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.
Topics: Monetary policy, Inflation, Interest rate, Poverty, Emerging markets
Papers published on a yearly basis
Papers
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TL;DR: In this paper, the authors show that the number of vehicles in Indian cities could increase along an S-shaped pattern with population and that such a pattern of growth can lead to a number of problems, such as: (1) India has several small but growing towns that will witness a rapid growth in the number as they grow, and (2) the vehicular increase in India has so far been dominated by personalised modes that are not energy-efficient and environmentally benign.
18 citations
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TL;DR: In this article, panel unit root tests show that intranational purchasing power parity cannot be rejected across major Australian cities from 1972:3 to 1999:1 and that the persistence of deviations in response to shocks is low, as measured by the estimated exact half-life of between five and ten quarters.
Abstract: Panel unit root tests show that intranational purchasing power parity cannot be rejected across major Australian cities from 1972:3 to 1999:1. The persistence of deviations in response to shocks is low, as measured by the estimated exact half-life of between five and ten quarters. This is much lower than results for similar tests done on US cities, and for international purchasing power parity tests. The food CPI is largely responsible for the fast convergent results for city CPIs. Intranational purchasing power parity was rejected for the floating exchange rate period from 1984 to 1991 when inflation was high and not specifically targeted by the central bank.
18 citations
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TL;DR: In this article, the authors have shown that a room of length 3.5 m, breadth 3.4 m and height 3.14 m would lead to about 6 tonnes of CO 2 emissions if constructed at the minimum possible cost, which is distributed as follows: foundation, walls, 46, roof, 16, floor, 4.8, and plastering.
18 citations
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TL;DR: In this paper, a quantitative assessment of the impact of recently signed ASEAN-India FTA (AIFTA) for selected plantation commodities (coffee, tea and pepper) in India is presented.
Abstract: The present study attempts a quantitative assessment of the impact of recently signed ASEAN-India FTA (AIFTA) for selected plantation commodities (coffee, tea and pepper) in India. Partial equilibrium modeling approach (SMART model and gravity model) is used to simulate the likely import increase of the plantation commodities under the proposed tariff reduction schedule of the AIFTA.
18 citations
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TL;DR: In this article, the effects of trade barriers and multinationals on the intensity of intra-industry trade (IIT) in a panel of Indian manufacturing industries from 1988 to 1999 were analyzed.
Abstract: The article analyses the effects of trade barriers and multinationals on the intensity of intra-industry trade (IIT) in a panel of Indian manufacturing industries from 1988 to 1999. We find that the intensity of IIT increases with the reduction of trade barriers. This is expected as greater competition from imports leads individual plants in the domestic industry to specialize in the manufacturing of unique varieties. The analysis suggests that horizontal (market seeking) multinational activities in the domestic industries exert a negative influence on IIT. This is consistent with the view that horizontal multinationals displace exports to the host country. At the same time, our results indicate that IIT will be stimulated to the extent that the entry of multinationals induces intra-industry specialization. We also analyse the role of product differentiation and plant level scale economies in determining IIT.
18 citations
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 |