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Working Papers | 2013

Development of a Causal Framework linking High Perofrmance HRM Practices, Positive Psychological Capital, Creative Behaviours

Vishal Gupta

Synthesizing the ideas of high-performance Human Resource Management (HRM), positive psychological capital, and componential theory of creativity, the present study develops a multi-level causal framework linking high-performance work practices (HPWP), positive psychological capital, employee creative performance behaviors and creative performance. The paper argues that to provide a convincing explanation of the association between HRM practices and creativity, we need to improve our theoretical understanding in three key areas. These are the nature of HRM, and especially the rationale for the specific lists of HR practices; the linkage between HRM practices and employee creativity; and the 'black-box' linking HRM practices and employee creativity. A model is presented to explore these linkages. The existing literatures on HRM, Creativity and PsyCap are reviewed and directions for future research are provided.

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Working Papers | 2013

A Memory-Aided Broadcast Mechanism for Enabling a Rural Community Radio on an Ad-hoc peer-to-peer Mobile Network

Kavitha Ranganathan and Sonia Arora

This paper investigates deploying a village level community-radio application on top of a MANET comprising completely of basic mobile phones. We envision a system, where any user in the network is equally empowered to generate and distribute audio content to the entire network, using his or her mobile phone. The paper focuses on the study of suitable broadcast algorithms for the network. In this context, we propose a novel broadcast scheme where nodes bank on their memory to decide whether to forward packets of an audio stream-capitalizing on their past behavior to stabilize on fixed routes for the entire stream. In our scheme called Environs Aware Broadcast Mechanism (EABA), a node gauges the local mobility around itself, and uses that to decide which broadcast mechanism to use. When mobility is high, it uses SBA (Scalable Broadcast Algorithm), a popular neighbor -knowledge broadcast algorithm with high overheads, but when mobility is low, it switches to MaBA (Memory-aided Broadcast Algorithm). Extensive simulations on a village-level MANET, confirm that EABA is successful in substantially reducing jitter, latency and packet loss: all critical metrics for an audio application. At the same time, EABA does not incur other overheads and maintains the same levels of reachability and efficiency as SBA

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Working Papers | 2013

Corporate Governance: Financial Regulators and Courts Need To Be On the Same Page

Anurag K. Agarwal

Real corporate governance requires tough financial regulators which effectively work to safeguard investors' interests in securities and endeavour to create a proper environment for the securities market to develop. The financial regulators-Securities and Exchange Board of India, SEBI in India, and Securities and Exchange Commission, SEC in the US-have been created by the legislature. They are independent expert bodies and are vested with remarkable powers, but they have to work within the framework of law, which is interpreted by the courts. This paper examines the role of courts vis-à-vis expert bodies in general and financial regulators in particular, and highlights the importance of the two being on the same page for effective corporate governance.

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Working Papers | 2013

Advertisement Placement in TV Programs: Different Roles of ELM and Mood Protection Mechanism

Mayank Jyotsna Soni

This study explores how involvement of the audience with cognitive/affective program influence their processing of advertisements aired in between the program because of varying involvement within program. An experimental design was conducted. Cognitive ad recall was found to be higher when involvement with program (both cognitive and affective) is low than when involvement with program is high. Affective ad recall was found to be lower when involvement with program (cognitive and affective) is low than when the involvement with program is high. This study will be useful for managers in choosing television slots to broadcast their advertisements. ELM, Mood Protection Mechanism and Resource Matching Hypothesis are used to explain information processing mechanisms. The results also indicated a need of extending existing information processing theories.

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Working Papers | 2013

Sectoral Choice of Credit in Rural India

Debdatta Pal and A. K. Laha

This article examines, what makes rural household a preferred choice for formal lenders? It develops sample selected ordered probit model to address this question. While, the selection equation models the determinants of access to credit, an ordered probit model is used to determine the factors affecting the choice of credit sources in a hierarchical order. Using household data from six Indian states this study finds corroborative evidence that relatively resource rich households even while staying at distant location enjoy greater access to formal creditors. It also identifies a new factor i.e., interlinked credit as a significant variable influencing the access to formal credit.

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Working Papers | 2013

Policy Gaps for Promoting Green Grassroots Innovations and Traditional Knowledge in Developing Countries: Learning from Indian Experience

Anil K. Gupta

Society for Research and Initiatives for Technologies and Institutions [SRISTI] has pioneered a knowledge intensive model for transforming institutional context of problem solving at community level. In this paper, the building blocks of a sustainable innovation eco system have been identified. The concept of National Innovation System [NIS], which ignored the knowledge of informal sector, has been redefined. A major gap in the literature on NIS is being filled through the contributions of Honey Bee Network. While several policy initiatives in the last decade have reduced the gap in the eco system, a great deal remains to be done. The ethical accountability of academic world towards the local knowledge holders has not been systematically understood and enforced adequately. The terms like BOP [Bottom of the Pyramid] are extremely unfortunate because they distract our attention away from those pyramids in which poor people may actually be on the top. The paper, thus, makes a case for changing the mindset and creating a new set of institutional conditions to promote creativity and innovation at grassroots level.

