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Economic Analysis of Supply Response in Pakistan’s Agriculture
Muhammad Ali Chaudhary
Published:July - Dec 2000
This study represents an attempt at estimating the farmer supply
response to different economic and material incentives. Several
researchers have estimated the cultivator supply response to different
techno-economic factors (Cummings, 1975a and 1975b; Askari and
Cummings, 1977; Cooley, 1973; Chen, Courteny and Schmitz, 1972;
Ghoshal, 1975; Tweeten, 1986). However, as agriculture modernises, the
relative significance of different factors affecting farm inputs and outputs
changes; factors regarded as significant determinants of farmer decision at
one time may not be relevant at another time. Similarly, the
transformation of agriculture in the desirable direction invariably
necessitates and at times renders desirable the use of new measures and
policy instruments. How farmers react to changes in market forces and
government measures is important to know in different ways. In fact,
policy makers are interested in knowing the appropriateness, effectiveness
and impact of measures for the ultimate formation or legislation of farm
regulations.
KEYWORDS:
Pakistan, agriculture, supply response, legislation, farming regulations.
JEL:
N/A.
Towards a New Solution Mechanism for Corporate Bankruptcy
Omar Chaudry
Published:July - Dec 2000
A firm may resort to leverage in its capital structure for a variety of
reasons; to capture the benefits of the tax shield of debt, to signal to the
market that it sees a bright future for itself, or as a commitment device to
reduce financial slack. Unforeseen circumstances, however, may force the
firm into a situation where it is unable to pay its debts. If the environment
is such that the firm has a single creditor, emerging from a situation like
this may not pose too much of a problem. However, problems are likely to
arise if there are multiple creditors. A resource-wasting race is likely to
ensue as the creditors try to “be first” to seize the firm’s assets (in the case
of a secured loan) or to obtain a judgement against the firm (in the case of
an unsecured loan). This race may lead to a dismantling of the firm’s assets,
which may mean a loss in value if the firm is worth more as an entity than
it is as a collection of pieces.
KEYWORDS:
Corporate bankruptcy, bankruptcy, transaction costs, bankruptcy procedure, mechanism.
JEL:
N/A.
Deviations from Market Efficiency; Behavioural Explanations and their Validity
Ali Almakky
Published:July - Dec 2000
Efficiency of financial markets implies that prices fully reflect all
available information rapidly and in an unbiased manner. Thus, market
prices should provide an unbiased estimate of fundamental value.
Despite strong empirical evidence supporting this theory, there are
questions about its validity. In recent years, a significantly large volume of
empirical research has been conducted to show predictability of asset returns
using publicly available information. This is popularly referred to as the
anomalies literature. These studies used different explanatory variables ranging
from fundamental to technical factors and showed evidence of market
inefficiency. The results indicate that returns exhibit trends of momentum in
the short to medium term and reversal in the long term
KEYWORDS:
Market efficiency, theoretical framework, economics.
JEL:
N/A.
Institutional Failure, State Failure or the Failure of ‘Civil’ Society? The Rural Water Supply and Sanitation Sector in Pakistan
S. Akbar Zaidi
Published:July - Dec 2000
With only half of Pakistan’s rural population provided water
through government sources, many observers may well be led to believe that
this is a clear case of government failure. Yet, such conclusions ignore the
way development thinking has changed over time. Currently, the new way
of providing infrastructure and social services relies increasingly on
communities, NGOs and the private sector, with the role of government
considerably curtailed. In the Rural Water Supply and Sanitation (RWSS)
sector, it is the Uniform Policy which now dominates planning and
implementation Unfortunately, succumbing to donor pressure, an illdevised Policy has been approved for the sector which requires prerequisites
which are just not available. A socially sensitive engineering department,
and organised and active communities, which are the cornerstone of the
Uniform Policy, do not exist. Hence the failure of the new thinking in the
RWSS sector. While institutional failure and government sclerosis may be
amongst the more critical causes of failed service delivery, it may perhaps
be more instructive to analyse such institutions in a broader political
economy perspective, where reasons for the failure of the state as much as
of ‘civil’ society, may provide more useful answers.
KEYWORDS:
Rural water supply, institutions, public health, public health engineering, Pakistan.
JEL:
N/A.
Motives of Foreign Firms in Pakistan
Mohammad H. Akhtar and Peter J. Buckley
Published:July - Dec 2000
To date no study has been made to explore the FDI motives of
foreign firms in Pakistan. An attempt has been made to rectify this position
through a survey of both wholly- and majority-owned multinational
enterprises (MNEs) in the economy. Market size and growth variables appear
to be the most cited reasons for FDI by MNEs in the sample. The use of
exploratory factor analysis (EFA) also reinforces the significance of market
size as the motive for FDI in Pakistan. The other underlying factors
produced by the EFA are: expansion of business, low input prices, desire to
lower the transaction costs and psychic distance.
