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2757 items in total found

Working Papers | 1988

Energy Planning in India: Relevance of Regional Planning for National Policy

Moulik T K, Dholakia Bakul H, Ravindra H. Dholakia, K. V. Ramani, and P. R. Shukla

This paper presents a macrolevel energy model and its application for energy planning for three States in India-namely Gujarat, Kerala and Rajasthan. In conjunction with energy modelling at national level, the Advisory Board on Energy, Government of India, envisaged regional energy planning to capture regional specificities in energy demand-supply structure. Methodology for constructing reference energy system, expanded input-output table with disaggregated energy sectors and a linear programming model for analysis are presented. Scenario analysis approach is adapted and analysis and findings are presented for future reference years upto 2000 AD.

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Working Papers | 1988

Risk Sensitivity in Bargaining and A Monotone Solution to Nashs bargaining Problem

Lahiri Somdeb

In this paper we show that for a new solution to Nash's bargaining problem, proposed by Lahiri (1988) ("Monotonicity with Respect to the Disagreement Point and a New Solution to Nash's Bargaining Problem", IIM, Ahmedabad, Working Paper No. 724), which satisfies monotonicity with respect to the disagreement point, an increase in risk aversion is to the player's own disadvantage and to the advantage of the opponent in the two person case; to the advantage of all opponents in the multi-person generalization. Thus it parallels results on risk-sensitivity for the Nash and Kalai-Smorodinsky solutions.

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Working Papers | 1988

Central Excise Revenues from Major Commodities and the Sources of their Growth

Gupta Anand P

Indirect taxes are the mainstay of India's tax system. The central excise duty, leviable on the production or manufacture of goods ranging from aerated waters to zip fasteners, is the single most important source of revenue, accounting for about one-third of consolidated (the Central, State and Union Territory Government) tax revenues and about one-fourth of current revenues. Ten major commodities (e.g., crude oil, motor spirit, cement) currently account for 52.6% of the total central excise duty collections. This study documents the growth in excise revenue from these commodities and examines the question of how much of the growth in excise revenue from them can be attributed to growth of tax base and how much to growth of tax rate. Four points emerge from the study. First, the cess on indigenous crude oil, levied under the provisions of the Oil Industry (Development) Act of 1974, currently makes the largest contribution (11.4% in 1987/88) to the total central excise collections. Indeed, the increase in cess collections in 1987/88 (Rs. 9,122.9 million) accounted for about one-half of the increase in that year's total excise collection! Although the base for the cess has also grown, with clearances of crude oil rising from 9.7 million tons in 1980/81 to 31.5 million tons in 1987/88 and with the base price of crude (fixed by the Government of India) rising from Rs. 203.41 per ton in 1980/81 to Rs. 1,021 per ton in 1987/99, most of the growth in revenues from the cess in recent years has resulted from growth of the cess rate-the cess rate has risen from Rs. 100 per ton during the period July 11, 1981-February 14, 1983 and Rs. 300 per ton during the period February 15, 1983-February 28, 1987 to Rs 600 per ton beginning March 1, 1987. Of the growth in cess collections between 1981/82 and 1987/88, 86% has resulted from growth of the cess rate and the balance from growth of the cess base (value of crude clearances). Second, the official data do not fully capture the incidence of excise duties on motor spirit and high speed diesel oil. This is because of the Government of India recent practice of raising resources through various devices (e.g., cost and freight surcharge, contribution to product price adjustment account) which, there is reason to believe, are akin to excise duties and get reflected in Oil Coordination Committee's resources, not in excise collections. Given the magnitude of the resources being raised, this practice may be contributing in a major way to distortions in Indian firms' decisions regarding input choices. This needs to be looked into. Third, the liberalization in cement pricing policy introduced beginning March 1982 has resulted into substantial growth in cement clearances which, in turn, have contributed to substantial growth in excise collections. Upward revisions in excise duty-from Rs 71.50-Rs 135 per ton in 1981/82 to Rs 162.75-Rs 225 per ton in 1987/88-have also made a major contribution: of the growth in excise revenues from cement between 1981/82 and 1987/88, 52.3% has resulted from growth of the tax base (value of cement clearances) and the balance from growth of the excise duty ratet. Finally, one does not see much of a growth in excise collections from sugar. This is due to the growth of tax base (value of sugar clearances) offset to a large extent (52%) by reductions in the average incidence of excise duty (excise collections as % of value of clearances) from 13.5% in 1980/81 to 8.9% in 1987/88.

