3,985 research outputs found
Causal relationship between domestic credit and international reserves: The experience of developing countries
Three causality tests, Haugh, Granger and Sims are used to determine the nature of causal relationship between the components of monetary base of India, Malaysia, Mexico and Taiwan. The conclusion derived is that bidirectional causality exists between the changes in domestic credit and changes in international reserves for all four countries.
Estimates of the unreported economy in India
This paper presents estimates of India's unofficial economy on a yearly basis for the period 1967 to 1978. These estimates implicitly revise the GNP, per capita and other related statistics for this period. The technique employed has been recently used to determine the size of the unreported economies in U.S.A. and Canada. The results indicate that the unreported activity as a proportion of official GNP has grown from 9.5 per cent in 1967 to nearly 49 per cent by 1978. High taxes have contributed significantly to the growth of the unofficial economy. A 1 per cent increase in overall taxes leads to more than 3 per cent increase in the unofficial economy relative to the official economy.
On managing adjustment to external shocks in oil importing developing countries
This paper employs country specific multisectoral general equilibrium models of Turkey, Kenya and India to study the adjustment problems confronting these countries. The affects of liberal and interventionist policies on GDP and on incomes of different classes are analysed. The results show that liberal policies minimise the GDP losses and that farmers are relatively better off under these policies.
A test of the efficiency of futures markets in commodities
The role of the futures markets in stabilising spot prices has been widely discussed. However, the success of these markets in performing the stabilising function critically depends on whether they are efficient (Fama 181, page 383) in the sense that the futures prices fully reflect the available information. The question of futures market efficiency has assumed greater relevance in view of the recent UNCTAD proposals to stabilise the prices of primary commodities exported mainly by the developing countries. The Integrated Programme for Commodities put forward by the Group of 77 at UNCTAD IV in 1976 calls for the establishment of buffer stocks for 18 such commodities. The recent developments show, however, that the political as well as the economic success of the UNCTAD schemes is rather doubtful. Under these circumstances, the feasibility of other efficient market oriented alternatives for stabilising commodity prices needs to be examined. Further, it could be argued that theoretically the case for buffer stocks for stabilising prices rests in part on the lack of sufficient and rational speculators in these markets. For, if futures markets reflect the available information and provide efficient forecasts of the future spot prices, the rationale for UNCTAD schemes is somewhat weakened. In this paper, we test the efficiency of futures markets for five of the commodities in the UNCTAD list. At the outset, we discuss various approaches for testing the efficiency of futures markets. A semi-strong' test is then performed. The data, the models and the results are presented in sections III through V. The concluding comments and the economic implications are discussed in the last section.
Implications of unitarity and precision measurements on CKM matrix elements
Unitarity along with precision measurements of sin2\beta, V_{us} and V_{cb}
allows one to find a lower bound V_{ub}\geq 0.0035 which, on using the recently
measured angle \alpha of the unitarity triangle, translates to V_{ub}=
0.0035\pm 0.0002. This precise value, stable for a good deal of changes in
\alpha, along with CP violating phase \delta found from unitarity allows the
construction of a `precise' CKM matrix. The above unitarity based value of
V_{ub} is in agreement with the latest exclusive value used as input by UTfit,
CKMfitter, HFAG, however underlines the so called `tension' faced by the latest
inclusive V_{ub}=0.00449 \pm 0.00033. Further, using this inclusive value of
V_{ub} along with the latest sin2\beta, one finds \delta=23 ^{\rm o}- 39 ^{\rm
o}, again in conflict with \delta measured in B-decays. The calculated ranges
of the elements of the CKM matrix are in excellent agreement with those
obtained recently by UTfit, CKMfitter and HFAG. Also, the ratio
\frac{V_{ts}}{V_{td}} is in agreement with its latest measured value, whereas
there is some disagreement between the `measured' and the calculated V_{td}
values.Comment: 10 pages, 1 figure, incorporated latest dat
A unified approach to discriminators for searches of gravitational waves from compact binary coalescences
We describe a general mathematical framework for discriminators in
the context of the compact binary coalescence search. We show that with any
is associated a vector bundle over the signal manifold, that is, the
manifold traced out by the signal waveforms in the function space of data
segments. The is then defined as the square of the norm of the
data vector projected onto a finite dimensional subspace (the fibre) of the
Hilbert space of data trains and orthogonal to the signal waveform - any such
fibre leads to a discriminator and the full vector bundle comprising
the subspaces and the base manifold constitute the discriminator. We
show that the discriminators used so far in the CBC searches
correspond to different fiber structures constituting different vector bundles
on the same base manifold, namely, the parameter space. The general formulation
indicates procedures to formulate new s which could be more effective
in discriminating against commonly occurring glitches in the data. It also
shows that no with a reasonable degree of freedom is foolproof. It
could also shed light on understanding why the traditional works so
well. As an example, we propose a family of ambiguity discriminators
that is an alternative to the traditional one. Any such ambiguity
makes use of the filtered output of the template bank, thus adding negligible
cost to the overall search. We test the performance of ambiguity on
simulated data using spinless TaylorF2 waveforms. We show that the ambiguity
essentially gives a clean separation between glitches and signals.
Finally, we investigate the effects of mismatch between signal and templates on
the and also further indicate how the ambiguity can be
generalized to detector networks for coherent observations.Comment: 21 pages, 5 figure, abstract is shortened to comply with the arXiv's
1920 characters limitation, v2: accepted for publication in PR
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