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Institution

Indian Institute of Management Tiruchirappalli

EducationTiruchchirappalli, India
About: Indian Institute of Management Tiruchirappalli is a education organization based out in Tiruchchirappalli, India. It is known for research contribution in the topics: Emerging markets & Context (language use). The organization has 47 authors who have published 105 publications receiving 1694 citations. The organization is also known as: IIM Trichy.

Papers published on a yearly basis

Papers
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Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors study competition and collaboration between an OEM and remanufacturer under subscription-based contracts and analyze the strategic decisions of the players in these contracts, and find that the collection effort of the remanufacturers under the lump-sum pay and per-unit fee contract is lower than the case of competition (base case), whereas the collecting effort is higher under the revenue sharing and lump sum pay contract (under certain bounds).

14 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: This theory-driven, exploratory study proposes and tests a rare event logistic regression model for using mobile money services in India and shows that the ownership of a SIM card, income and ownership ofA bank account, awareness of mobileMoney services, age and gender, and location of residence significantly inhibit the use of mobilemoney services.
Abstract: Since the application of mobile technology for financial services can contribute to the economic development of developing countries, it is critical to examine the inhibitors to using mobile money ...

14 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors make a distinction between firm-level and business group-level diversification, arguing that business groups dominate the landscape in emerging economies and are known to diversify either by expanding the scope of existing affiliate firms and/or setting up new firms.
Abstract: The viability of unrelated diversification as a strategy in emerging economies is an unresolved puzzle. Because business groups dominate the landscape in these economies, and are known to diversify either by expanding the scope of existing affiliate firms and/or setting up new firms, we argue that it is important to make a distinction between firm‐level and business group‐level diversification. The results of our study covering the 15‐year period following India’s economic liberalization confirm our thesis. Whereas all firms, including business group affiliates, reduced unrelated scope to negotiate product and capital market pressures, business groups took advantage of the opportunity‐rich, post‐reform environment to enter into new unrelated businesses by setting up new affiliates. Our findings echo suggestions that as institutions strengthen, the locus of unrelated diversification moves away from managers of public corporations to entities with different types of ownership structures. We present the business group as one such ownership structure.

13 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: There is a larger digital divide in terms of mobile phone usage in Asian countries when compared to African countries and the study recommends that policymakers and international agencies exercise caution while developing one-size-fits-all cross-country policies to address the multi-level digital divide.
Abstract: Mobile phones are the most accessible information and communication technology today, and they serve as the gateway to high-speed internet for large populations in developing economies. However, despite the progress, there remains a persistent disparity in mobile phone usage among users, and between users and non-users, in developing countries. However, the literature on the digital divide has paid limited attention to the multi-level nature of this gap in mobile phone adoption and use, particularly in developing countries. This research paper provides a comparative analysis of this divide in mobile phone usage in eight developing nations from Africa and Asia. Broadly, the study categorises individuals into three groups: mobile phone non-users, mobile phone users who do not use internet applications and mobile phone users who use applications that need internet access. The disparity between these users was analysed using micro-level survey data from each country. The study results show that the nature of the divide varies across countries and that the influence of socio-demographic factors is not consistent. Further, we find that there is a larger digital divide in terms of mobile phone usage in Asian countries when compared to African countries. The study recommends that policymakers and international agencies exercise caution while developing one-size-fits-all cross-country policies to address the multi-level digital divide.

12 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, the authors investigate the motivations for Indian firms to invest in tax havens and find that the motivations are not only driven by the benefits of tax avoidance and secrecy of these jurisdictions, but also to seek strategic advantage and efficiency gains in global markets.
Abstract: Little is known about the drivers of corporate investments in tax havens from emerging markets. This paper offers extensive descriptive statistics and regression analysis to illustrate the patterns and motivations for tax haven investments by Indian firms over the 2007–2017 period. We find that the motivations for Indian firms to invest in tax havens are not only driven by the benefits of tax avoidance and secrecy of these jurisdictions, but also to seek strategic advantage and efficiency gains in global markets.

11 citations


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Performance
Metrics
No. of papers from the Institution in previous years
YearPapers
20233
202123
202015
201921
201815
201710