Faculty & Research

Research Productive

Show result

Search Query :
Area :
Search Query :
3846 items in total found

Working Papers | 2001

Capital Structure and the Firm Characteristics: Evidence from an Emerging Market

Pandey I M

We examine the determinants of capital structure of Malaysian companies utilizing data from 1984 to 1999. We classify data into four sub-periods that correspond to different stages of Malaysian capital market. Debt is decomposed into three categories: short-term, long-term and total debt. Both book value and market value debt ratios are calculated. The results of pooled OLS regressions show that profitability, size, growth, risk and tangibility variables have significant influence on all types of debt. These results are normally consistent with the results of fixed effect estimation with the exception that risk variable loses its significance. Unlike the evidence from the developed markets, investment opportunity (market-to-book value ratio) has no significant impact on debt policy in the emerging market of Malaysia. Our results are generally robust to time periods, but the significance of some variables changes over time. Profitability has a persistent and consistent negative relationship with all types of debt ratios in all periods and under all estimation methods. This confirms the capital structure prediction of the pecking order theory in an emerging capital market.

Read More

Working Papers | 2001

GATS and Educational Services: Issues for India Response in WTO Negotiations

Satish Y. Deodhar

Under the auspices of WTO, negotiations on liberalization of trade in services are expected to begin soon. One agenda at the negotiating table will be trade in educational services. Trade in educational services is too important an issue for India, and, a thorough homework needs to be done before we make any commitments at the negotiating table. In this context, the paper analyses the intricacies of the General Agreement on Trade in Services (GATS) as applicable to educational sector. The need for trade, and the likely competitiveness of India educational services is also discussed. Finally, suggestions for trade negotiations and domestic reforms are presented.

Read More

Working Papers | 2001

Societal Change, States and Governance: Insights from History and other Societies

Sebastian Morris

The nature of governance has differed widely across societies, and what is more interesting, within any particular society depending upon the stage of development. Governance is better defined in functional rather than in value terms. Functional governance aids and abetts industrialisation. Industrialisation is the one change that all societies have to necessarily strive for. Without it no development is possible In contemporary societies which are also democratic and trying hard to industrialise, that insight needs to be tempered with the limitations of the state that is a coalition of many classes. More importantly just because functional governance was not the good governance of today, in many countries and societies in the past, does not mean, that it today cannot be both good and functional. The point though is that unless it is functional it can never be good. Functionality of governance is best assured when the policies followed by the state in its drive to industrialise the economy are correct. Therefore the main lesson from history is that the first thing to do (for both functional governance and for the industrial transformation) is to bring about the initial conditions necessary for the industrialisation of the economy. The key bottleneck here is tenurial relations in land which stand in the way of output increases from the poor farmer. The egalitarian income distribution that land reform brings, ensures that nearly all the poor are particpants in the market. All other conditions necessary for the unambigous transformation already obtain today in India. We also describe the process of change and the sense in which the economic is primary to societal change. That does not mean that there is no scope for individual or collective action. It only means that there are particular ways in which individuals and small groups including reformers can bring about change. It is important to recognise the specific ways in which small groups including elements with government can bring about change. In any discussion of corruption and governance the case of China which despite being highly corrupt society grows can hardly be avoided. Corruption there is the means by which a bourgeois society is being born in China today. Because much of the rents are invested there is no dysfunctionality to this corruption. It would though soon become dysfunctional, since, once the party elite have all become capitalists, the gain to them and to society as a whole is greater in a non-corrupt society. That is already happening, and corruption can be expected to decline soon.

Read More

Working Papers | 2001

The Challenge of Governance of India Today

Sebastian Morris

This paper attempts to delineate the possible role of goverance oriented reform in India today. We raise conceptual and historical difficulties with the notion that sees governance failure as the cause of poor economic performance. We discuss why there are certain regularities in the occurance of good governance, distinguishing the same from functional governance which aids and abets industrialisation. Next we go on to discuss the interlikages between institutions, economic development and governance in India, and why internal attempts at reform thus far have failed.. Finally we bring out the current failures in governance that are actionable and suggest that they are largely corrected by changes in economic policy and some intitutional initiatives. Attention to governance as such is warranted only to build organisations and initiatives for commercialisation and privatisation, and for appropriate changes in the law and in the development of frameworks for regulation and contracting out.

Read More

Working Papers | 2001

Regulatory Implications of Monopolies in the Securities Industry

Jayanth R. Varma

Since the mid-1990s, investors and regulators have benefited from a high degree of competition in the Indian securities industry. Even more than all the policy changes that have taken place, it is technology and competition that have transformed the Indian capital market in the last 7-8 years. This paper shows that there is now considerable evidence that critical elements of the Indian securities industry are becoming significantly less competitive than in the past. Reduced competition would remove the single most important driver of capital market modernisation in this country and would create several serious regulatory problems. The paper argues that rather than applying the traditional solution of "regulated monopolies", regulators need to adopt strong measures to stimulate competition. The regulator must also ruthlessly discard those elements of the regulatory regime that are anti-competitive in nature.

