Analytical Issues in Trade, Development and Finance Essays in Honour of Biswajit Chatterjee /

The book’s 30 chapters are divided into three sections – international trade, economic development, macroeconomics and finance – and focus on the frontier issues in each. Section I addresses analytical issues relating to trade-environment linkage, capital accumulation for pollution abatement, possib...

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Corporate Author: SpringerLink (Online service)
Other Authors: Ghosh, Ambar Nath. (Editor, http://id.loc.gov/vocabulary/relators/edt), Karmakar, Asim K. (Editor, http://id.loc.gov/vocabulary/relators/edt)
Language:English
Published: New Delhi : Springer India : Imprint: Springer, 2014.
Edition:1st ed. 2014.
Series:India Studies in Business and Economics,
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1007/978-81-322-1650-6
Table of Contents:
  • Section I: International Trade
  • Chapter 1: Trade-Environment Linkage: A South-centric Model-specific Analysis
  • Chapter 2: Accumulation of Capital for Pollution Abatement and Immizerizing Growth: A Theoretical Result for Developing Economies
  • Chapter 3: Optimal Entry Mode for Multinationals with Possibility of Technology Diffusion
  • Chapter 4: An Example of Innovation Inducing Tariff Protection
  • Chapter 5: Import Restriction, Capital Accumulation   and Use of Child Labour: A General Equilibrium Analysis
  • Chapter 6: Direction of Trade, Exchange Rate Regimes and Financial Crises: The Indian Case
  • Chapter 7: Global Crisis, Financial Institutions and Reforms: An Indian Perspective
  • Chapter 8: Global Capital Flows & Payments Imbalances
  • Section II: Development
  • Chapter 9: Widespread Poverty Amidst High Economic Growth: Some Lessons from South Asia
  • Chapter 10: Development Dividend of Peace: Experience of South Asia
  • Chapter 11: Well-Being in Human Development Framework : Constituents and Aggregation
  • Chapter 12: Human Capital Accumulation, Environmental Quality, Taxation and Endogenous Growth
  • Chapter 13: Labour Supply Schedule of the Poor: A Commonsense Approach
  • Chapter 14: Switching as an Investment Strategy: Revisiting Parrondo’s Paradox
  • Chapter 15: Asymmetric Information, Non-Cooperative Games and Impatient Agents: Modeling the failure of Environmental Awareness Campaigns
  • Chapter 16: Government’s Role in Controlling Food Inflation
  • Chapter 17: Inter-State Variations in Levels & Growth of Industry: Trends During the Last Three Decades
  • Chapter 18: Unit Root and Structural Break: Experience from the Indian Service Sector
  • Chapter 19: Infrastructure Development and Regional Growth in India
  • Chapter 20: The Phenomenon of Wasted Vote in the Parliamentary Elections of India
  • Section III: Macroeconomics and Finance
  • Chapter 21: Monetary Policy and Crisis
  • Chapter 22: An Effective Demand Model of Corporate Leverage & Recession
  • Chapter 23: Empirical Evidence on the Relationship between Stock Market Development & Economic Growth: A Cross-Country Exploration in Asia
  • Chapter 24: Financial Development in India: An Empirical Test of the McKinnon-Shaw Model
  • Chapter 25: Dynamics of Indian Stock Market
  • Chapter 26: Analysis of Revenue Efficiency: Empirical Study of Indian Non-Life Insurance Companies
  • Chapter 27: Empirics on Fiscal Smoothing : Some Econometric Evidence for the Indian Economy
  • Chapter 28: Index of Financial Inclusion: Some Empirical Results
  • Chapter 29: The Causal linkage between FDI and Current Account Balance in India: An Econometric Study in the Presence of Endogenous Structural Breaks
  • Chapter 30: Contagious Financial Crises in the Recent Past and Their Implications for India.