1,626 research outputs found

    Mother or Motherland: Can a Government Have an Impact on Educational Attainment of the Population? Preliminary Evidence from India

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    In this paper, using data from the 61st round of the (Indian) National Sample Survey, we examine the relative impacts of personal-household and state-level characteristics (including government policy) on the likelihood of transition from one educational level to the next. Our analysis suggests that the most important factors driving these transition likelihoods are personal and household characteristics like gender and education of household heads. However, state-level characteristics and government policies have a significant impact on these transition likelihoods as well, especially for transitions from the lowest levels of education to somewhat higher levels. The odds of making the transition to higher education, especially tertiary education, are systematically lower for women than for men, for individuals in rural areas than those in urban areas, and for Muslims than for Hindus. An important conclusion of our analysis is that there is significant scope for government policy to address educational gaps between various demographic and other groups in the country.educational attainment, likelihood of transition, government policy

    Good and Bad Institutions: Is the Debate Over? Cross-Country Firm-Level Evidence from the Textile Industry

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    Using firm-level data from nine developing countries we demonstrate that (a) certain institutions like restrictive labour market regulations that are considered to be bad for economic growth might be beneficial for production efficiency, whereas (b) good business environment which is considered to be beneficial for economic growth might have an adverse impact on production efficiency. We argue that our results suggest that the debate about the implications of institutional quality is far from being over, and classification of institutions into "good" and "bad" might be premature.institutional quality, production efficiency, stochastic frontier model

    Impact of Reforms on Plant-Level Productivity and Technical Efficiency: Evidence from the Indian Manufacturing Sector

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    It is generally believed that the structural reforms that usher in competition and force companies to become more efficient were introduced later in India following the macroeconomic crisis in 1991. However, whether the post-1991 growth is an outcome of more efficient use of resources or greater use of factor inputs, especially capital, remains an open empirical question. In this paper, we use plant-level data from 1989-90 and 2000-01 to address this question. Our results indicate that while there was an increase in the productivity of factor inputs during the 1990s, most of the growth in value added is explained by growth in the use of factor inputs. We also find that median technical efficiency declined in all but one of the industries between the two years, and change in technical efficiency explains a very small proportion in the change in gross value added.efficiency, growth decomposition, productivity, manufacturing

    Biofuel Subsidies: An Open-Economy Analysis

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    We present a general equilibrium analysis of biofuel subsidies in an open-economy context. In the small-country case, when a Pigouvian tax on conventional fuels such as crude is in place, the optimal biofuel subsidy is zero. When the tax on crude is not available as a policy option, however, a second-best biofuel subsidy (or tax) is optimal. In the large-country case, the optimal tax on crude departs from its standard Pigouvian level and a biofuel subsidy is optimal. A biofuel subsidy spurs global demand for food and confers a terms-of-trade benefit to the food-exporting nation. This might encourage the food-exporting nation to use a subsidy even if it raises global crude use. The food importer has no such incentive for subsidization. Terms-of-trade effects wash out between trading nations; hence, any policy intervention by the two trading nations that raises crude use must be jointly suboptimal.optimal biofuel subsidy, Pigouvian tax, terms-of-trade, pollution externality

    Does Institutional Quality Affect Firm Performance? Insights from a Semiparametric Approach

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    Using a novel modeling approach, and cross-country firm level data for the textiles industry, we examine the impact of institutional quality on firm performance. Our methodology allows us to estimate the marginal impact of institutional quality on productivity of each firm. Our results bring into question conventional wisdom about the desirable characteristics of market institutions, which is based on empirical evidence about the impact of institutional quality on the average firm. We demonstrate, for example, that once both the direct impact of a change in institutional quality on total factor productivity and the indirect impact through changes in efficiency of use of factor inputs are taken into account, an increase in labor market rigidity may have a positive impact on firm output, at least for some firms. We also demonstrate that there are significant intra-country variations in the marginal impact of institutional quality, such that the characteristics of "winners" and "losers" will have to be taken into account before policy is introduced to change institutional quality in any direction.institutional quality, firm performance, marginal effect, textiles industry

