Faculty & Research

Research Productive

Show result

Search Query :
Area :
Search Query :
3721 items in total found

Books | 2020

The financial landscape of emerging Economies.

Aswini Kumar Mishra, Vairam Arunachalam, Sanket Mohapatra and Dennis Olson

Springer

Books | 2020

HR analytics: Connection data and theory

Rama Shankar Yadav and Sunil Maheshwari

Wiley

Books | 2020

Conceptualizing the ubiquity of informal economy work

Errol D'Souza

Springer

Books | 2020

Rebels with a cause: Famous dissenters and why they are not being heard

T.T. Ram Mohan

Penguin Random House

Working Papers | 2020

Enhancing Port Performance: A Case of Jawaharlal Nehru Port Trust

Aman Rathi, Ambesh Pratap Singh, and Sundaravalli Narayanaswami

Ports are critical infrastructure and contribute significantly to international trade. They play a crucial role in connecting developing countries to the global market and boost the business and growth of the economy. This infrastructure is growing and becoming more complex. Hence, there is a demand for performance indicators to measure competitiveness and undertake strategic planning for improving them. Port performance tools can be an internal strategic management tool and benchmarking tool across the network of ports. This study is on evaluating operational efficiency of a port, and application of the approach for Jawaharlal Nehru Port Trust (JNPT) and diagnose and recommend areas of improvement.

Read More

Working Papers | 2020

Public-Private Partnership (PPP) in Indian Railways: Models, Framework, and Policies

K. Sitharamaraju, Santhosh Kumar Beerelli, Saket Anil Yelne, and Sundaravalli Narayanaswami

Indian Railways is the backbone of Indias public transportation network. The Railway Ministry is one of the vital ministries of the Government of India with the mandate to provide economic and efficient rail transportation in India to achieve the twin goals of economic integration and regional development. Based on a detailed study of IR projects and large infrastructure projects in other sectors, we propose certain key recommendations.

Read More

Working Papers | 2020

Pandemics and Historical Mortality in India

Chinmay Tumbe

This paper presents selected historical mortality statistics of India and analyses their characteristics and trends. Statistics are collated from a wide range of sources as time series at different regional scales, and particularly for the pandemics related with cholera, plague and influenza between 1817 and 1920. The paper analyses rare burial records in 19th century Calcutta, constructs the global distribution of deaths due to pandemic cholera in the 19th and early 20th century, and provides new mortality estimates of the 1918 influenza pandemic in India. The paper also presents a bibliography of over 250 studies on pandemics and historical mortality in India.

Read More

Working Papers | 2020

How informative are quantified survey data? Evidence from RBI household inflation expectations survey

Gaurav Kumar Singh

Quantification of the ordinal survey responses on inflation expectations ease and important preliminary step for undertaking further macroeconomic analysis of the data. In this paper, we briefly describe the standard quantification methods along with the underlying assumptions. We also propose two new methods for Quantification. We than apply these methods to quantify the IESH data collected by the Reserve Bank of India (RBI). An interesting fact that emerges from this exercise is simpler quantification methods are found to perform better that more complex methods for IESH data. Also, the methods with time varying weights or time varying thresholds, as the case may be, work significantly better.

Read More

Working Papers | 2020

Expectations formation of household inflation expectations in India

Gaurav Kumar Singh

Inflation expectations data are commonly used to address a number of important questions primarily related to the inflation expectations formation. This work presents such an empirical analysis of Reserve Bank of India's (RBI) inflation expectations data for Indian urban population. First, we apply a battery of tests for verifying the assumptions of rationality of household expectations. The tests lead to the outright rejection of the assumptions. On the other hand, the inflation forecasts by professional forecasters seem to support the rational expectations assumptions. Second, considering a regression model we find that the inflation forecasts by the professionals forecast the actual inflation better than what could be predicted by the recently available actual inflation data. Finally, using a sticky information model (Mankiw Reis (2001, 2002), Carroll (2003)) we also find the support for Carroll's contention that relevant macroeconomic information about future inflation flows from experts to the households, not vice versa. Additionally, if the sticky inflation model describes the household inflation expectations formation, it is natural to expect that more news about inflation in the news channels would lead to the reduction of disagreement. Our empirical analysis using Google trend data supports this hypothesis.

Read More

Working Papers | 2020

Public perception of courts in India: unmeasured gap between the justice system and its beneficiaries

M.P. Ram Mohan, Muhammed K Faisal, Jacob P Alex, and M V Shiju

Understanding how people view the courts and the legal profession helps in identifying some areas of friction, and thereby provides critical insights into the measures needed to improve the working and management of the justice delivery process. This study examines the influence of gender, age, education and court experience on citizens' perception of the Ernakulam District and Sessions Court, Kerala-a state with the highest social indicators in India. Using a total sample of two hundred and fifty (n=250) respondents, the study assessed perception of the court using three attitudinal scales, perception of the court's concern and respect, fair procedure and outcome, and overall perception of the court. A multivariate regression analysis was used to gauge the significance of the influence of each demographic factor and court experience on the respondents' perception of the court. We find respondents with personal experience in courts perceive it negatively; gender has no significant influence on attitudes toward the court; and regardless of their demographic characteristics and court experience, people perceive the court as being too costly and too slow for settling legal disputes.

Read More
IIMA