KEYWORDS:
Foreign Direct Investment, FDI, multinational enterprises, MNEs, Pakistan.
JEL:
N/A.
International Labour Standards and National Labour Laws in Pakistan
S. Nazre Hyder
Published:July - Dec 2000
The genesis of setting International Labour Standards lies in the idea
that the issues related to labour and social conditions are not merely matters
of state concern. The objective of establishing the International Labour
Organisation in 1919 was to undertake joint international action to improve
labour conditions world wide along with achieving several inter-related
motives. The preamble and the first Article of the ILO’s Constitution gives
expression to these ideas by the following statement:
KEYWORDS:
Pakistan, labour laws, ILO, labour standards, child labour, minimum wage.
JEL:
N/A.
The Concept and Model of Small Enterprise Hub for Developing Countries
Iqbal M. Khan
Published:July - Dec 2000
In a rapidly changing global economy, small enterprises are
increasingly a force for national economic growth. Since the 1970s, SEs and
the entrepreneurs who drive them have received serious attention by
planners, multilateral agencies and governments the world over. Yet there is
the need for the management of the environment at the macro level to
facilitate the growth of the SE sector. There is a need for setting up and
managing institutions and networks which support directly, indirectly,
formally, informally, the growth business at the regional and national level.
This also calls for the development of entrepreneurs and their team,
development of the organisation and the business.
The engine of change in all the new economies has been the small
and medium enterprises (SMEs) but the growth of the sector was not a
response to problems of economic crises of the 1970s and 1980s but it has
been observed as a trend that emerged as a wave of change. Hence the
chaos and scramble to move according to the trend. The other notable
contributing factor for the emergence of Small Enterprises (SEs) is the IT
business industry and the worldwide trend towards the service industry
sector.
KEYWORDS:
Developing countries, SME, support infrastructure, development.
JEL:
N/A.
Published:July - Dec 2000
S. Akbar Zaidi, Issues in Pakistan’s Economy, Oxford University Press,
Karachi, 1999. 462 pp. Price: Pak Rs. 450/-.
In the last five decades, Pakistan’s economy has, as they say, gone
places. Undoubtedly, this economy is much more broad-based, with
increases in productivity in all sectors, incomes (even if nobody believes it),
trade, infrastructure, social sectors. Living standards and consumption levels
and patterns are more diversified than those in the early years, though the
benefits are unevenly distributed. Such disparity and imbalances created
additional complications because of a rise in expectations, which is
invariably faster than production capacity and income increases. Developing
countries, soft societies as these are, must face problems emerging from the
resulting frustrations and frictions.
KEYWORDS:
Pakistan, economy, distribution, economic situation.
JEL:
N/A.
The Determinants of Foreign Direct Investment in Pakistan: An Econometric Analysis
Mohammad Hanif Akhtar
Published:Jan - June 2000
This study contributes to an understanding of locational determinants
of FDI in Pakistan. Although there exists a great deal of literature in this area,
there is hardly any evidence of such a study in the case of Pakistan. Economy
level analyses are carried out to explore the determinants of FDI through
multivariate regression analysis. The results of the multivariate regression
analyses reveal that market size, relative interest rates and exchange rates are
the major determinants of FDI in Pakistan. The variables such as market
growth and political instability were consistently insignificant in the analyses.
However, mixed findings were revealed by the variables such as consumer
goods imports and the political regime in Pakistan.
KEYWORDS:
Locational determinants, consumer good imports, market development, transnational corporations, foreign direct investment, FDI, Pakistan.
JEL:
N/A.
Significance of the Small and Medium Enterprises (SMEs) Sector in Pakistan and Assessment of its Employment Potential
Shahid Amjad Chaudhry
Published:Jan - June 2000
Definitions: In this paper it is proposed to use the definition of selfemployed, small scale (2-9 employees), medium scale (10-99 employees) and
large scale (100 employees and above) to discuss the issues relating to the
Small and Medium Enterprise (SME) sector in Pakistan. The national
pension (regulated through the Employees Old Age Benefit Institution
Legislation) and health insurance (The Provincial Social Security Institutions
Legislation) is applicable to institutions with 10 or more employees and
provides a natural cut off point between the small scale and medium and
large scale sectors. The cut off between the medium and large scale at 100
workers is also appropriate.
Sources: Major sources of data were the: (i) The Census of Establishment
1988; (ii) The Labour Force Survey 91-92; (iii) The Report of the National
Manpower Commission 1991; (iv) The Employment and Management
Situation in Pakistan (ILO) 1997 and (v) The Economic Survey 1997-98. A
large number of other sources were also used as required and these are
indicated wherever possible.
KEYWORDS:
SME, Pakistan, structure of employment, urban employment, rural employment, employment potential.
JEL:
N/A.