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 & Context (language use). 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: In this article, the authors used a panel error correction model to determine country-level factors affecting chronic respiratory disease (CRD) mortality using data from the Global Burden of Disease Study 2017.
Abstract: Chronic Respiratory Diseases (CRDs) in Asian countries are a growing concern in terms of morbidity and mortality. However, a systematic understanding of the increasing age-adjusted mortality rate of chronic respiratory disease (CRD) and its associated factors is not readily available for many Asian countries. We aimed to determine country-level factors affecting CRD mortality using a panel error correction model. Based on data from the Global Burden of Disease Study 2017, we estimated the trends and distribution of CRD mortality for selected Asian countries from 2010 to 2017. Furthermore, we evaluated the relationship between CRD mortality and Gross Domestic Product (GDP) per capita, average years of schooling, urbanization, and pollutant emission (PM2.5 concentration) using a fixed-effect model. We corrected the estimates for heteroscedasticity and autocorrelation through Prais-Winsten adjustment along with robust standard error. Between 2010 and 2017, approximately 21.4 million people died from chronic respiratory diseases in the countries studied. Age-standardized crude mortality rate from CRDs in the period had minimum and maximum values of 8.19 (Singapore in 2016) and 155.42 (North Korea in 2010) per 100,000 population, respectively. The coefficients corrected for autocorrelation and heteroskedasticity based on the final model of our study (Prais-Winsten), showed that all explanatory variables were statistically significant (p < 0.001). The model shows that the 1% increase in GDP per capita results in a 20% increase (0.203) in the CRD mortality rate and that a higher concentration of air pollution is also positively associated with the CRD deaths (0.00869). However, an extra year of schooling reduces the mortality rate by 4.79% (− 0.0479). Further, rate of urbanization is negatively associated with the CRD death rate (− 0.0252). Our results indicate that both socioeconomic and environmental factors impact CRD mortality rates. Mortality due to CRD increases with rising GDP per capita and decreases with the percentage of the total population residing in urban areas. Further, mortality increases with greater exposure to PM2.5. Also, higher years of schooling mitigate rising CRD mortality rates, showing that education can act as a safety net against CRD mortality. These results are an outcome of sequential adjustments in the final model specification to correct for heteroscedasticity and autocorrelation.
17 citations
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TL;DR: This study identifies important factors that will enable law enforcement agencies to reach the first step in effective prosecution, namely charge-sheeting of the cybercrime cases.
Abstract: With increased access to computers across the world, cybercrime is becoming a major challenge to law enforcement agencies. Cybercrime investigation in India is in its infancy and there has been limited success in prosecuting the offenders; therefore, a need to understand and strengthen the existing investigation methods and systems for controlling cybercrimes is greatly needed. This study identifies important factors that will enable law enforcement agencies to reach the first step in effective prosecution, namely charge-sheeting of the cybercrime cases. Data on 300 cybercrime cases covering a number of demographic, technical and other variables related to cybercrime was analyzed using data mining techniques to identify and prioritize various factors leading to filing of the charge-sheet. These factors and the respective priority rankings are used to suggest various policy measures for improving the success rate of prosecution of cybercrimes.
17 citations
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TL;DR: In this article, the authors examined the value relevance of CFS in India through an empirical study and examined the relationship between market values and consolidated earnings and parent-only earnings and found that annual CFS are not value relevant, whereas annual parent•only financial statements are value relevant.
Abstract: Purpose – India is one of the few countries where companies are required to give both consolidated financial statements (CFS) as well as parent‐only financial statements. While parent‐only statements have been in existence for a long time, CFS was introduced recently. The purpose of this paper is to examine the value relevance of CFS in India.Design/methodology/approach – The value relevance of CFS is examined through an empirical study. The study examines the relationship between market values and consolidated earnings and parent‐only earnings is analysed. The study uses four years data of 59 companies whose subsidiary earnings are more than 20 per cent of consolidated revenue.Findings – Initial results show that annual CFS are not value relevant, whereas annual parent‐only financial statements are value relevant. However, wherever quarterly financial statements are available, CFC are found to be value relevant and parent‐only financial statements are not value relevant.Practical implications – While CFS...
17 citations
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TL;DR: In this article, it is recognized by policy-makers in most countries that SMEs need special help for their survival and growth and that such help was offered by way of facilitating the external environment. But such facilitation will be effective only if SMEs have the internal capabilities for taking advantage of the external facilitation.
Abstract: While small and medium sized enterprises (SMEs) are acknowledged by researchers and policy-makers alike as the major source of vitality in an economy, they are also found to be extremely vulnerable especially to the vagaries and turbulences of the external environment. It is therefore recognized by policy-makers in most countries that SMEs need special help for their survival and growth. Traditionally such help was offered by way of facilitating the external environment. Such facilitation will be effective only if the SMEs have the internal capabilities for taking advantage of the external facilitation. This is why the experiments with external facilitation have not met with much success especially in developing countries, where SMEs are inherently weaker than their counterparts in developed countries. Strengthening the internal capabilities of SMEs therefore has become a top priority nowadays and is positioned as an alternative or supplementary strategy for SME development. Training is recognized as an i...
17 citations
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TL;DR: In this paper, a simple theoretical model is presented to demonstrate that better mutual fund managers make larger investments in the important supplier/customer industries related to the main industry, and empirical tests on a large sample of mutual funds show that investment in related industries is positively associated with fund performance and plays a more significant role in explaining fund performance.
Abstract: Mutual funds typically invest a disproportionately large portion of their portfolio in one industry (main industry). We present a simple theoretical model to demonstrate that better mutual fund managers make larger investments in the important supplier/customer industries related to the main industry. Consistent with our theory, empirical tests on a large sample of mutual funds show that investment in related industries is positively associated with fund performance and plays a more significant role in explaining fund performance than investment in the main industry. Furthermore, the positive relation between main investment and fund performance obtains only when related investment is high. Copyright 2013, Oxford University Press.
17 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 |