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2758 items in total found

Working Papers | 1993

On the Existence and Efficiency of a Voting Equilibrium for a Public Good Economy

Lahiri Somdeb

The main purpose of this paper is to formalise the concept of a compromise function. Subsequently, given a compromise function, we define a voting equilibrium and prove the existence of such an equilibrium. Finally, we close our analysis by showing that under some assumptions a voting equilibrium is Pareto optimal.

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Working Papers | 1993

When AAA Means B: The State of Credit Rating in India

Ragunathan V and Jayanth R. Varma

As in many other countries, India five year old credit rating industry has grown rapidly amidst persistent doubts about the quality of the rating service. This paper evaluates the ratings given by India leading credit rating agency, CRISIL. We find that CRISIL ratings are not only too liberal by international standards but also internally inconsistent. We argue that to improve the quality of credit rating in India, there must be more competition; credit rating must be opened up to the private sector; and raters must provide unsolicited ratings.

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Working Papers | 1993

Structural Features of Indias Financial System: 1980-92

Rastogi A B and Ghose Amitabha

The objective of this paper is to provide a concise description of the Indian Financial System from macro-economic perspective. The study analyses the evolution and interrelations of the financial system using the flow of funds framework and other tools of financial planning. The Financial intermediation by the banking sector waned a little as other financial companies gained importance in the economy. However, new assets, deposits and credits outstripped the growth rate of the economy.

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Working Papers | 1993

Scale, Equity and Efficiency: A Stone May Kill More Than One Bird

Prakash Aseem and Anil K. Gupta

Policy goals of efficiency, equity, and sustainability may not be independent. Also the policy instruments. i.e. price mechanism, fiscal policy, and scale may be related. We need to find answers about who shall decide the scale at the national and international level? If equity and scale are related, the interests of the countries in the resource-intensive growth phase and of the post-industrial societies, my clash.

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Working Papers | 1993

On Internalization of Externalities

Anil K. Gupta and Prakash Aseem

Externalities can be internalized through market mechanism, government regulation, or self-governing institutions or a mix of these institutions. We recommend the institutional route which minimizes total cost (sum of technology, management, and transaction costs) to the firm. These costs are influenced by the externality attributes (occurrence, polluter, spatial, time and technology). Different institutions may be appropriate for different stages and social contexts of an externality.

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Working Papers | 1993

Project Management: Comparison of Practices in India and U K

Tripathy Arabinda

Resources are committed primarily for two purpose. In one case it is spent on meeting ongoing requirements and in other case for creating new facilities. The first category is classified as operational requirements and the second project. However, the definition of project as an one time endeavour, encompasses many areas other than creation of new facilities. It is possible to associate all types of projects to creation of facilities physical or otherwise and resulting in “benefits” to a set of beneficiaries.

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Working Papers | 1993

Forecasting Money Supply Using Box-Jenkins and other Procedures

Gupta G S

The big provides forecasts on the money supply in India during 1993-01 through 1995-04, using the quarterly data for the period 1970-01 to 1992-04 and several alternative appropriate statistical and econometric methods. Appropriate statistical and econometric methods. Appropriate statistical tests and accuracy measures have been applied to assess the credibility of the alternative methods and within the sample period forecasts. It is found that the forecasts through the Box-Jenkin's method are the most conservative while those from the decomposition method the most liberal ones, those through the regression and exponential smoothing fall in between the two extremes. Arguments have been advanced for their comparative strengths and weaknesses. As per the results, the money supply is expected to be around Rs.5,000 billion in Dec. 1995, and it could vary between Rs.4,764 billion and Rs.5,814 in that period.

