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Working Papers | 1999

Comparative Ranking of Quality of Life in Four Indian Cities

Ingawale Yashada and Prem Pangotra

Cities are often compared with one another using a variety of indicators which measure the physical, economic and social well being of the residents. Such comparisons are used to assign rankings such as "best places to live" or "best places to do business" etc. Frequently these comparisons are based on subjective opinions of individuals relying on minimal facts. Often the rankings cover cities which differ so widely in terms of population, level of economic development and the social and political institutions, that these comparisons are of rather limited use. This study, covering four Indian cities (Ahmedabad, Pune, Hyderbad, Bangalore) is an attempt to develop the conceptual and methodological framework for comparing the quality of life in urban centres.

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Working Papers | 1999

HACCP: A Quest for Quality as a Competitive Strategy for Agribusiness

Satish Y. Deodhar

While consumption of food gives material pleasure and a healthy life, contaminated food can be dangerous to health. Therefore, quality of food is very important. Even from the producers point of view, selling high quality food can be viewed as a competitive strategy to overcome competition. With the recent agreement on Sanitary and Phytosanitary (SPS) measures, World Trade Organization (WTO) has made it mandatory for all member states to follow international food standards guidelines in the sphere of foreign trade. An important element of these guidelines is the compliance with Hazard Analysis and Critical Control Points (HACCP), a management system for food safety. Indian firms will have to adopt these guidelines, else they will have to face non-trade-barriers in the export market. In this paper, I try to give a comprehensive treatment to HACCP and related food safety issues. I present the historical development of the system, give a theoretical background, and describe the actual procedure for implementing HACCP. It is hoped that food processing industry takes a lead in developing HACCP plans for the diverse range of domestic food products. This has a potential not only to improve food quality but also to give Indian firms a competitive advantage over others both in the domestic and export market.

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Working Papers | 1999

Comparison of Vastrapur Cartons with Conventional Wood Carton Based on Laboratory Tests

Sreenivas P, Srivastava S M, Dave Umang, and Girja Sharan

Three different CFB cartons were designed. Prototypes were tested for compression, vibration and drop. The results are presented and discussed.

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Working Papers | 1999

Axiomatic Characterizations of the CEA Solution for Rationing Problems

Lahiri Somdeb

Situations abound in the real world, where aggregate demand for a commodity exceeds aggregate supply. When such situations of excess demand occur, what is required is some kind of rationing. The literature on rationing problems has an interesting origin in the Babylonian Talmud. The purpose of this paper is to characterize axiomatically and analyze the constrained equal award solution for rationing problems.

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Working Papers | 1999

Quasitransitive Rational Choice

Lahiri Somdeb

We consider a finite universal set of alternatives and the set of all feasible sets are simply the set of all non-empty subsets of this universal set. A choice function assigns to each feasible set a non-empty subset of it. An interesting problem in such a context is to explore the possibility of the choice function coinciding with the best elements with respect to a binary relation. This is precisely the problem of rational choice theory. There is a large literature today on this topic. In this paper, we propose three new axioms which are used to fully characterize all choice functions which are rationalized by quasi-transitive, semi-transitive and a third kind of 'almost' transitive (:the property is called intervality in the literature) binary relations. These 'almost' transitive (:but not exactly so!) binary relations, which are now quite popular in the literature (:see Yu [1985]), have the rather interesting feature of revealing intransitive indifference for single valued choice functions. This phenomena has been dealt with rather elegantly by Kim [1987]. Our purpose, is to shed new light on the problem in the absence of the single-valuedness assumption. We, propose axiomatic characterizations which are minimal. Several examples are provided, to show that the assumptions we use are logically independent. While characterizing choice functions which coincide with the best elements with respect to a binary relation satisfying intervality, we invoke a property due to Fishburn [1971],which we refer to in the paper as Fishburn's Intervality Axiom. In Aizerman and Aleskerov [1995], can be found an axiom called Functional Acyclicity, which generalizes Fishburn's Intervality Axiom. It is correctly claimed in Aizerman and Aleskerov[1995], that satisfaction of Functional Acyclicity is equivalent to the existence of two real valued functions, one with domain being the finite universal set and the other with domain being the set of all finite subsets of the universal set, such that given a feasible set, only those alternatives are chosen whose value corresponding to the first function is at-least as much as the value assigned to the feasible set by the second function. Such choice functions are called threshold rationalizable. In a final section to the paper, we provide a correct proof of this result, in view of obvious logical discrepencies in the proof available in Aixerman and Aleskerov [1995]

