000 02404nam a2200193Ia 4500
999 _c44509
_d44509
005 20220701165351.0
008 200204s9999 xx 000 0 und d
020 _a195631714
082 _a338.9 THE
100 _aDutta, Bhaskar (ed.)
245 0 _aTheoretical issues in development economics
260 _aBombay
260 _bOxford University Press.
260 _c1993
300 _a292 p.
520 _aThe Indian Statistical Institute Conferences on Economic Theory and Related Mathematical Methods were conceived with the goal of fostering research and discussion in the application of theoretical methods to economic development. This collection of papers, all outcomes of the presentations and lively discussions at the first three meetings, is being published with the same purpose in view. The chapters fall into four broad subject categories: macroeconomics, industrial organization, planning and public policy, and intertemporal economics. In the first section, two chapters deal with the interaction between agriculture and industry, and its implications for short-run macroeconomic effects of exogenous changes in agricultural output, and transfer payments from the government. The third chapter examines whether an increase in administered prices of some essential good (such as petroleum) has an expansionary effect, while the fourth. analyses the effects of technological change on an LDC via North-South trade. The section on Industry includes chapters on technical change and market expansion, profitability in relation to monopoly trading and entry deterrence, product differentiation and pricing 'networks' in congested markets, and the effect of learning-by-doing on industry concentration and pricing behaviour. The section on Planning and Public Policy begins with a chapter on the design of dynamic, decentralized planning procedures to allocate resources between private and public goods. Another chapter surveys the literature on informational constraints in planning procedures, and the last two deal with aspects of government policy pertaining to foreign investment and foreign aid. The final section on Intertemporal Economics contains two papers dealing respectively with the efficiency of market outcomes, and the nature of bequest behaviour, in the context of a model with overlapping generations of economic agents.
650 _aEconomics
942 _cB
_2ddc