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Tamil Nadu,Pin : 6259 153
Sl.No ACCNO TITLE AUTHOR PUBLISHER MALANKARA CATHOLIC COLLEGE Mariagiri, Kaliakkavilai, Kanyakumari District, Tamil Nadu,Pin : 6259 153 ACCESSION REGISTER DETAILS 1 1 THIRUKKURAL RAMASWAMI SRE HINDU PUBLICATION 2 70 MATHEMATICS DICTIONARY JAMES/JAMES CBS PUBLISHERS 3 203 NEENGAL VERUMBUVATHU KAPMAYER.M.R KANNADHASAN EDHUVANALUM ADHAI PATHIPPAGAM ADAIVATHU EAPPADI 4 204 KELIVIKALUM UNGAL PACKIVARAJ KANNADHASAN PAKIYARAJIN PATHILKALUM PATHIPPAGAM 5 205 MUTTAL GURUVUM MOODA KUMARA KRISHNAN.S NAN MOZHI CHEEDARKALUM PATHIPPAGAM 6 206 NEENGALAGA IRUNGAL SIVA SOORIAN KANNADHASAN PATHIPPAGAM 7 207 PUZAZHL PETTA PUTHIER SOTHI NANMOZHI KATHAIKAL PATHIPPAKAM 8 208 INNUM CHILA PUTHER SOTHI NANMOZHI KATHAIKAL PATHIPPAKAM 9 209 MUTTAL KATHAIKAL SOTHI NANMOZHI PATHIPAGAM 10 210 PUTHIER KATHAIKAL SOTHI NANMOZHI COMPUTER A1 MADAKKA ORU PATHIPAGAM KELVI 11 211 MUTTAL KATHAIKAL II SOTHI NANMOZHI PATHIPAGAM 12 212 SAMARTHIYA KATHIKAL V SOTHI NANMOZHI PATHIPAGAM 13 213 VIDUKATHAIKAL PUTHIERKAL SOTHI NANMOZHI 250 PATHIPAGAM 14 214 PUTHIER KATHAIKAL SOTHI NANMOZHI PATHIPAGAM 15 215 SAMARTHIYA KATHAIAKAL SOTHI NANMOZHI PATHIPAGAM 16 216 THADDHUVA PUTHIER SOTHI NANMOZHI KATHIKAL PATHIPAGAM 17 217 OONAYAI VENTA NARI SOTHI NANMOZHI PATHIPAGAM 18 218 SAMARTHIYA KATHAIKAL VI SOTHI NANMOZHI PATHIPAGAM 19 423 MANIMEHALAI PULIOOR KESEHAN PAARINILAYAM 20 424 BHARATHIYAR KATTURAIKAL SUBRAMANIYA VANATHI PATHIPPAKAM BHARATHIYAR 21 425 CHERIKKA CHENTHIKA RAYAR MANIMEHALAI MANIMEHALAI APPAGI KATHIAKAL PRASURAM PRASURAM 22 426 MANANOYAM INTAYA SOMASUNDARAM NEW CENTURY BOOK -
In the Name of Krishna: the Cultural Landscape of a North Indian Pilgrimage Town
In the Name of Krishna: The Cultural Landscape of a North Indian Pilgrimage Town A DISSERTATION SUBMITTED TO THE FACULTY OF THE GRADUATE SCHOOL OF THE UNIVERSITY OF MINNESOTA BY Sugata Ray IN PARTIAL FULFILLMENT OF THE REQUIREMENTS FOR THE DEGREE OF DOCTOR OF PHILOSOPHY Frederick M. Asher, Advisor April 2012 © Sugata Ray 2012 Acknowledgements They say writing a dissertation is a lonely and arduous task. But, I am fortunate to have found friends, colleagues, and mentors who have inspired me to make this laborious task far from arduous. It was Frederick M. Asher, my advisor, who inspired me to turn to places where art historians do not usually venture. The temple city of Khajuraho is not just the exquisite 11th-century temples at the site. Rather, the 11th-century temples are part of a larger visuality that extends to contemporary civic monuments in the city center, Rick suggested in the first class that I took with him. I learnt to move across time and space. To understand modern Vrindavan, one would have to look at its Mughal past; to understand temple architecture, one would have to look for rebellions in the colonial archive. Catherine B. Asher gave me the gift of the Mughal world – a world that I only barely knew before I met her. Today, I speak of the Islamicate world of colonial Vrindavan. Cathy walked me through Mughal mosques, tombs, and gardens on many cold wintry days in Minneapolis and on a hot summer day in Sasaram, Bihar. The Islamicate Krishna in my dissertation thus came into being. -
Money and Banking
