Institution
Indian Institute of Management Bangalore
Education•Bengaluru, Karnataka, India•
About: Indian Institute of Management Bangalore is a education organization based out in Bengaluru, Karnataka, India. It is known for research contribution in the topics: Emerging markets & Corporate governance. The organization has 491 authors who have published 1254 publications receiving 23853 citations. The organization is also known as: IIMB.
Papers published on a yearly basis
Papers
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TL;DR: A heuristic version of the exact aggregation-disaggregation theory for finite Markov chains is developed here for performance evaluation of these closed Kanban-controlled assembly systems.
6 citations
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01 Jan 2016TL;DR: In this paper, the authors examined the impact of India's trade liberalization on firm-level performance in terms of profitability, sales revenues, and imports of raw material for different subsectors of the textile industry over the 2000-2009 period.
Abstract: The textile industry is one of India’s major industries in terms of output, investment, and employment. It accounted for 4 % of India’s GDP, 14 % of total industrial production, and 11 % of total export earnings in 2012. The industry employs around 45 million people, second only to agriculture. A wide range of textile products are produced and exported from India. Exports of most textile products registered high growth during the 2005–2009 period. The industry and its various subsectors have also experienced a significant reduction in domestic tariff and nontariff barriers over the last decade in addition to liberalization in the global market following the phasing out of the MFA. This chapter examines the impact of India’s trade liberalization on firm-level performance in terms of profitability, sales revenues, and imports of raw material for different subsectors of India’s textile industry over the 2000–2009 period. It makes use of firm-level panel data from the CMIE−Prowess database to determine this impact. It also analyzes how this impact has been influenced by various firm-specific characteristics. The main finding from this analysis is that there has been an improvement in firm-level profitability and sales and an increase in imported raw materials due to domestic trade liberalization. The analysis also shows that the effect has been stronger through the input sourcing channel, mainly due to the removal of quantitative restrictions on inputs used by the textile industry and that larger firms have been able to gain more from trade liberalization. The analysis and methodology used for the textile industry can be used in similar firm-level studies for other important industries in India.
6 citations
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01 Dec 2011TL;DR: A review and synthesis of the studies that have examined the phenomenon of innovation from a social network perspective can be found in this paper, where the current state of the literature, gaps and future research direction are discussed.
Abstract: Innovation has been studied from several different perspectives. Since innovation has increasingly become a nonlinear, interactive and open activity, social network analysis provides a handy tool to examine this phenomenon. This paper aims to review and synthesize the studies that have examined the phenomenon of innovation from a social network perspective. The current state of the literature, gaps and future research direction are discussed.
6 citations
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6 citations
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01 Oct 2007
TL;DR: It is shown that the measures proposed could help aspiring students identify research advisors with proven mentoring skills and help in stratification of researchers with similar ranks based on typical indices like publication and citation counts while being independent of their direct influences.
Abstract: Researchers are assessed from a researcher-centric perspective - by quantifying a researcher's contribution to the field. Citation and publication counts are some typical examples. We propose a student-centric measure to assess researchers on their mentoring abilities. Our approach quantifies benefits bestowed by researchers upon their students by characterizing the publication dynamics of research advisor-student interactions in author collaboration networks. We show that our measures could help aspiring students identify research advisors with proven mentoring skills. Our measures also help in stratification of researchers with similar ranks based on typical indices like publication and citation counts while being independent of their direct influences.
6 citations
Authors
Showing all 531 results
Name | H-index | Papers | Citations |
---|---|---|---|
Kannan Raghunandan | 49 | 100 | 10439 |
Saras D. Sarasvathy | 41 | 109 | 14815 |
Asha George | 35 | 156 | 4227 |
Dasaratha V. Rama | 32 | 67 | 4592 |
Raghbendra Jha | 31 | 335 | 3396 |
Gita Sen | 30 | 57 | 3550 |
Jayant R. Kale | 26 | 67 | 3534 |
Randall Hansen | 23 | 41 | 2299 |
Pulak Ghosh | 23 | 92 | 1763 |
M. R. Rao | 23 | 52 | 2326 |
Suneeta Krishnan | 20 | 49 | 2234 |
Ranji Vaidyanathan | 19 | 77 | 1646 |
Mukta Kulkarni | 19 | 45 | 1785 |
Haritha Saranga | 19 | 42 | 1523 |
Janat Shah | 19 | 52 | 1767 |