15 research outputs found

    A study on small business enterprises in Bangladesh : searching for growth factors and obstacles

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    Small businesses are the heart of the market-based economy with their business operations in rural and urban areas of developed and developing countries. In Bangladesh, small business enterprises are playing a significant role by contributing to the production and services, employmnet and thereby to GDP. But these are found to face servere competition and different types of constraints. As a result, these have not achieved substantial growth. In view of this, the present study is primarily aimed at identifying factors and obstacles that influence the growth of SBEs. Finally, the paper suggests some policy measures which are expected to excel the growth of SBEs

    Human resource development practices in Bangladesh : a study of selected business enterprises

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    Human Resource Development (HRD) has been an important issue in the socio-economic arena in Bangladesh.  Human resource development is directly related to the corporate goal.  An effective human resouce management practice is required for the accomplishment of corporate goal.  Besides, business enterprises cannot keep pace in the changing world without human resource development.  In view of the situation, reserachers are interested to undertake the present study to evaluate the human resource management practices in some select enterprises in Bangladesh.  The study attempts to analyse (i) the factors considered in selecting trainers.  Eventuallu after analyzing these factors, the paper would suggest some policy implications for the effective exercise of human resource management practices in Bangladesh

    Measuring efficiency of Japanese banks : a qualitative and quantitative approach

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    Low-frequency volatility of yen interest rate swap market in relation to macroeconomic risk

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    Using ‘low-frequency’ volatility extracted from aggregate volatility shocks in interest rate swap (hereafter, IRS) market, this paper investigates whether Japanese yen IRS volatility can be explained by macroeconomic risks. The analysis suggests that this low-frequency yen IRS volatility has strong and positive association with most of the macroeconomic risk proxies (e.g., volatility of consumer price index, industrial production volatility, foreign exchange volatility, slope of the term structure and money supply) with the exception of the unemployment rate, which is negatively related to IRS volatility. This finding is fairly consistent with the argument that the greater the macroeconomic risk the greater is the use of derivative instruments to hedge or speculate. The relationship between the macroeconomic risks and IRS volatility varies slightly across the different swap maturities but is robust to alternative volatility specifications. This linkage between swap market and macroeconomy has practical implications since market makers and hedgers use the swap rate as benchmark for pricing long-term interest rates, corporate bonds and various other securities

    Linking the interest rate swap markets to the macroeconomic risk:The UK and US evidence

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    In this paper we aim to link the volatility of interest rate swap (hereafter, IRS) markets to the macroeconomic risk/uncertainty of the UK and the US. In doing so, we obtain the low-frequency volatility of IRS using a recently developed Asymmetric Spline GARCH (ASP-GARCH) model of Rangel and Engle (2012). Our findings suggest a strong relationship between uncertainties of macroeconomic fundamentals and the fluctuation in swap market volatility. The association between the two is robust with respect to the choice of different alternative measures of volatility that are used in the literature on GARCH modelling. From the perspectives of practical implications, the findings suggest that policy makers should use low-frequency volatility in order to examine market responses to key macroeconomic policies, and that market participants may rely on low-frequency volatility to extract trading signals. Using such signals, hedgers could make forecast of whether they need to increase (decrease) IRS usage to hedge risk originating from macroeconomic uncertainty
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