MONEY AND BANKING Money Supply A considerable acceleration in the rate of growth of money sxpply, mainly resulting from a substantial expansion in domestic credit, was the salient feature of monetary developments in 1988. The annual rate of growth of narrow money supply (M,), consisting of currency and demand deposits held by the public, which stood at 18 per cent as at the end of 1987, increased to 29 per cent by the end of 1988. In absolute terms, the narrow money supply rose substantially by Rs. 7,296 million in 1988, ; compared with an increase of Rs. 3,904 million in the previous year. Meanwhile, the time and savings deposits of the public held with commercial banks (quasi-money) increased at a slower rate of 7 per cent in 1988, compared with a 12 per cent growth in 1987. Consequently, the broad money supply (MJ, defined to include M, plus quasi-money, grew by Rs. 9,611 million or 16 per cent in 1988, compared with a growth of Rs. 7,475 million or 15 per cent in the preceding year. The substantial growth in M] during 1988 was mainly reflected in the currency holdings of the public, which rose by Rs. 4,992 million or 37 per cent. The corres ponding increase in 1987 was Rs, 1,925 million or 17 per cent. Consequently, the share of the currency component in M, rose from 54 per cent in 1987 to 57 per cent in 1988, largely reflecting the public's preference for liquid assets to meet unforeseen emergencies arising from the sporadic civil disturbances in the country. -
Subject Index
Economic and Political Weekly INDEX Vol XVI Nos 1-52 January-December 1981 Ed = Editorials MMR = Money Market Review F = Feature RA= Review Article CL = Civil Liberties SA = Special Article C = Commentary D = Discussion P = Perspectives SS = Special Statistics BR = Book Review LE = Letters to Editor SUBJECT INDEX ADMINISTRATIVE REFORMS AFRICA Administering a Just Decision; S P Sathe O AU Summit: Africa (Ed) (BR) Issue no: 28-29, Jul 11-24, p.1168 Issue no: 51, Dec 19-25, p.2092 War History of North-East Africa ; ADULT EDUCATION Kassahun Checole (BR) Adult Education for What?; Vidyut Joshi Issue no: 41, Oct 10-16, p.1654 (BR) Issue no: 01-02, Jan 03-16, p.26 AGRA Rioting as Rational Action: An Co-opting Freire: A Critical Analysis of Interpretation of the April 1978 Riots Pseudo-Freirean Adult Education; Ross in Agra; Owen M Lynch (SA) Kidd and Krishna Kumar (SA) Issue no: 48, Nov 28-Dec 04, p.1951 Issue no: 01-02, Jan 03-16, p.27 Terrorising Workers in Agra; P S Kushwaha ADVERTISING (LE) Newsadvertisements: The Press (Ed) Issue no: 41, Oct 10-16, p.1634 Issue no: 39, Sep 26-Oct 02, p.1556 AGRARIAN POLICY AFGHANISTAN Agrarian Programme of Left Front Cosmetic Proposal: Afghanistan (Ed) Government; Ratan Ghosh (RA) Issue no: 35, Aug 29-Sep 04, p.1403 Issue no: 25-26, Jun 20-Jul 03, p.A58 From Kremlin to Kabul (BR) Agrarian Programme of Left Front Issue no: 17, Apr 25-May 01, p.756 Government in West Bengal; Buddhadeb Bose (D) Keeping the Issue Alive: Afghanistan (Ed) Issue no: 50, Dec 12-18, p.2053 Issue no: 48, Nov 28-Dec 04, p.1927 One -
Cinema of the Social: Stars, Fans and the Standardization of Genre in Tamil Cinema
Western University Scholarship@Western Digitized Theses Digitized Special Collections 2011 CINEMA OF THE SOCIAL: STARS, FANS AND THE STANDARDIZATION OF GENRE IN TAMIL CINEMA Ganga Rudraiah Follow this and additional works at: https://ir.lib.uwo.ca/digitizedtheses Recommended Citation Rudraiah, Ganga, "CINEMA OF THE SOCIAL: STARS, FANS AND THE STANDARDIZATION OF GENRE IN TAMIL CINEMA" (2011). Digitized Theses. 