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: In this article, Mishra and Subramanian proposed a measure to explain group-differential which is sensitive to levels in the sense that a given hiatus at lower levels of failure (or higher levels of attainment) is considered worse off.
Abstract: In a recent paper, Mishra and Subramanian (2006) propose a measure to explain group-differential which is sensitive to levels in the sense that a given hiatus at lower levels of failure (or higher levels of attainment) is considered worse off. This article critically evaluates their method – refines their two axioms, adds an additional axiom of normalization and proposes an alternative which is more general. It proposes to reduce subjectivity when there is lower hiatus at lower levels of failure and also addresses scenarios when rank ordering of sub-groups will be reversed. Empirical illustration with infant mortality rate data for selected Indian states is also provided.
14 citations
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TL;DR: In this article, the strategic nature of choice of environmental standards considering both local and global pollution under alternative regimes of international trade is analyzed and compared and contrasted with the strategic equilibrium environmental standards and levels of pollution with the world optimum levels.
14 citations
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TL;DR: In this article, the authors explore the linkages between energy efficiency, sustainable development, and climate change in India using the household sector as a case-study, and look at the prospects of these "options" against the backdrop of the CDM, the financial incentives for investors in the form of CERs and the possibility of trading cERs in the international markets.
14 citations
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TL;DR: A stochastic bottleneck transportation problem is formulated and an algorithm based on a parametric programming approach is developed to solve it, and a trade-off analysis between the transportation time target and the total cost is given.
Abstract: In this paper, a stochastic bottleneck transportation problem, which aims at minimizing the transportation time target subject to a chance constraint, is formulated and an algorithm based on a parametric programming approach is developed to solve it. Further, assuming the transportation costs to be deterministic, a trade-off analysis between the transportation time target and the total cost is given. In addition, methods are developed which give the whole spectrum of optimal solutions to the problems mentioned above. The algorithms are illustrated by numerical examples. The computational complexity of the algorithms is also discussed.
14 citations
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TL;DR: This paper showed that monetary stimulus preceding a supply shock can abort inflation at minimum output cost, since of the appreciation of exchange rates, accompanying a fall in interest rates and rise in output.
Abstract: An open economy macromodel, calibrated to typical institutions and shocks of a populous emerging market economy, shows that a monetary stimulus preceding a supply shock can abort inflation at minimum output cost, since of the appreciation of exchange rates, accompanying a fall in interest rates and rise in output. Analytic results obtained for two periods are generalized through simulations and validated through estimation. One instrument achieves both domestic output and exchange rate objectives, partly since it creates correct incentives for foreign exchange traders. Strategic interactions imply supporting institutions are required to coordinate monetary, fiscal policy, and markets to the optimal equilibrium.
14 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 |