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Working Papers | 1999

Structural Design for Greenhouse at Bhujodi-2

Pilare Vasant R and Girja Sharan

This write up contains design computations for selection of structural members for a greenhouse to be installed at Bhujodi. Straight wall gable roof form was selected. Wind load estimates made for wind angle 0 degree and 90 degree on air tight structure. Analysis was also carried out for left wall open. Effect of wind on the structure will be more serve when it is blowing at 0 degree. If the greenhouse happens to be open during high wind, the possibility of damage is increased. The steel requirement of structure in the present analysis is slightly high (15 kg/m2). Conventionally it should not exceed 10kg/ m2.

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Working Papers | 1999

Strategy in the Emerging Countries

Chaudhari Shekhar

Many of the developing countries of Asia and Africa with large and increasing populations are currently at low levels of economic development but represent large potential markets for consumer as well as industrial products. Some developing nations in these continents have initiated economic reforms under the advice of international lending agencies such as The World Bank and IMF. Due to the process of deregulation and economic liberalisation taking place in these countries there has been a sudden upsurge in economic activity and as expected several industries are in the process of transformation. Th impact of reforms on industry has been felt acutely in India where several industries are now in the process of transformation. From a regulated and protected environment firms have been catapulted into a market oriented economy where international competitiveness is the only route to success. For a long period firms in India had been pursuing cost leadership strategies based on low wage labour. The target customers were essentially at the lower end of the market requiring low quality and low priced products. However, we are now seeing some changes in the strategic thinking of corporate leaders. With the realisation of the changes in the competitive environment firms are now experimenting with diversity of strategic approaches. From a low cost approach firms are moving towards a new management paradigm. Strategic approaches incorporating product differentiation, brand building, rapid new product development, major technological changes, organisational restructuring for greater effectiveness and efficiency, internationalisation and a strategic refocusing on business, with a view to building on core competences are fast becoming the order of the day in India. Future progress on the economic front in India as well as on the sub-continent would depend on improvement in the governance processes. Political stability would be a key to further reforms and in turn industrial resurgence. Africa is going to face a very major challenge in the process of industrial development as the political situation there is far more complex with armed internecine conflicts being rampant.

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Working Papers | 1999

Building Core Competence in a Regulated Economy

Chaudhari Shekhar

The significance of core competencies is now well recognized. Its role in enabling firms to respond to customers' rapidly changing needs and combat competition is well documented. However, the applicability of this concept in regulated and protected economies is an area that needs the attention of management scholars. In this paper we briefly review the concept of core competence and examine the manner in which several firms in India built their strategies around some identified core competencies and also how these in turn enabled the firms to achieve superior performance. The paper also discusses in detail the capability development process in Telco, the leader in the Indian commercial vehicle industry.

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Working Papers | 1999

Retail Investors and the Budget 1999 - An Agenda

Gupta Ramesh

With the advent of SEBI, the regulatory philosophy has changed from merit (administered) to disclosure (market based). Since retail investors do not have expertise and resources to fully understand the disclosed information, they generally participate in the capital markets through mutual funds. In India, institutional accountability to investors has been dismal and the regulators have repeatedly failed to provide effective and timely remedies. Retail investors, though enthusiastic in the beginning, have lost faith in mutual funds because of many ugly episodes. Most of the investors' savings are now going to assured and/or fixed income schemes and not to equity funds. Financial development institutions are in universal banking financing consumer loans and trading on interest spread rather than performing their basic role of converting deposits into risk capital and smoothening of maturity to fund long duration projects. Foreign Financial Institutions (FIIs) also have not contributed much of risk capital to the new projects; they are making money by fast churning their portfolios. Infrastructure and development-oriented projects are starved of funds. The government is concerned and wants to lure retail investors back to the market. Retail investors are the major (rather only) source of providing risk capital in the absence of effective financial intermediation. This paper is an attempt to offer some suggestions to bring retail investors back into the market.

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Working Papers | 1999

Catalysing Indian Agriculture

Desai B M

This somewhat non-technical and brief paper synthesizes the literature on what to catalyse for the “Strategy” for agriculture and how to accomplish this “strategy” through public policies for government expenditure, reorganization of implementing institutions, pricing of farm inputs and produce, and land reforms in the context of ensuring budget of the GOI.

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