RePEc-List of Bangladesh-related Publications Compiled by the BDRC, this list provides publications details of 916 items related to Bangladesh as listed in the IDEAS/RePEc database http://ideas.repec.org/ (as of November 6, 2008). For further publication details, please use the search tool (http://ideas.repec.org/search.html) of the IDEAS/RePEc database. IDEAS is the largest bibliographic database dedicated to Economics and available freely on the Internet, see: http://ideas.repec.org/. The format of each item listed (sorted by alphabetical order of title) is as follows: a) Title of publication [relevance of item using “Bangladesh” as the search term]; b) Name(s) of author(s) and publication year; and c) Abstract (possibly partial) and information on download-ability of the item. 1. A Computable Stochastic Control Model for the Assessment of the Impact of Floods on Growth in Bangladesh [28.738%] | Motel, P. (1993) | No abstract is available for this item. 2. A Conceptual Review on Corporate Governance and its Effect on Firm's Performance: Bangladesh Perspective [29.971%] | Homayara Latifa Ahmed & Md. Jahangir Alam & Saeed Alamgir Jafar & Sawlat Hilmi Zaman (2008) | Downloadable! Corporate governance - a concept referring to the ideal mode of ensuring firm's accountability to its stakeholders, has ascended to its current level of importance owing to corporate level scandals in the large economies of the world; experience gained from which has brought some positive changes in the less developed economies - changes that are proactive and are aimed at enhancing corporate responsibility and performance. The objective of this study has been to review this concept as is being practised, the problems being faced, the schools of thought, its implication on firm valuation and performance and lastly, to see its relevance in the context of Bangladesh, where the listed firms are mostly owned and managed by family members. Suggestions to improve corporate governance and accountability, also in line with SEC guidelines, is to have an active board with well proportioned executive vs non-executive members, along with representatives from all groups of shareholders/stakeholders; separati 3. A Cost-Effectiveness Analysis of the Grameen Bank of Bangladesh [30.016%] | Mark Schreiner (2003) | Downloadable (with restrictions)! Reports of the success of the Grameen Bank of Bangladesh have led to rapid growth in funding for microfinance. But has the Grameen Bank been cost-effective? This article compares output with subsidy for the bank in a present-value framework. For the timeframe 1983-97, subsidy per person-year of membership in Grameen was about $20, and subsidy per dollar-year borrowed was about $0.22. Although the article does not measure consumer surplus for Grameen users, the evidence in the literature suggests that surplus probably exceeds subsidy. The Grameen Bank - if not necessarily other microlenders - was probably a worthwhile social investment. Copyright Overseas Development Institute, 2003. 4. A Cost-Effectiveness Analysis of the Grameen Bank of Bangladesh [29.985%] | Mark Schreiner (2001) | Downloadable! In the next ten years, advocates of microfinance organizations (MFOs) will seek more than $20 billion to provide small loans to 100 million of the poorest families worldwide. In the United States, the newest federal budget proposes a 159-percent increase in the about $200 million spent per year on domestic microfinance. Most of the excitement for the promise of microfinance in the United States has been sparked by reports of the success of the Grameen Bank of Bangladesh. Was Grameen a good use of scarce funds earmarked to help the poor? For the time frame of 1983- 96, I find that the present worth of benefits of Grameen exceeded the present worth of costs ($16.4 million) as long as the average member got more than $8 worth of surplus per year of membership. This result is robust to assumptions about opportunity costs. Given the documented impacts of Grameen, my guess is that benefits did in fact exceed costs. Grameen seems to have been a good way to help the poor. Still, one good MFO does not a Page 1 of 148 5. A Cross-Country Study of Union Membership [8.652%] | David G. Blanchflower (2006) | Downloadable! This paper examines changes in unionization that have occurred over the last decade or so using individual level micro data on twenty seven of the thirty OECD countries, with particular emphasis on Canada, the United Kingdom and the United States. Micro-data is also used to model union membership in a further eleven non-OECD countries. Union density is found to be negatively correlated with level of education in the private sector and positively correlated in the public sector. The probability of being a union member is found to follow an inverted U-shaped pattern in age, maximizing in Canada, the USA and the UK in the mid to late 40s. This inverted U-shaped pattern is repeated in a further thirty countries (Australia; Austria; Bangladesh; Belgium; Bulgaria; Chile; Czech Republic; Denmark; Germany; Estonia; Finland; France; Greece; Hungary; Ireland; Israel; Japan; Luxembourg; Mexico; Netherlands; New