as a result of some kind of optimization. Specifically, the endeavour has concentrated largely on finding a binary relation (if there be any) whose best elements coincide with observed choices. An adequate survey of this line of research till the mid eighties is available in Moulin [1985]. The idea of a function which associates with each set and a binary relation a non-empty subset of the given set has a long history whose exact origin is very difficult to specify and in any case is unknown to the author. In Laslier [1997] can be found a very exhaustive survey of the related theory when binary relations are reflexive, complete and anti-symmetric.

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