3315. https://ir.lib.uwo.ca/digitizedtheses/3315 This Thesis is brought to you for free and open access by the Digitized Special Collections at Scholarship@Western. It has been accepted for inclusion in Digitized Theses by an authorized administrator of Scholarship@Western. For more information, please contact [email protected]. CINEMA OF THE SOCIAL: STARS, FANS AND THE STANDARDIZATION OF GENRE IN TAMIL CINEMA r , ' (Spine title: CINEMA OF THE SOCIAL) (Thesis Format: Monograph) by : Ganga Rudraiah Graduate Program in Film Studies A thesis submitted in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Master of Arts The School of Graduate and Postdoctoral Studies The University of Western Ontario London, Ontario, Canada © Ganga Rudraiah 2011 THE UNIVERSITY OF WESTERN ONTARIO SCHOOL OF GRADUATE AND POSTDOCTORAL STUDIES CERTIFICATE OF EXAMINATION r Supervisor Examiners Dr. Christopher E. Glttings Dr. James Prakash Younger Supervisory Committee Dr. Constanza Burucúa Dr. Chris Holmlund The thesis by Ganga Rudraiah entitled: Cinema of the Social: Stars, Fans and the Standardization of Genre in Tamil Cinema is accepted in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Master of Arts Date Chair of the Thesis Examination Board Abstract The star machinery of Tamil cinema presents itself as a nearly unfathomable system that produces stars and politicians out of actors and fans out of audiences in an organized fashion. -
NAGA LIMITED CIN : L24246TN1991PLC020409 Registered Office: No.1, Anna Pillai Street, Chennai - 600 001Tel No
NAGA LIMITED CIN : L24246TN1991PLC020409 Registered Office: No.1, Anna Pillai Street, Chennai - 600 001Tel No. 044-25363535, 0451-2410168,2410121 Fax : 0451-2410122Email : [email protected], Website : www.nagamills.com LIST OF UNPAID DIVIDEND HOLDERS FROM 2008-2014 SL. NO. FOLIO NUMBER FIRST NAME FATHER/HUSBAND ADDRESS COUNTRY STATE DISTRICT PIN CODE INVESTMENT TYPE AMOUNT DATE OF FIRST NAME DUE (RS.) TRANS. TO IEPF 1 00000001 AHMED KHATRI KHATRI 293-A,ABDUL REHMAN STREET, KHATRI INDIA MAHARASHTRA MUMBAI 400003 AMOUNT FOR UNCLAIMED DIVIDEND1150.00 03.09.2015 2 00000006 ASHOK KUMAR JAIN S.JANI ISTHOUSE, FLOOR 3RD SOWCARPET FLOOR INDIA TAMILNADU CHENNAI 600079 AMOUNT FOR UNCLAIMED DIVIDEND 50 03.09.2015 3 00000007 ASHOK SAROGI MOHANLAL JAIN 51, NAMBULIER STREET IST FLOOR SOWCARPET INDIA TAMILNADU CHENNAI 600079 AMOUNT FOR UNCLAIMED DIVIDEND150 03.09.2015 4 00000009 BALASUNDARAM M MURUGAN NO.12 IST MAIN ROAD NEW COLONY CHROMEPETINDIA TAMILNADU CHENNAI 600044 AMOUNT FOR UNCLAIMED DIVIDEND350 03.09.2015 5 00000010 CHANDRA DEVI JAIN SIKRILAL JAIN 51 NAMBULIER STREET SOWCARPET INDIA TAMILNADU CHENNAI 600079 AMOUNT FOR UNCLAIMED DIVIDEND 50 03.09.2015 6 00000014 GHERWAL JAIN JAIN NO.11 LOD COLONY INDIA MADHYA PRADESH INDORE 452003 AMOUNT FOR UNCLAIMED DIVIDEND250 03.09.2015 7 00000019 KISHORE SHETTY SHETTY CHANDRA BHAGALYA, FLAT NO.2 BHAGAT GULLYINDIA MAHIMMAHARASHTRA MUMBAI 400016 AMOUNT FOR UNCLAIMED DIVIDEND200 03.09.2015 8 00000026 MAHALAKSHMI N N. NAGAKUMAR NO.314, LINGI CHETTY STREET, CHENNAI INDIA TAMILNADU CHENNAI 600001 AMOUNT FOR UNCLAIMED DIVIDEND 5 03.09.2015 9 00000031 MANOHAR LAL NAGI BELIROM NAGI B-15 (FIFTEEN) SUBHADRA COLONY INDIA DELHI NEW DELHI 110035 AMOUNT FOR UNCLAIMED DIVIDEND100 03.09.2015 10 00000037 PIYUSH V SHAH SHAH 3. -
The Institute of Road Transport Driver Training Wing, Gummidipundi