Zealand; Norway; Poland; Portugal; Russia; Slovak Republic; Slovenia; Spain; Sweden and Switzerl 6. A Dynamic Econometric Model of Agricultural Wage Determination in Bangladesh [30.017%] | Boyce, James K & Ravallion, Martin (1991) | Econometric evidence on the evolution of real agricultural wages in Bangladesh over time has been used by some observers to argue that higher relative prices of food staples and higher agricultural productivity will help the rural poor. The authors re-examine this hypothesis using new data and a dynamic econometric model of wage determination. The model's specification avoids a number of shortcomings in past work, and the estimated equation gives a good yet parsimonious fit to annual data. Increases in rice prices relative to the prices of manufactured goods are found to have adverse effects on the real wages in terms of rice in both the short and long-run though there is full indexation relative to a bundle of goods in the long-run. On correcting for likely measurement errors in the official series, they find no evidence that changes in agricultural productivity have had a significant effect on real wage rates. Copyright 1991 by Blackwell Publishing Ltd 7. A More Generalized Planning Model of Bangladesh: Some Preliminary Observations [28.743%] | Chowdhury, Anisuzzaman (1986) | No abstract is available for this item. 8. A Note on the Contribution of Sectoral Natural Population Growth to the Aggregate Poverty Change: Evidence from Bangladesh, Mong [28.738%] | Rim Chatti & AbdelRahmen El Lahga (2007) | Downloadable! This note extends the Ravallion and Huppi (1991) aggregate poverty change decomposition, to account for the distinct contribution of migration and differential natural population growth between sectors to the aggregate poverty change. We apply our decomposition to three LDCs. We find that accounting for sectoral difference in natural population growth has a considerable impact on national poverty change. 9. A Search for an Optimum Currency Area Partners for Pakistan [8.652%] | Farooq Rasheed & Javed A. Ansari (2004) | Downloadable! This paper empirically examines the existence of a common trend between the exchange rates of Pakistan and four regional countries (Bangladesh, India, Saudi Arabia, and Sri Lanka) with two of their major trading partners (the United States and Japan) as base countries. Results from cointegrating analysis show that the strongest evidence points to the existence of common stochastic trends between the Pakistani rupee, on the one hand, and the Bangladeshi Taka and the Sri Lankan rupee, on the other hand. There is no strong evidence for the existence of a common stochastic trend between the Pakistani rupee and the currencies of India and Saudi Arabia. Optimum Currency Area (OCA) theory seems to justify the formation of a currency union between Pakistan, Bangladesh, and Sri Lanka. The case of a currency union between Bangladesh and Pakistan is strengthened by a shared political past and a shared history of financial institutional development. The immediate impact of the formation of such union on Pak 10. A Social Cost-Benefit Analysis of Irrigation in Bangladesh [28.742%] | Nguyen, D T & Alamgir, Mohiuddin (1976) | No abstract is available for this item. 11. A Study on Structure of the Economy of Udalguri Sub-Division, Assam (India) [8.652%] | Prasen Daimari & SK Mishra (2005) | Downloadable! In this study we make an attempt to visualize the structure Page 2 of 148 of the economy of Udalguri Subdivision of Assam, India. The structure of an economy comprises the characteristic features of and the interrelationships among its constituent parts and subsystems. These characteristic features and interrelationships typify the economy and give to it a style, an appearance and individuality of its own. In our study area, we find only a weak interrelationship among various sectors of the economy. The urban sector has little impact on the productive system, mainly due to poor infrastructure. Conspicuous and ceremonial expenditure is substantial, specially in the villages inhabited by indigenous people vis-à-vis the villages inhabited by immigrant people from Bangladesh. The economy is subsistence driven and productive resources are underutilized. Marginal productivity of labour is near- zero and productivity of land provides only subsistence. Poverty keeps consumption and savings low. Capital formation in 12. A conceptual framework for the sustainability assessment procedures of the shrimp aquaculture industry in coastal Bangladesh [29.951%] | Md. Arif Chowdhury & Ganesh P. Shivakoti & Md. Salequzzaman (2006) | Downloadable (with restrictions)! Shrimp aquaculture is now establishing itself as an important aquaculture industry in coastal Bangladesh. However, the benefit of this industry is concentrated to only the interests of a specific group of people who contribute a significant amount of foreign earnings to the nation, while the present development process is posing a challenge to the coastal sustainability, as well as the industry itself.
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