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Working Papers | 1988

Multi-Item (S,s) Inventory Model with Poisson Demand, General Lead Time and Adjustable Reorder Time

N. Ravichandran and Srinivasan S K

Stochastic Multiple Item Inventory System of (S, s) type is studied with general lead time distribution and Poisson demand. The demands occur according to Poisson process for one unit of a specific item at a time. The demand types are characterised by a discrete distribution An order is placed when the inventory level drops to si. Shortages are assumed to be lost. An explicit expression is provided for the marginal distributions of the Inventory level process. Using this, the expected total cost of the inventory system is obtained explicitly. The results for the special care of instantaneous lead time are deduced from the earlier results.

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Working Papers | 1988

Behaviour of Integers: Some Peculiar Porperties

Ragunathan V

The intention of this paper is to highlight certain latent and interesting characteristics of natural numbers and their higher powers vis-a-vis the ultimate sum (single digit sum) of the digits in such integers and their higher powers, their sums and their multiples. The peculiarities owe their characteristics indeed, to the decimal system of integers. And it is the existence of such peculiarities that this paper endeavours to demonstrate. While the author is not aware of any practical use to which the interesting property of integers described in this paper could be put to, it may possibly of some interest to those involved with checks and verification of numerical solutions on computers, apart from of course the number theory buffs.

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Working Papers | 1988

Financial Ratio Patterns in Indian Manufacturing Companies: A Multivariate Analysis

Pandey I M and Bhat Ramesh

The objectives of the study were: (a) to present Indian evidence on empirical-based classification of financial ratios, and (b) to examine the intertemporal stability/change of classification of ratios so obtained for the 20 year period of 1965-66 to 1984-85. The study used data of 612 Indian companies belonging to 61 manufacturing and processing industries. The statistical methods employed included factor analysis, differential R factor analysis, correlation and percentage mean absolute deviations. The study has obtained eleven factors: (i) return on investment, (2) sales efficiency, (3) equity intensiveness, (4) short-tern liquidity, (5) current asset intensiveness, (6) cash position, (7) activity, (8) earnings appropriation, (9) financial structure, (10) interest coverage, and (11) long-term capitalisation. Thus it was indicated that there were multiple dimensions of financial phenomena traditionally grouped under liquidity, profitability, activity, and leverage. It was also shown that financial ratio patterns were reasonably stable over years.

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Working Papers | 1988

An Explanatory Study of Viewers Perceptions of Television Advertising

Gupta Nirmal

Study of Consumers' attitude towards advertising helps the advertisers in planning their advertising campaigns. By comparative evaluation of advertisements across different elements viz. Creative strategies, appeals and execution styles, the advertisers can select appropriate 'content mix' for their campaigns. The present study attempts to explore the role and effectiveness of different elements of an advertisement (i.e. Creative Strategy, appeal and execution style) on the Viewers' attitude for it. The study was carried out for 24 television advertisements and the overall attitude of 50 viewers was evaluated by using attitude measuring scales. Advertisements were selected after a comprehensive content analysis, of a large number of advertisements which classified them under different elements. The items on the attitude scales were chosen in such a manner so as to tap all three components (viz. Cognitive, affective and conative) of attitude. The study concluded that there was no significant association between the single element of an advertisement and viewers' attitude for it. No association was found even when combinations of two elements at a time were evaluated against viewers' attitude. It appears that viewers do not form attitudes for advertisements on the basis of one or two elements but they perceive it as an integrated whole.

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Working Papers | 1988

The Max-Min Solution for Variable Threat Games

Lahiri Somdeb

In this paper we obtain general inequality properties that max-min strategic solutions to Variable Threat Games satisfy under a set of very plausible assumptions.

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Working Papers | 1988

Attitude Toward Computers: Development of a Scale

Chhokar J S and Deepti Bhatnagar

This study reports the development of an instrument to measure attitude toward computers. The importance of attitude in attaining the full potential of computerization is highlighted and possible uses for the attitude toward computers (ATC) scale are suggested.

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Working Papers | 1988

Growth of Tractors in India: Past and Future

Girja Sharan and Kayastha Sandeep

A casual, discrete, dynamic mathematical model to describe the growth of tractors in India has been proposed. It is able to describe the past pattern of growth quite closely, and yields results that are much better than possible from methods available in literature. Therefore, it has been used to outline scenarios till the year 2000. The model appears promising and needs to be tested further on independent set of data from individual states.

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