THE INSTITUTE OF ROAD TRANSPORT DRIVER TRAINING WING, GUMMIDIPUNDI LIST OF TRAINEES COMPLETED THE HVDT COURSE Roll.No:17SKGU2210 Thiru.BARATH KUMAR E S/o. Thiru.ELANCHEZHIAN D 2/829, RAILWAY STATION ST PERUMAL NAICKEN PALAYAM 1 8903739190 GUMMIDIPUNDI MELPATTAMBAKKAM PO,PANRUTTI TK CUDDALORE DIST Pincode:607104 Roll.No:17SKGU3031 Thiru.BHARATH KUMAR P S/o. Thiru.PONNURENGAM 950 44TH BLOCK 2 SATHIYAMOORTHI NAGAR 9789826462 GUMMIDIPUNDI VYASARPADI CHENNAI Pincode:600039 Roll.No:17SKGU4002 Thiru.ANANDH B S/o. Thiru.BALASUBRAMANIAN K 2/157 NATESAN NAGAR 3 3RD STREET 9445516645 GUMMIDIPUNDI IYYPANTHANGAL CHENNAI Pincode:600056 Roll.No:17SKGU4004 Thiru.BHARATHI VELU C S/o. Thiru.CHELLAN 286 VELAPAKKAM VILLAGE 4 PERIYAPALAYAM PO 9789781793 GUMMIDIPUNDI UTHUKOTTAI TK THIRUVALLUR DIST Pincode:601102 Roll.No:17SKGU4006 Thiru.ILAMPARITHI P S/o. Thiru.PARTHIBAN A 133 BLA MURUGAN TEMPLE ST 5 ELAPAKKAM VILLAGE & POST 9952053996 GUMMIDIPUNDI MADURANDAGAM TK KANCHIPURAM DT Pincode:603201 Roll.No:17SKGU4008 Thiru.ANANTH P S/o. Thiru.PANNEER SELVAM S 10/191 CANAL BANK ROAD 6 KASTHURIBAI NAGAR 9940056339 GUMMIDIPUNDI ADYAR CHENNAI Pincode:600020 Roll.No:17SKGU4010 Thiru.VIJAYAKUMAR R S/o. Thiru.RAJENDIRAN TELUGU COLONY ROAD 7 DEENADAYALAN NAGAR 9790303527 GUMMIDIPUNDI KAVARAPETTAI THIRUVALLUR DIST Pincode:601206 Roll.No:17SKGU4011 Thiru.ULIS GRANT P S/o. Thiru.PANNEER G 68 THAYUMAN CHETTY STREET 8 PONNERI 9791745741 GUMMIDIPUNDI THIRUVALLUR THIRUVALLUR DIST Pincode:601204 Roll.No:17SKGU4012 Thiru.BALAMURUGAN S S/o. Thiru.SUNDARRAJAN N 23A,EGAMBARAPURAM ST 9 BIG KANCHEEPURAM 9698307081 GUMMIDIPUNDI KANCHEEPURAM DIST Pincode:631502 Roll.No:17SKGU4014 Thiru.SARANRAJ M S/o. Thiru.MUNUSAMY K 5 VOC STREET 10 DR. -
Koel Chatterjee Phd Thesis
Bollywood Shakespeares from Gulzar to Bhardwaj: Adapting, Assimilating and Culturalizing the Bard Koel Chatterjee PhD Thesis 10 October, 2017 I, Koel Chatterjee, hereby declare that this thesis and the work presented in it is entirely my own. Where I have consulted the work of others, this is always clearly stated. Signed: Date: 10th October, 2017 Acknowledgements This thesis would not have been possible without the patience and guidance of my supervisor Dr Deana Rankin. Without her ability to keep me focused despite my never-ending projects and her continuous support during my many illnesses throughout these last five years, this thesis would still be a work in progress. I would also like to thank Dr. Ewan Fernie who inspired me to work on Shakespeare and Bollywood during my MA at Royal Holloway and Dr. Christie Carson who encouraged me to pursue a PhD after six years of being away from academia, as well as Poonam Trivedi, whose work on Filmi Shakespeares inspired my research. I thank Dr. Varsha Panjwani for mentoring me through the last three years, for the words of encouragement and support every time I doubted myself, and for the stimulating discussions that helped shape this thesis. Last but not the least, I thank my family: my grandfather Dr Somesh Chandra Bhattacharya, who made it possible for me to follow my dreams; my mother Manasi Chatterjee, who taught me to work harder when the going got tough; my sister, Payel Chatterjee, for forcing me to watch countless terrible Bollywood films; and my father, Bidyut Behari Chatterjee, whose impromptu recitations of Shakespeare to underline a thought or an emotion have led me inevitably to becoming a Shakespeare scholar. -
The Journal the Music Academy
