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2758 items in total found

Working Papers | 1995

Resource Mobilisation Strategies for Financing of Transport Infrastructure and Services

Prem Pangotra and G. Raghuram

Transport infrastructure development in India has been slow and unsatisfactory due to the excessive dependence on budgetary support from the State and due to the dominance of state controlled enterprises. Future investment requirements need much greater mobilisation of resources than that accomplished in the past. This paper reviews the Indian experience of infrastructure investment allocations, performance of parastatals and major policy makers. It provides a framework for formulating “unbundling strategies” for increased private sector participation in the financing of investment and provision of transport services.

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Working Papers | 1995

Representation of Barganing Games as Simple Distribution Problems

Lahiri Somdeb

In this paper we show that the set of all bargaining problems is isomorphic to the set of all simple distribution problems.

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Working Papers | 1995

A Note on A Reduced Game Property for the Egalitarian Solution

Lahiri Somdeb

In this paper we obtain an axiomatixation of the egalitarian solution using a reduced game property.

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Working Papers | 1995

Fourier Representation of Ambient Temperature and Duration of Sunshine

Girja Sharan and Kumar M Krishna

While constructing a transient thermal model of solar cooker, a need was felt for analytic expressions for ambient temperature and sunshine duration. This paper, therefore, presents the Fourier analysis of ambient temperature and sunshine duration data. It may be useful to those working on solar thermal systems, green houses and estimation of water loss from plants.

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Working Papers | 1995

International Trade and the Political Economy of State Formation in South Asia: A Long Wave

Thakur Sanjay P

The emerging contours of a borderless wold are becoming visible in the last decade of the 20th century. The domain of the state is being redefined in the economic life of nations, and in the relations between them. In this context, it is observed that a broad sweep of nearly 2,000 years of South Asian history reveals a fascinating correlation between periods of flourishing long distance international trade and large scale state formation processes over the Indian subcontinent. There appear to be historical long waves of state formation activity. The model presented in this essay situates the political economy of large scale state formation in south Asia within a geographical context. The narrative is taken up from the decline of empire in the ancient phase of Indian history. South Asian civilisation has essentially been nurtured in “nuclear core areas” of economic and cultural activity around the major riverine plains their delta regions. Land revenue appropriation by itself could not form a sufficient basis to support a State structure from the originating core on a sub-continental scale. This required an expanding frontier in the shape of cash revenue earned from flourishing long distance trade and/or plunder. The explanatory power of the model is revealed in an analysis of the political vicissitudes of attempts at large scale state formation in the three centuries prior to the advent of the Mughal Empire. The advent of this large scale state system coincided, not surprisingly, with the revival of trade. The crisis and breakdown of the Mughal State, C.1700 and after, occurred in a period of increasingly strong presence of the European East India Companies in the foreign trade sector of the South Asian Economy. Even the earliest of these trading companies, the Portugese East India Company, began operating as a “redistributive mechanism”, instead of as a purely trading concern alone creating models of mini-states. The European companies first captured the Intra-Asian trade. The subsequent struggle over trade revenue between the smaller successor states of the Mughals and the European East India Companies illustrates well, at the micro-level, the hypothesis under view. Large scale state formation through the agency of the British Colonial Empire in India is not unconnected with the presence of the East India Company, from the outset and primarily, in the foreign trade sector of the South Asian economy. By the second half of the 19th century, the foreign trade sector of India's economy was well integrated with the world economy. The sustenance for empire derived from India's commodity exports. By virtue of India's balance of trade surplus, in fact, the British Colonial Empire could be sustained, despite Britain's adverse balance of trade with the rest of the world. Pushing the logic of the model to the current scene, the paper points out that the crisis of the Union Government of India at present, is in fact that the State is unable to meet its developmental expenditure through the revenue generated by the administrative apparatus. The interest cost of the Indian state is high by any reckoning. In fact, revenue deficit is the primary cause of anxiety with regard to macro-economic stability. The political economy of large-scale state formation in India and its sustenance continues to depend on an “expanding frontier” as it were, of external revenue for the state, in the form of export earnings or external borrowings/investments. Historical researchers, as well as analysts of India's “growing crisis of governability” would do well to keep in view the model suggested here.

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Working Papers | 1995

The Logarithmic Relative Egalitarian Solution: An Axiomatic Characterization

Lahiri Somdeb

In this paper we propose and axiomatically characterize the Logarithemic Relative Egalitarian Solution for social choice problems.