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Working Papers | 2013

Explaining Access to Credit by Rural Households: Results based on a Study of Several States in India

Saugandh Datta and Anirban Ghosh

Against the backdrop of evolution of rural credit system in India as well as its observed failure to be inclusive in character, this paper makes use of a fairly large data set of the Center for Mangement in Agriculture in Indian Institute of Management, Ahmedabad to try to explain several hitherto unaddressed issues-why certain rural households fail to have any access to credit from any source, and especially from the much-publicized and much-pampeered formal source, and even from the emerging MFIs. Three probit models are used to explain this phenomenon in terms of village and household characteristics of the sample households. The paper highlights the need for strengthening rural infrastructure, which is often found to stand in complementary relation with credit demand and credit access. Emphasis is also laid on strengthening of semi-formal souces of credit known as micro-finance, which seem to follow a market logic rather than strict regulatory approach of formal banking system, and doesn't always favor large borrowers and large projects, in spite of apparent economies of scale of such projects. Familiarity to powerful rural personnel seem to be playing a dubious role in influencing credit demand and credit access-a matter which needs to be addressed revamping of development policy administration in the countryside.

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Working Papers | 2013

Concentration and Other Determinants of Innovative
Efforts in Indian Manufacturing Sector: A Dynamic Panel Data Analysis

Rakesh Basant and Pulak Mishra

The relationship between market concentration and innovative efforts by firms has attracted a lot of attention by researchers. However, a consensus is yet to emerge on the conceptual underpinnings and empirical manifestations of this relationship. While Schumpeter (1942) argued that existence of large firms in imperfectly competitive markets provides the most conducive condition for technical progress, Arrow (1962) pointed out that a pre-innovation monopolist has weaker incentive to innovate than a firm operating in a competitive market. However, even a monopolist faced with contestable markets may be forced to undertake innovative activities to meet 'potential competition'. Further, R&D efforts by a firm are likely to depend on a variety of risks in the market and an increase in such risks may discourage firms to spend on in-house R&D. This is particularly so as expenditure on R&D by a firm is an endogenous sunk cost (Sutton, 1991) and significant innovative efforts by a firm do not always yield success in the market (Scherer, 2000). Given the difficulty in predicting the demand patterns of the consumers and R&D strategies of the rivals with information asymmetries, there is a large stochastic component in R&D spending and economic returns. In addition, possibility of disclosure of the outcomes of publicly funded R&D projects also poses threat on the rate of returns and, therefore, may reduce firms' own R&D expenditure. Given such importance of risks, it is potential/expected market structure and not actual concentration that is likely to influence innovative efforts by the firms. Although the existing studies have attempted to explore different aspects of R&D efforts in Indian manufacturing (e.g., Kumar and Agarwal, 2000), examining the role of potential market concentration in determining R&D efforts is largely ignored. The present paper attempts to fill in this gap. The basic objective of the present paper is to understand the role of expected market concentration in determining inter-industry variations in R&D efforts in Indian manufacturing sector, controlling for various other aspects of market structure, firms' conduct (other than R&D), their performance, and policy related aspects. The paper is based on the proposition of Kamien and Schwartz (1982) that market power interacts with a firm's decision to make innovative efforts via anticipated market power. It is assumed that higher the anticipated market power associated with the post-innovation industry, the innovators have greater incentive to innovate. This is so because larger anticipated market power promises higher profits in future and hence can compensate for current R&D investment. We use Arellano-Bond dynamic panel estimation technique and a panel dataset of 34 manufacturing industries over the period from 2001-02 to 2008-09. The paper finds that firms in industries with greater R&D efforts in the past, larger participation of the MNCs, higher capital intensity, and greater penetration in the international market through exports spend more on innovation. On the other hand, in-house R&D efforts are less in the industries with larger incidence of mergers and acquisitions and greater competition from imports. However, the degree of sellers' concentration in a market, size of the market, efforts by the firms towards creation of product differentiation and image advantage, purchase of technology, and the level and variations in their profitability do not make any significant difference in in-house R&D intensity across the industries. The findings of the present paper raise some important policy concerns relating to investment, trade and competition. Should restrictions on entry of MNCs be relaxed further and exports encouraged for promoting in-house R&D? Should M&As be restricted as they hinder in-house R&D efforts? How to encourage the MNCs to enter through Greenfield investment, instead of M&As? Answering these questions requires detailed understanding of technology strategies at the firm level and, therefore, leaves interesting areas for further research.

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Working Papers | 2013

Positive and Normative Aspects of Food Policy and the Market in Indian Agriculture-An Empirical Analysis of Government Policy Interventions in Food Management

Munish Alagh

This paper begins by outlining the views of economists on food management and contemporary food policy issues in the backdrop of largely unchanging dynamics of slow growth of the farm sector in India. First we deal with the manner in which the changing situation is dealt with in terms of cycles in the wheat market. We also outline the analysis of how the effects of government policy including subsidizing import is dealt with in the policy literature. We then empirically examine the welfare impacts of the policy of subsidies on imports alongside high Support Prices. Finally debates on high support prices are discussed. We sum up this paper with the argument that the need for food management in India, under conditions of global volatility, risk and uncertainty is obvious to any sensitive analyst of Indian Agriculture. Efficiency and reform in food management policies and administration in relation to clearly stated welfare objectives is the need of the hour.

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Working Papers | 2013

On the Choice of Optimization Routine in Estimation of Parsimonious Term Structure Models: Results from the Svensson Model

Vineet Virmani

Objective function in term structure estimation with price errors is not only non-linear but also non-convex in parameters. This makes the final results sensitive to both the choice of the optimization routine as well as to the starting guess. This study looks at the impact of the choice of the optimization routine to final parameter estimates for the Svensson model. While results are expected to differ numerically across routines, what is of interest is the economic impact. Using eleven different routines over a range of starting parameter values, it is found while there is significant variation in the final objective function value across routines, for the most part, implied short-rates and long-rates have low standard deviation. Also, while grid-search seems unavoidable, popular quasi-Newton methods allowing for linear constraints seem quite adequate for the task at hand.

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