ISSN. 0970-3101 THE JOURNAL OF THE MUSIC ACADEMY DEVOTED TO THE ADVANCEMENT OF THE SCIENCE AND ART OF MUSIC Vol. LX 1989 *ra im rfra era faw ifa s i r ? ii ''I dwell not,in Vaikuntha, nor in the hearts of Yogins nor in the Sun; (but) where my bhaktas sing, there be I, Narada!" Edited by: T. S. PARTHASARATHY The Music Academy Madras 306, T. T. K. Road, Madras-600014 Annual Subscription — Inland Rs. 20 : Foreign $ 3-00 OURSELVES This Journal is published as an Annual. All correspondence relating to the Journal should be addressed and all books etc., intended for it should be sent to The Editor, Journal of the Music Academy, 306, T. T. K. Road, Madras-600 014. Articles on music and dance are accepted for publication on the understanding that they are contributed solely to the Journal of the Music Academy. Manuscripts should be legibly written or, preferably, type written (double-spaced and on one side of the paper only) and should be signed by the writter (giving his or her address in full). The Editor of the Journal is not responsible for the views expressed by contributors in their articles. CONTENTS Pages The 62nd Madras Music Conference - Official Report 1-64 The Bhakta and External Worship (Sri Tyagaraja’s Utsava Sampradaya Songs) Dr. William J. Jackson 65-91 Rhythmic Analysis of Some Selected Tiruppugazh Songs Prof. Trichy Sankaran (Canada) 92-102 Saugita Lakshana Prachina Paddhati 7. S. Parthasarathy & P. K. Rajagopa/a Iyer 103-124 Indian Music on the March 7. S. -
Academic Curriculum Vitae Marie Josephine Aruna Assistant Professor Department of English Kanchi Mamunivar Government Instit
Academic Curriculum Vitae Marie Josephine Aruna Assistant Professor Department of English Kanchi Mamunivar Government Institute for Postgraduate Studies and Research (Autonomous) Govt. of Puducherry Puducherry-605008, India. / kmcpgs.puducherry.gov.in/ Email: [email protected] Mobile: 9442234350 Qualifications Ph.D. English Pondicherry Central University Thesis- Patriarchal Myths in Postmodern Feminist Fiction: A Select Study January 2011 M.Phil. English Pondicherry Central University Thesis- Existential Critique of Marriage: A Comparative Study of Select Novels of Simone De Beauvoir and Nayantara Sahgal April 1991 M.A. English and Comparative Literature Pondicherry Central University Project – Idayanaadam and A Portrait of The Artist As A Young Man as Bildungsromane April 1990 M.A. Women’s Studies Allagappa University Karaikudi, Tamilnadu May 2004 P.G. Diploma in Higher Education Indira Gandhi National Open University New Delhi June 2000 P.G. Diploma in Journalism and Mass Communications Pondicherry University Community College Pondicherry Central University September 1998 Research Profile Member of several peer-reviewed online and print journals for which regular contributions are made, I am interested in employing theoretical/critical approaches to literary texts as methods of analysis. Recognized Guide (Full Time/ Part Time PhD) for Pondicherry Central University, Pondicherry. Recognized Guide for Bharathiar University (Part-Time PhD) and currently supervising two PhD candidates registered under Bharathiar University, Coimbatore. PhD/M.Phil Candidates 1 -PhD Candidate Awarded– Bharathiar University (Part-Time PhD) 6th July 2018 1-M.Phil Candidate (Pondicherry University)-KMCPGS- (2017-18 Batch) – Awarded-25/01 2019 2--M.Phil Candidates (2018-19 Batch), Awarded -11/01/2020 2-PhD Candidates – (Pondicherry University- 2018-19 & 2019-20 Batches)-KMGIPSR- ongoing. -
Transitional Justice for Women Ex-Combatants in Sri Lanka