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Working Papers | 1993

Bases of Work Motivation in Development Societies: A Framework for Performance Management

Misra Sasi B and Kanungo R N

In this essay authors endeavored to analyse and understand variables that adversely affect level of motivation and performance of people within work organizations in developing societies. The authors analyse and identify the endogenous and the exogenous variables affecting worker motivation. With respect to exogenous variables, it is apparent that employees, owing to enduring influences of past socialization, bring with them habits, norms, and expectations that guide their behaviours at work place. It is this cultural baggage they carry that is stubbornly resistant to change. This has to be accepted as given while attempting to improve employee motivation and performance. It is the set of endogenous organizational variables that need to be looked at more carefully for identifying action levers for improving worker motivation and performance. These action levers have to be designed in such a way that they become compatible with the socio-cultural norms of the employees. With particular reference to Indian organizations, we have formed these into the following imperatives. 1. The management ought to be guided by the dictum: “Labour is an investment” and develop an organizational culture that values and promotes human resource as an important asset. Top management must demonstrate a commitment to establish such a culture with proactive policies in human resource management areas such as recruitment, training, placement, job design, supervision etc. It is not enough to remain merely at the level of pious pronouncements, but to go further in demonstrating that pronouncements are translated into actions. Establishment of a culture that values human asset will go a long way in enhancing employee self-esteem and loyalty. 2. The management must undertake systematic manpower planning, evolve recruitment criteria and procedures based on behaviourally and/or skill anchored job analysis. 3. With respect to tasks, job definitions should be unambiguous and performance standards clear. Such job clarity would be welcome by the employees who belong to a culture high on uncertainty avoidance (Ho fstede, 1980). 4. Rewards, financial or otherwise, should be valued and must be perceived as based on performance. Perhaps there is no hitch in acknowledging this principle. But most organizations have far to go in implementing them. We have alluded to several management practices such as time-based compensation, inadequate performance appraisal etc. that hinder reward – performance contingency and equity in the Indian context. Such practices have to change if management wants organizational rewards to have motivational effects. What is needed is a systematic evaluation of both compensation and appraisal systems on the basis of two criteria culture congruence and motivational effectiveness. On the basis of such evaluation, the systems can then be redesigned to ensure that whatever rewards are offered by the organizations are needed and valued by employees, and perceived as equitable and are contingent on performance desired by the organizations. 5. Finally, appropriate supervisory support and guidance are necessary for the employees to be motivated to perform. Mendonca and Kanungo (1990) have proposed several concrete organizational interventions for effective performance management in developing countries. They also suggested that in the Indian context the manager must adopt a nurturant-task leadership style (Sinha 1980, 1990) which is congruent with the employees familial and cultural values.

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Working Papers | 1993

Structural Determinants of Openness of Economies: The Conceptual Basis and Cross-Sectional Evidence

Sebastian Morris

This study argues that structural factors – principally population per capita income and population density – can explain a significant proportion of the variation in openness defined as (exports + imports)/gross national production. It also provides a conceptual and theoretical basis for the form of the function that explains openness. Spatial theories of order in the location of economic activities – the ideas of Christaller and Losch – which have found much support in studies of geographers, and other empirical findings of spatial order viz., the famous rank size rule of cities' populations, and the equally famous 'gravity-model' of spatial interaction, can all be used fruitfully to understand openness. They explain why openness is inversely related to population sizes, and more generally the functional form of the structural dependence. Biometricians in the early part of this century had used allometric growth models to understand the form and growth of organisms, across not too distant species. Use of the allometric model to the problem of trade openness only calls for recognising the economy as having a structure and therefore as being more than a collection of producers and consumers; and simple assumptions about the economy's principal characteristics. Given this structural determination of openness we are able to explain the long standing puzzle of Tarshis that smaller countries, but not smaller regions within a nation, would tend to show greater economic stability. Out study would also call for re-examination of many of the studies linking growth to trade openness, especially those conducted in a cross-sectional framework: We would contend that the measure of the openness that is induced by policy (and other non-structural factors) would have to be proxied not by revealed openness as such, but by the same adjusted for the structural component.

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Working Papers | 1993

On a Theorem due to Sobel

Lahiri Somdeb

In this paper we prove that any bargaining solution to group decision problems which satisfies individual rationality, strong symmetry, efficiency and strong improvement sensitivity also satisfies mid-point domination.

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