    Mother or motherland: Can a government have an impact on educational attainment of the population? Preliminary evidence from India

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    In this paper, using data from the 61st round of the (Indian) National Sample Survey, we examine the relative impacts of personal-household and state-level characteristics (including government policy) on the likelihood of transition from one educational level to the next. Our analysis suggests that the most important factors driving these transition likelihoods are personal and household characteristics like gender and education of household heads.http://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/132999/1/wp987.pd

    Isolation and characterization of adenosine kinase from Leishmania donovani

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    Adenosine kinase (ATP:adenosine 5'-phosphotransferase, EC 2.7.1.20) has been purified 3250-fold from Leishmania donovani promastigotes using ion-exchange, gel filtration, and affinity chromatography techniques. Both native and sodium dodecyl sulfate-gel electrophoresis of the enzyme revealed a single polypeptide of around 38,000 molecular weight. Biophysical and biochemical analyses of the enzyme reveal unique characteristics different from those of adenosine kinases from other eukaryotic sources. The isoelectric pH of the enzyme is 8.8. In native acrylamide gels the enzyme moves with an RF of about 0.62. The enzyme displays a maximum activity at pH between 7.5 and 8.5 and is dependent upon an optimum ATP/Mg2+ ratio. ATP at high concentration inhibits the reaction. Adenosine and Mg2+ are not inhibitory. EDTA completely knocks off the activity. Enzyme activity is dependent upon the presence of active thiol group(s) at or near the active center. Under a defined set of conditions the enzyme exhibited an apparent Km for adenosine and ATP of 33 and 50 microM, respectively. Of the nucleoside triphosphates tested ATP and GTP were the most effective phosphate donors. Marginal inhibition of activity was detected with other nucleosides as competitors. However, adenosine analogs, such as 7-deaza-adenosine (tubercidin) and 6-methylmercaptopurine riboside at very low concentrations, were found to be excellent inhibitors and substrates as well. S-Adenosylhomocysteine does not inhibit the reaction even at very high concentration

    Disappearance of stilostomella lepidula (schwager) across the mid-pleistocene transition and its paleoceanographic implication

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    Stilostomella lepidula (Schwager), an infaunal benthic foraminifer, is an important component of the deepsea environment, showing wide geographical distribution and variation in test morphology. The ecological preference and timing of its disappearance across the mid-Pleistocene Transition (MPT) is widely debated. To understand the ecological preference, and timing and cause(s) of disappearance of S. lepidula, we analysed Neogene record of this taxon from Ocean Drilling Programme and Deep Sea Drilling Project sites located at bathyal to abyssal depths in the Atlantic and Indian oceans. Population plots of this species at various sites reveal that this taxon showed a substantial increase during the warm late Oligocene to the middle Miocene and suffered a major decline across the middle Miocene cooling event (15-13 Myr). S. lepidula disappeared at ~0.6 Myr very close to the MPT (0.9-0.8 Myr) from the Indian and Atlantic oceans, coinciding with a change from a 40 to 100 Kyr world with amplified ice-age cycles. We suggest that high-amplitude glacial cycles, frigid deep-water temperatures and strong circulation drove S. lepidula to nearly disappear across the MPT

    Good and bad institutions:is the debate over? Cross-country firm-level evidence from the textile industry

    Get PDF
    Using firm-level data from nine developing countries, we demonstrate that certain institutions, like restrictive labour market regulations, that are considered bad for economic growth might be beneficial for production efficiency, whereas good business environment, which is considered beneficial for economic growth, might have an adverse impact on production efficiency. We argue that our results suggest that there might be significant difference in the macro- and micro-impacts of institutional quality, such that the classification of institutions into 'good' and 'bad might be premature
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