Transitional Justice for Women Ex-Combatants in Sri Lanka Nirekha De Silva Transitional Justice for Women Ex-Combatants in Sri Lanka Copyright© WISCOMP Foundation for Universal Responsibility Of His Holiness The Dalai Lama, New Delhi, India, 2006. All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system or transmitted in any form or by any means, mechanical, photocopying, recording, or otherwise, without the prior written permission of the publisher. Published by WISCOMP Foundation for Universal Responsibility Of His Holiness The Dalai Lama Core 4A, UGF, India Habitat Centre Lodhi Road, New Delhi 110 003, India This initiative was made possible by a grant from the Ford Foundation. The views expressed are those of the author. They do not necessarily reflect those of WISCOMP or the Foundation for Universal Responsibility of HH The Dalai Lama, nor are they endorsed by them. 2 Contents Acknowledgements 5 Preface 7 Introduction 9 Methodology 11 List of Abbreviations 13 Civil War in Sri Lanka 14 Army Women 20 LTTE Women 34 Peace and the process of Disarmament, Demobilization and Reintegration 45 Human Needs and Human Rights in Reintegration 55 Psychological Barriers in Reintegration 68 Social Adjustment to Civil Life 81 Available Mechanisms 87 Recommendations 96 Directory of Available Resources 100 • Counselling Centres 100 • Foreign Recruitment 102 • Local Recruitment 132 • Vocational Training 133 • Financial Resources 160 • Non-Government Organizations (NGO’s) 163 Bibliography 199 List of People Interviewed 204 3 4 Acknowledgements I am grateful to Dr. Meenakshi Gopinath and Sumona DasGupta of Women in Security, Conflict Management and Peace (WISCOMP), India, for offering the Scholar for Peace Fellowship in 2005. -
Financial Reforms in Sri Lanka and Their Influence on the Banking Industry”
“Financial reforms in Sri Lanka and their influence on the banking industry” AUTHORS Lalith Seelanatha Guneratne B Wickremasinghe Lalith Seelanatha and Guneratne B Wickremasinghe (2009). Financial reforms in ARTICLE INFO Sri Lanka and their influence on the banking industry. Banks and Bank Systems, 4(4) RELEASED ON Wednesday, 16 December 2009 JOURNAL "Banks and Bank Systems" FOUNDER LLC “Consulting Publishing Company “Business Perspectives” NUMBER OF REFERENCES NUMBER OF FIGURES NUMBER OF TABLES 0 0 0 © The author(s) 2021. This publication is an open access article. businessperspectives.org Banks and Bank Systems, Volume 4, Issue 4, 2009 Lalith Seelanatha (Australia), Guneratne B. Wickremasinghe (Australia) Financial reforms in Sri Lanka and their influence on the banking industry Abstract Financial reforms in Sri Lanka began in 1977 with the introduction of open economic policies. The aim of this paper is to summarize the major reforms and evaluate their influence on the banking industry in Sri Lanka. The analytical discussions presented in this paper demonstrate that market structure and scope in the banking industry have drastically changed after the reforms. Further, the analysis found that the depth of the banking industry has improved significantly as a result of the reforms. Keywords: banking industry, Sri Lanka, financial reforms, unit trusts, superannuation funds. JEL Classifications: E44, E58, G21. Introduction © reforms in Sri Lanka. The third section analyzes the impact of financial sector reforms on the banking In the late 1970s, most developed and developing industry in Sri Lanka. The last section presents policy countries began to introduce financial deregulation implications and conclusions of the paper.