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Socioeconomic and Environment Conditions and Diarrheal Disease Among Children in Pakistan
Imran Ashraf Toor and Muhammad Sabihuddin Butt
Published:Jan - June 2003
Diarrheal disease poses mortality and morbidity risks to infants and young children. Based on losses in terms of disability-adjusted life years, the World Development Report (1993) estimates that diarrheal disease is the third most burdensome illness among children in the 1 to 5 years age bracket. Using 1990 data, Murray and Lopez (1994) estimated that about 3 million children die every year due to diarrheal disease. Severity of diarrheal illness and alternative interventions are necessary inputs into the government’s decision-making. However, there is currently much uncertainty about the most appropriate policies in the context of low-income environments such as Pakistan. The debate could be described in terms of efficacy of economic/behavioural or environment/infrastructure. In this study, we explore the socioeconomic and environment determinants of diarrheal disease for children in Paksitan. The diarrheal determinants equation was estimated by logistic techniques. Diarrheal illness jointly with defensive behaviour was estimated from the reduced form to fully capture the relationship between defensive actions and illness. Such an endeavour will provide decision makers and policy analysts information to formulate policy design for the necessary interventions and respective investment plans for the alleviation of dairrheal disease among children, depending upon the relative contribution of socioeconomic and enviromental factors. For the specific case of Pakistan, socioeconomic development strategies do not necessarily gaurantee lowering the incidence of diarrhea, particularly among children below five years of age, unless supported by environmental interventions.
KEYWORDS:
Pakistan, Diarrheal disease, policy design, solution, household behaviour, sanitation.
JEL:
N/A.
Opportunities and Challenges for Pakistan in an Era of Globalisation
Umer Khalid
Published:Jan - June 2003
The study analyses the degree of integration of Pakistan’s economy in global trade and financial flows. Pakistan’s integration into the global economy gained momentum in the late 1980s and early 1990s when it adopted more open and liberal policies as part of stabilisation and structural adjustment programmes negotiated with the IMF and World Bank. The paper presents an overview of Pakistan’s economy in the before and after period, it will specifically examine the trade performance from the 1980s onwards to see the progress made towards the integration of the Pakistani economy into the world economy. It will look into the opportunities that Pakistan is likely to gain in a more globalised world, with special focus on the textile and clothing sector and the potential growth in this sector after the abolition of the Multi Fibre Arrangement (MFA) in 2005. New challenges that may emerge in a more open trading environment will also be discussed.
KEYWORDS:
Pakistan, globalisation, Mutual Fibre Agreement, MFA, integration, Pakistani economy.
JEL:
N/A.
Export Earnings, Capital Instability and Economic Growth in South Asia
Muhammad Aslam Chaudhary and Amjad Naveed
Published:Jan - June 2003
During the last two decades the role of international trade and flow of foreign capital have received considerable attention in the literature. Various studies have examined the impact of export instability and capital instability on economic growth in less developed countries.1 Empirical evidence supports the hypothesis of a deleterious impact of export instability on economic growth. However, some studies also indicated that the relationship was unstable but positive with economic growth.2 Yet there are no systematic empirical investigations into the implied links between export diversification and long-term economic growth, particularly in the case of South Asian countries. The major concern regarding export instability is that it retards economic growth. The theoretical rationale for the same is that export instability creates uncertainty in the supply of foreign exchange earnings, discourages capital formation and hence hampers economic growth.3 Another notion is that capital instability affects economic growth more significantly than that of exports instability.4 When a country uses other sources to finance development than export earnings, it leads to forced savings and foreign aid for funding investment projects, and then the speed and volume of capital formation determines economic growth, not the instability of export earnings. Thus, if there is instability in mobilising capital itself, it will be pernicious to output growth. As a result, it will affect economic growth more than export earning instability.
KEYWORDS:
Capital instability, export instability, South Asia, international trade.
JEL:
N/A.
A Comparative Analysis of Job Satisfaction Among Public and Private Sector College / University Teachers in Lahore
Aamir Ali Chughtai
Published:Jan - June 2003
A high quality teaching staff is the cornerstone of a successful education
system. Daily interaction between teachers and students is at the center of the
educational process. Attracting and retaining high quality teachers is thus a
primary necessity for a strong education system. One step in developing a high
quality faculty is to understand the factors associated with teaching quality and
retention. One of these factors is job satisfaction. Very often, it is not merely
satisfaction with the job, but with the career in general, that is important. With
teachers, satisfaction with their careers may have strong implications for student
learning. Specifically, a teacher’s satisfaction with his or her career may influence
the quality and stability of instruction given to the students. Some researchers
argue that teachers who do not feel supported in their work may be less
motivated to do their best work in the class- room (Ostroff, 1992; & Ashton &
Web, 1986). This would ultimately have an adverse impact on student
achievement. In addition, highly satisfied teachers are less likely to leave the
teaching profession altogether than those who are dissatisfied with many areas of
their work life (Choy et al., 1993). Such departures disrupt the education system
and result in the shift of valuable educational resources away from actual
instruction towards costly staff replacement efforts. It is not necessary to be a
management expert or an economist to understand that if the education
managers are spending thousands of rupees and hours of their time to replace
teachers who have left, preventing the brain drain in the first place might have
saved some of those resources. Because faculty are both the largest cost and the
largest human capital resource of an education system, understanding factors that
contribute to teacher satisfaction (or dissatisfaction) is essential to improving the
information base needed to support a successful educational system.