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Working Papers | 1995

Restricted Expansion Independence for Choice Problems

Lahiri Somdeb

In this paper we propose restricted expansion independence as a criterion which may be satisfied by desirable choice functions and axiomatically characterize the proportional solution by using this criterion. We also show that the proportional solution satisfies an improvement sensitivity property on a reasonable domain. The theory of solutions to choice problems is used in the paper to define solutions for coalitional bargaining problems.

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Working Papers | 1995

Bureaucracies and Economic Reforms: Experience in India, China and South Korea

Chowdhury Supriya Roy

This paper draws mainly upon research in the state of Gujarat focussing both on administrative reform and the bureaucracy's response to a changing economic policy environment in the context of liberalization. For a comparative focus, the paper also draws on material on the Chinese and South Korean bureaucracies in the context of structural adjustment programmes in these countries. In both India and China higher echelons of the bureaucracy have responded positively and even helped shape liberalization policies; middle and lower rungs of the state services have remained largely ignorant of the economic reforms and have frequently resisted liberalization as a perceived threat to their powers. In both these countries, in varying degrees, the ideological and institutional heritage of a pronouncedly statist model of development have created pockets of resistance within bureaucracies to economic liberalization. On the other hand, the authoritarian nature of the military dictatorship in South Korea has made it relatively easy for the state to push through administrative reforms in the context of structural adjustment. The material reviewed points to the fact that a comprehensive set of policies notwithstanding, the actual process of economic reform may be obstructed by lack of understanding, opposition – over or otherwise, or at least foot dragging, by personnel who remain ultimately responsible for its implementation. The paper draws attention to the centrality of educative programmes, targeted particularly at middle and lower levels of bureaucracies, as an instrument of socializing state officials to a new set of roles in a changing policy context.

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Working Papers | 1995

Blowing ten Myths About Agroforestry: Restoring the Productivity of Marginal Dry Regions

Anil K. Gupta

I discuss ten myths about why agroforestry systems may or may not work in a particular manner. It is obvious that while blowing these myths I may have caricatured the reality a bit too harshly. The purpose only is to stress that there is no substitute to restoring the place of agro-forestry systems in any scheme of rehabilitating degraded lands in arid and semi-arid regions and other marginal regions. Not only that, even conservation of non-degraded lands would require recognizing the potential of agro-forestry systems. The lack of attention to its role in most watershed programs only highlights the enormous task of educating policy planners lying ahead of us. I also argue that we would not be able to do very much if we do not draw upon indigenous knowledge systems, local cultural and ecological basis of historical evolution of agro-forestry and agro-horticulture systems. The need for strengthening some of the top level land use planning and implementation mechanisms cannot be over stressed. After all certain kinds of changes require greater degree of unlearning at top level than at the lower level. People at grassroots level have known about the importance of the agro-forestry and agro-horticulture systems for a long time. If they have not persisted with it in many areas, reasons must not be traced in their ignorance or 'improvidence'. The macro-level policies of tenure, harvesting rights, technological back stopping, market incentives etc., will have to be put properly in place. The ten myths discussed in this paper are: 1) Privatization of common lands leads to sustainable agro-forestry based land use, 2) Poor people have shorter time frame and have lesser trees in and around their fields, 3) Poor people need fast growing species because they cannot wait for too long, 4) Agro-forestry can survive entirely through market incentitives, 5) Capital support for undertaking agroforestry is adequate, the basic problem is lack of demand, 6) Agroforestry is a new concept and, therefore, farmers need to be trained and motivated, 7) Agroforestry systems can be designed primarily on the basis of soil physical properties independent local socio-cultural traditions and values, 8) The model of green revolution in wheat and rice can be replicated in the agroforestry systems as well, 9) Viable agroforestry systems require emphasis on 'Multi-Purpose Tree Species' (MPTS) and 10) National land use policies and institutional arrangements are robust and conducive for promotion of agroforestry systems in marginal as well as other regions.

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Working Papers | 1995

Industrial Technological Development and Technology Institution-Firm Interaction: Reflections on a Multi-Industry Study in India

Chaudhari Shekhar and M. R. Dixit

Since Independence the government of India has given considerable importance to the development of a strong and autonomous scientific and technological base. In fact India has an enviable S&T infrastructure by developing country standards. Nevertheless, it has been widely perceived that the level of utilisation of research conducted by national research laboratories has not been satisfactory. This paper reports the major findings of a study of industrial technological development and technology institution-firm interaction in India conducted as part of an international study covering seven sectors: Auto Components, Foundry, Machine Tools, Pharmaceuticals, Polymers software and Textiles. Finally the paper drawn some implications for technology institutions in the country.

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