4,724 research outputs found
The Demand for International Reserves: A Case Study of Pakistan
Reserves-holding policy has been a main area of concern for policy-makers, researchers, and planners since the beginning of the Bretton Woods system. As a result, issues related to the equilibrium of international reserves, its determinants, and the departure from equilibrium have been widely discussed in the debates of economic policy-making. In spite of its importance, no serious attempt has been made to work on the determinants of international reserves in the case of Pakistan. Therefore, we have made an endeavour to determine the long-run and short-run determinants of Pakistan’s international reserves-holding and, hence, we hope to contribute to the literature on reserves in the case of Pakistan. We have also considered the role of monetary disequilibrium in the short-run, along with the other determinants in the explanation of international reserves-holding. In the context of cointegration-error correction framework, we have analysed Pakistan’s reserve demand using the quarterly data over the period 1982:1-2003-2 and found that there exists a stable long-run reserves demand function in the case of Pakistan. The results also confirm the role of domestic monetary disequilibrium for changes in reserves in the short-run
Endogenous Institutional Change and Privileged Groups
Since the recent advances in the institutional perspective of
economic development, there is considerable increase in the literature
on the evolution of institutions. In this study, while employing the
game theoretic approach, we explore the rent-seeking fundamentals of
institutions. We model the manner in which the rent-seeking behaviour of
state actors results in inefficiency of the institutional framework. The
main focus is on the rents provided by the availability of natural
resources wealth, foreign aid or corruption potential. By originating a
framework where rulers, agents of the state, and citizens act
endogenously, we show that the rents from these resources can be a
significant constraint to institutional reforms. In order to come out of
the bad institutions trap, the society needs to offer a substantial
amount of incentives to the privileged groups. The focus is on two
privileged groups, i.e. the rulers and the state agents. In most of the
societies, these two groups have the highest bargaining power in the
negotiations over the rules and institutions. JEL Classification:JEL
Classification: P48, P16, P14, O43, D73 Institutional Reforms, Natural
Resources Wealth, Foreign Aid,Corruption Potential, Rulers, Agents of
the Stat
Serpin Protease Inhibitors and Endogenous Resistance of Tubular Epithelial Cells to Granzyme B Injury
Human serpin protease inhibitor 9 (PI-9) inhibits Granzyme B (GrB) function. However, its role in protection from renal injury is unknown. Tubular epithelial cells (TEC) express serine protease inhibitor 6 (SPI-6), the murine homolog of human PI-9. SPI-6 protein expression increased in response to IFNγ or LPS and detachment stress. This occurred without increased mRNA expression suggesting SPI-6 is post transcriptionally regulated. Cloned TEC were resistant to GrB killing. However in SPI-6 gene silenced TEC, death significantly increased from baseline levels (10.7% + 2.4 to 21.22% + 1, p= 0.0002) when assessed by Annexin V∕7AAD. Kidney SPI-6 protein expression by immuno-histochemistry and western blotting, increased in TEC in vivo following ischemia-reperfusion injury (IRI). Expression of SPI-6 by TEC may provide protection from GrB producing cytotoxic CD8+T and NK cells, which are involved in IRI and rejection. Therefore, augmenting or maintaining SPI-6∕PI-9 expression by TEC may promote long term allograft survival
Understanding a novice teacher’s learning to teach in a private school for girls in Karachi, Pakistan
This paper reports the findings of a qualitative case study conducted in order to understand the learning experiences of a novice primary school teacher, Sajda (pseudonym), who was teaching in a private Community-Based English-Medium School in Karachi. During her appointment as a teacher she had an intermediate level academic qualification and had no exposure to any professional training course. The research question for the study was: How does a novice teacher experience her learning to teach in a private sector school in Karachi, Pakistan? Data for the study was collected through semi-structured interviews and field notes and was analyzed through NVivo, which is a systematic software to analyze qualitative data. Findings of the study show that when Sajda entered the teaching profession she faced different types of experiences in the process of learning to teach. She felt pride and happiness at the time of her appointment as a teacher. Prior to experiencing in the classroom she thought of teaching to be an easy job and that everyone could do that, but as soon as she entered her classroom, she came across a very different situation. She experienced both frustration and shocks. These experiences thus prove to be very different from what she was expecting initially. Data shows that preparations for her classroom teaching, collaborative school environment and professional development courses gave her confidence and encouraged her to overcome the challenges in the classroom. After taking all of this into account, the paper concludes with recommendations and implications for supporting novice teachers in the schools
Conducting Narrative Studies in Pakistan: Reflections from the Field
