Institution
Indira Gandhi Institute of Development Research
Facility•Mumbai, Maharashtra, India•
About: Indira Gandhi Institute of Development Research is a facility organization based out in Mumbai, Maharashtra, India. It is known for research contribution in the topics: Monetary policy & Inflation. The organization has 307 authors who have published 1021 publications receiving 18848 citations.
Papers published on a yearly basis
Papers
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TL;DR: Uttarakhand attained the status of the 27th state of the Republic of India to secure its independent pursuit of growth and development as mentioned in this paper, and identified the dimensions and defines some measu...
Abstract: Uttarakhand attained the status of the 27th state of the Republic of India to secure its independent pursuit of growth and development. This article identifies the dimensions and defines some measu...
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TL;DR: In this paper, the authors tried to find the existence of wage spillovers, if any, in Indian manufacturing, and they carried out their analysis for an unbalanced firm-level panel dataset for six two-digit industries.
Abstract: Demand for skilled labour from multinational firms is also high which might lead to movement of skilled labour from domestic firms. To prevent such movement domestic firms might feel the pressure to increase their wages. Also, productivity spillovers from foreign firms may increase productivity of domestic firms and possibly wages given in domestic firms. On the other hand, inflows of foreign firms can lead to lower scale of production and lower productivity in domestic firms, either of which could result in lower wages in domestic firms. This raises the following question i.e. are the wages offered by domestic firms to their labour affected by the presence of foreign firms. In this paper we try to answer this question by trying to find the existence of wage spillovers, if any, in Indian manufacturing. We carry out our analysis for an unbalanced firm-level panel dataset for six two digit industries. We find some evidence for positive wage spillover in three industries.
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TL;DR: In this article, the authors addressed the question of how pricing policies can improve the utilization of existing production capacities and developed an optimizing input-output model for the Indian economy where the government's objective is to maximize growth subject to capacity constraints, and the optimal prices are related to the Keynesian income multipliers associated with increases in the consumption of goods.
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TL;DR: The authors developed a simple multiplier-accelerator model of a market economy, where the strength of the accelerator relationship between current investment and past output depends on the state of the economy.
Abstract: The paper develops a simple multiplier-accelerator model of a market economy, where the strength of the accelerator relationship between current investment and past output depends on the state of the economy. It is found that the greater the values of the multiplier and the accelerator, the more persistent and aperiodic («chaotic») would be the cyclical behaviour of the economy.
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TL;DR: In this paper, the authors derive country ranks using disaggregated Indian import data over 1991-2005 using the intuition that developed countries would export more advanced goods to India earlier than other countries.
Abstract: We derive country ranks using disaggregated Indian import data over 1991-2005 using the intuition that developed countries would export more advanced goods to India earlier than other countries. We find that, consistent with theory, the degree of innovation is a significant determinant of our ranks.
Authors
Showing all 320 results
Name | H-index | Papers | Citations |
---|---|---|---|
Seema Sharma | 129 | 1565 | 85446 |
S.G. Deshmukh | 56 | 183 | 11566 |
Rangan Banerjee | 48 | 289 | 8882 |
Kankar Bhattacharya | 46 | 217 | 8205 |
Ramakrishnan Ramanathan | 43 | 130 | 6938 |
Satya R. Chakravarty | 34 | 144 | 5322 |
Kunal Sen | 33 | 251 | 3820 |
Raghbendra Jha | 31 | 335 | 3396 |
Jyoti K. Parikh | 31 | 110 | 3518 |
Sajal Ghosh | 30 | 72 | 7161 |
Tirthankar Roy | 25 | 180 | 2618 |
B. Sudhakara Reddy | 24 | 75 | 1892 |
Vinish Kathuria | 23 | 96 | 1991 |
P. Balachandra | 22 | 65 | 2514 |
Kaivan Munshi | 22 | 62 | 5402 |