Read More

Working Papers | 2001

Quality Attributes and Hedonic Price Analysis of Ghee

Intodia Vijay and Satish Y. Deodhar

In the post-WTO scenario processed food industry is witnessing intra-industry trade, i.e., trade in similar products. It also means that there will be intense competition between foreign and Indian companies in the domestic market. This competition will compel companies to focus their attention on product differentiation and branding. This is possible if companies prepare themselves to be quality competitive. In order to be quality competitive, firms have to understand consumers perception and valuation of various quality attributes. Hedonic price analysis, a methodology used for this purpose, is extensively used for processed food products in developed countries. However, it has not been applied to Indian food markets. We conduct a hedonic price analysis of a typical Indian processed food product - ghee. Results indicate that consumers are willing to pay a premium for branded over non-branded ghee, and, for corporate brands over cooperative brands. Flavour is an important quality attribute valued by consumers. While texture is not that important, an agreement needs to be developed on whether or not there is an ideal colour attribute for ghee. The results imply that branding generates reputation, and, cooperatives may want to enhance their brand equity. Firms may do well in improving flavour to enhance ghee quality. Another implication is that large firms and other organizations need to generate data on measurements of food quality attributes so that hedonic price analysis can be effectively used for strategic food quality management.

Read More

Working Papers | 2001

Relative Effectiveness of Signals in IPOs in Indian Capital Markets

Kumar G Arun and Ajay Pandey

IPO by a firm calls for assessment of potential agency problems and associated costs by the outside investors. The potential conflict of interest problems between insiders and outsiders could be very high in countries with weak corporate governance mechanisms like India. Theoretically it could be argued that there are quite a few signals related to the firms in the IPO context and available to the investors, which could be used by them to assess the quality of firms. Based on cross-sectional data of 1243 IPOs in Indian markets during 1993-95 period, we find that the under-pricing (or realized excess returns), inside equity and pre-public offer firm reservations made for institutions and mutual funds explain the extent of oversubscription across IPOs. The type of agency appraising the project and presence or absence of foreign financial and/or technical collaborators fail to explain the extent of oversubscription across IPOs. In addition, we find that subscription rate rather than realized initial returns as dependent variable sheds more light on the effect of signals in a fixed-price open offer IPO process characterized by listing with considerable lag.

Read More

Working Papers | 2001

Financial Goals Choices and Performance of Firms in Malaysia

Pandey I M

The objectives of the study are (a) to ascertain the financial goals pursued by companies in Malaysia and (b) to find out the relationship between firms financial performance and stated financial goals. Data on the financial goals are collected from 41 KLSE listed firms through a questionnaire. An analysis of the relationship between the financial goals pursued by these firms and their actual performance is conducted using dummy variables for financial goals. The results of the questionnaire analysis are: (a) Firms in Malaysia follow multiple financial goals. (b) A very few firms consider maximization of market value per share as their primary goal in the financial decision-making. (c) From the overall rank ordering of the financial goals, the following four goals could be isolated as more important in practice: (i) maximization of operating profit before interest and taxes (PBIT); (ii) maximizing the rate of return on equity (ROE); (iii) maximizing the growth rate in earnings per share (EPS); and (iv) ensuring that funds are available. The cross section study of the selected sample companies reveals that the pursuit of the goal of maximizing PBIT is positively related to the accounting-based financial performance. However, pursuing the goal of maximizing ROE has no relationship with the actual performance measured by ROE, and it has a negative relationship with the financial performance measure of ROA. The financial goals pursued by firms in Malaysia have no relation with market-to-book value as a measure of performance.

Read More

Working Papers | 2001

The Expected Stock Returns of Malaysian Firms: A Panel Data Analysis

Pandey I M

We used panel data set of 1729 observations (247 Malaysian companies listed on the Kuala Lumpur Stock Exchange for 1993-2000) to identify variables that could explain expected returns of Malaysian stocks. Our results are based on the fixed effects regression model as it performed better than the random effects model and OLS model without the firm effects. Results of the fixed-effect univariate regressions indicated that beta, size, book-to-market value (B/M) ratio, earnings-price (E/P) ratio and dividend yield individually played a significant role in explaining stock returns and payout and leverage had no effect. The explanatory power of size (natural log of market capitalisation) was the highest. The fixed-effect multivariate regression results showed that size was persistently a significant dominant variable together with other variables in explaining stock returns. Beta was found to have consistently a positive relation with stock returns by itself and together with other variables. But its explanatory power was less than size and other variables. Contrary to the results of Fama and French (1992), B/M ratio was not persistently a significant variable; its significance disappeared when we incorporated size and E/P ratio in regression.

Read More

Working Papers | 2001

An Empirical Examination of the Characteristics of the Integration Responsiveness Pressures

Devinney Timothy M, Midgley David F, and Venaik Sunil

Although the integration-responsiveness framework has been used extensively in the international business and strategy literature, empirical validation of the framework has largely focussed on the strategy and structure of MNCs in response to the environmental pressures confronted by the firm. There have been few attempts to directly investigate the characteristics of the diverse environmental pressures confronted by multinational firms as they conduct their value creating activities worldwide. In this study, we propose five factors to examine in detail the characteristics of the integration-responsiveness pressures. These are depth, dimensionality, direction, distinctiveness and dynamic. Using data from MNC subsidiaries, we empirically test the nature of the environmental pressures that impact on MNC strategy and organisation. Based on our findings, we propose an alternative representation of the integration responsiveness framework that is more meaningful, useful and consistent with the contemporary behavior of MNCs than the current framework. In particular, the alternative representation isolates the issues of strategy and structure from that of the business environment and overcomes the recurrent problem of confounding among these concepts in the literature. Second, the proposed IR framework better captures the trade-off between integration and responsiveness that needs to be managed to operate global businesses. Finally, in contrast with the current IR framework wherein the environmental pressures are a priori classified as GI or LR thus making the framework static and rigid, the alternative framework is dynamic and flexible as it allows the pressures to be classified as GI, LR or both contingent upon the nature of the business, firm, function, task, country and customer segments, and over time.

Read More
IIMA