KEYWORDS:
Pakistan, Lahore, education, private sector, higher education, university, college.
JEL:
N/A.
Trade, Investment and Growth Nexus in Pakistan: An Application of Cointegration and Multivariate Causality Test
Aurangzeb
Published:Jan - June 2003
This paper develops a multivariate model to test the causality between exports and investment and economic growth in Pakistan. Most of the previous studies in this area have not paid any attention to stationarity and co-integration issues. The underlying series are tested and it was found that the series are non-stationary in their levels and not co-integrated. The Hsiao’s version of the Granger Causality method is used, the order in which the variables are entered into the model is also considered by using (SG) criterion, which is very important in the multivariate frame work and it improves the robustness of the causality results. The results show that there exists a strong bi-directional causality between exports growth and investment growth to GDP growth. It was also found that exports growth causes imports growth, investment growth causes exports growth, and imports growth causes GDP growth and investment growth, but not the opposite. These findings support the fact that both exports and investment are considered as an engine of growth in Pakistan. The causal inferences are fairly stable over the sample period.
KEYWORDS:
Pakistan, trade, investment, neo-classical, economic growth, national income, domestic output.
JEL:
N/A.
Income Patterns of Woman Workers in Pakistan - A Case Study of the Urban Manufacturing Sector
Asad Sayeed, Farhan Sami Khan and Sohail Javed
Published:Jan - June 2003
The paper analyses the income patterns of women workers employed in the urban manufacturing sector of Pakistan. It examines the wage differentials across regions, manufacturing sectors and industrial categories including large scale factories, small-scale enterprises and home based work. The central conclusion is that wages of women workers across sectors and industry size vary because of differences in the capital-labour ratio and hence labour productivity. The paper determines the proportion of women earning above and below the legally mandated minimum wage, which differs significantly across formal and informal industries. Finally, the earnings of workers have been examined in the context of human capital accumulation.
KEYWORDS:
Pakistan, manufacturing sector, woman workers, gender, income, employment.
JEL:
N/A.
Stock Market Development and Financial Intermediary Development in Pakistan (1991-2001)
Atif Naveed
Published:Jan - June 2003
A healthy financial sector is an essential ingredient for a strong and
prosperous economy as it performs the important functions of mobilising
and allocating savings to meet the funding requirements of business and
industry. This in turn enables the commercial and industrial base to expand
leading to higher economic activity with increased levels of output and
employment.
The above stated roles are performed to perfection in the developed
countries where a vast web of financial institutions and financial instruments
exist to channelise savings into investments. Moreover, the developed
financial markets have a very effective distributive system whereby the
investors reap the benefits of their investments according to set distributive
rules. As against this developing economies lack an efficient financial system.
This has invited many cross country and time series studies to gauge the
level of financial development in the developed and developing economies.
KEYWORDS:
Pakistan, financial development, stock market, development, financial institutions, distributive rules.
JEL:
N/A.
Published:Jan - June 2003
Stiglitz Joseph E, Globalization and its Discontents, published by
Allen Lane, printed by Penguin Press, 2002, London, ISBN 0-713-99664-1.
Price $ 16.99 pp 282
Joseph Stiglitz in this book, spearheads the much needed and timely
attack on the international organisations - the IMF, the World Bank and the
WTO - as well as the ‘Western’ industrially developed nations, especially the
USA. This attack is not new. During the Cold War era - the Communist
Block countries led by the USSR, liberals, socialists and communists around
the world - levied allegations and accused these very organisations and
countries in helping the West to win their war against Socialism and trying
to keep the developing countries under developed. Also the opposition
political parties, economists and thinkers, as well as the governments in
developing or Third World countries have long accused the IMF, the World
Bank and the USA of playing ‘foul’ when negotiating trade, financial and
other agreements with these countries. All of them have accused these
organisations of harsh conditionality as well as using ‘arm-bending’ tactics,
forcing poorer nations to remain poor in the wake of exploiting their
natural and human resources.
KEYWORDS:
Book review, Globalization, Third World, IMF, World Bank, alternatives.
JEL:
N/A.