This reflective paper emerges from the reflections on my experience to carry out narrative studies in Pakistan —a country where narrative research in education is still very young. Field-notes, reflective journals and research memos were the key sources of triggering reflections on my learning to take the identity of a narrative researcher in a context where this approach is very young.  My reflections show the learning experience in conceptualising and practicing narrative studies in the country. The paper shows that I took the roles of an insider, co-constructor of stories, and trust-builder while taking up the identity of a narrative researcher in Pakistan. In addition, becoming a gender sensitive and knowing language and culture of the research participants enabled me to take up the role smoothly.  Findings have pertinent implications for life history research studies in Pakistan and elsewhere
The Hideous Beauty of Bird-Shaped Burns –Transnational Allegory and Feminist Rhetoric in Kamila Shamsie’s Burnt Shadows
This paper explores the forces of nationalism and transnationalism and examines the ways in which they are intricately and inextricably linked in Kamila Shamsie's most recent novel, Burnt Shadows. It explores Burnt Shadows for its nationalistic rhetoric, arguing the case for its attempt to critically analyze the status of Pakistanis and Muslims in a post ‘9/11’ world order, particularly within the contemporary discourses on terrorism, capitalism and Islamic fundamentalism. The paper attempts at connecting the novel’s alternative version of nationalism with the forces of feminism, via the novel’s unusual and ubiquitous protagonist, Hiroko Tanaka. It argues that while Hiroko poses serious challenges to existing and normative power structures, her physical body serves as a manuscript upon which national and political upheavals are literally and metaphorically transcribed, reflecting the novel’s demonstration of women’s bodies as sites of conflict between nationalism and colonialism. It offers the novel as an attempt at ‘psychic healing’ – a work that embraces nationalism transnationally, hence propounding an ‘imagined community’ (Hicks, xxiii-xxxi) that makes possible the existence of a kind of ‘horizontal comradeship’, transcending national borderlands and cultural boundaries
Information technology and cost efficiency in Malaysian banking industry
It is argued that information technology can increase cost efficiency of banks by offering opportunities to substitute across inputs into production – for example, to substitute computer technology and information networks for labor. Hence, the transition to a knowledge-based financial sector would lead to banks becoming more competitive, more cost effective and better able in managing risks. As such, those
banks that failed to make this transition are less able to compete as they lack the capability to innovate
and face higher delivery costs. The main objectives of this paper are to determine the impact of IT on banking efficiency and its economies of scale using a sample of Malaysian banks. To achieve these objectives, stochastic cost frontier method is employed to estimate bank efficiency and panel data approach were used to examine the impact of IT on bank efficiency. The results indicate that the impact of IT on bank efficiency increases with increase in bank size, hence further supporting the process of bank mergers that are currently undertaken in the Malaysian banking industry
Can We Solve the Issue of Poverty Without Solving the Issue of Conventional Economic Paradigm: A Critical Review
The primary focus of economics is to allocate resources in
order to achieve the well-being of humans. Wellbeing has many
dimensions, ranging from the level of mere subsistence to the equality
of opportunities to accumulate, and to safeguard life and wealth.
Poverty, thus, is one of the parameters for measuring the welfare of
society in general. Given this importance, the Millennium Development
Goals aim at halving the world poverty by 2015. Many organisations in
the world set poverty eradication as one of their key objectives.
Likewise, poverty reduction has got a central place in the international
politics. Accordingly, each country including Pakistan has launched
programmes for the alleviation of this great menace. The election
manifesto of all the mainstream political parties in Pakistan includes
poverty alleviation as one of their main goals. Additionally, poverty
alleviation is one of the major subjects of talks in electronic media
and in the editorials of newspapers, both at the national and at the
international level. Nevertheless, poverty is still a major problem of
humanity across the globe
Dictatorships, Patronage and Public Good Provision: Some Empirics
Dictatorship has been one of the most persistent regimes types
in history. Different dictators have applied different strategies for
maintaining political support across different societies. We discuss and
empirically estimate the hypothesis that states that dictators rely more
on patronage as compared to the general provision of public goods for
political support. Our results, based on the data from cross-section of
the countries from all continents, confirm this hypothesis. We use
military spending as an indicator of the patronage to military and the
secondary school enrolment as an indicator of the provision of public
goods. In the separate sets of regressions, we conclude that
dictatorship has a significant negative effect on the secondary school
enrolment rate and a significant positive effect on military expenditure
as percentage of GDP. These effects, in turn, might have caused the
persistent of dictatorships in many societies. In order to generalise
these findings, we also check robustness of the findings with respect to
other variables like infant mortality rate, average life expectancy,
Human Development Index (HDI), corruption, rule of law, ease of doing
business and competitiveness. The robustness analysis confirms our
findings. JEL Classification: P16, H11, H41, H42 Keywords: Dictatorship,
Patronage, Public Goods Provision, Military Spending, Secondary School
Enrolment Rate, Robustness Analysi
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