Markets, Governance, and Institutions in the Process of Economic Development

Price: 595.00 INR

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ISBN:

9780198824664

Publication date:

27/11/2017

Hardback

416 pages

Price: 595.00 INR

We sell our titles through other companies
Disclaimer :You will be redirected to a third party website.The sole responsibility of supplies, condition of the product, availability of stock, date of delivery, mode of payment will be as promised by the said third party only. Prices and specifications may vary from the OUP India site.

ISBN:

9780198824664

Publication date:

27/11/2017

Hardback

416 pages

Edited by Ajit Mishra and Tridip Ray

Rights:  OUP UK (Indian Territory)

Edited by Ajit Mishra and Tridip Ray

Description

Written in honour of Kaushik Basu, Markets, Governance, and Institutions in the Process of Economic Development is a celebration of over forty years of contributions to development economics. Written by Professor Basu's past and present collaborators and research students it offers original insights and perspectives on issues relating to well-being, freedom, and institutions in the developmental context.
Throughout his career, Kaushik Basu has addressed policy issues such as rent control, child labour, labour laws, harassment, shared prosperity, and gender empowerment. The contributions in this volume, theoretical as well as empirical, reflect this range of issues in the broader context of interactions between markets, governance, and institutions in the process of economic development. The broader roles of markets as key resource allocation mechanisms cannot be disputed. But they need suitable governance structures and institutions, working both as facilitators and as regulators. Markets, Governance and Institutions in the Process of Economic Development looks at the complex interactions between these three forces of development.
Divided into three distinct sections covering foundational and measurement issues associated with economic development and well-being; functioning (and non-functioning) of the market in the context of development; and structure and design issues relating to governance and institutions, this book provides a clear focus for academics and economists considering development policy questions.

About the Editors

Ajit Mishra
is a development economist with research interests in the economics of corruption and enforcement, inequality, vulnerability, and applied microeconomics. He is currently a Associate Professor of Economics at the University of Bath. He graduated from the Delhi School of Economics and, prior to University of Bath, taught at various institutions including Delhi School of Economics, Indira Gandhi Institute of Development Research, Ashoka University, the University of Dundee, and the University of Edinburgh. He has written several articles on corruption and is the Editor of The Economics of Corruption (Oxford University Press, 2005).
Tridip Ray is a Professor of Economics at the Indian Statistical Institute (ISI), Delhi. He received his Ph.D. in economics from Cornell University and taught at the Hong Kong University of Science and Technology before joining ISI Delhi. His research areas include economic development and growth, inequality, financial development, economics of education, and issues in applied microeconomics. He has published several articles on economic development and is the Co-Editor of New and Enduring Themes in Development Economics (World Scientific, 2009).

Edited by Ajit Mishra and Tridip Ray

Table of contents


Foreword: Early Kaushik and the World Lately, Amartya Sen
Development: Foundations and Measurement
2: Markets, State, and Institutions, Joseph E. Stiglitz
3: On a Concept of Freedom, Prasanta Pattanaik and Yongsheng Xu
4: Multi-dimensional Poverty: Some Comments, Bhaskar Dutta
5: The Quintile Income Statistic and Distributional Analysis, S. Subramanian
6: Sensitivity of Stationary Equitable Preferences, Tapan Mitra
7: The Link between Preferences, Price, Inequality, and Poverty: The Indian Evidence, Ranjan Ray
Markets and Development
8: Private versus Public Monopoly, Jörgen W. Weibull and Jun Chen Jun Chen
9: U.S.-Japanese Differences in Employment Practices: New Explanations and Predictions, Hodaka Morita
10: On Quality Traps and Economic Development, Patrick M. Emerson
11: Inequality and Neighbourhood Effects: Market Access and Welfare of the Poor, Namrata Gulati and Tridip Ray
12: The Great Recession and Life Satisfaction: The Unique Decline for Americans Approaching Retirement Age, John Ifcher, Homa Zarghamee and Amanda Cabacungan
13: Does Rising Inequality Delay Marriage? Evidence from India, A.V. Chari, Annemie Maertens, and Sinduja Srinivasan
14: The Impact of Migration on Child Labour: Theory and Evidence from Brazil, Garance Genicot, Annea-Mariea Mayda and Mariapia Mendola
Governance and Institutions
15: Relation-Based Governance and Competition, Avinash Dixit
16: Labour and Tenancy in Retrospect: Two Bihari Villages in 1970, Clive Bell
17: Holding India Together: The Role of Institutions of Federalism, Nirvikar Singh
18: The Dividend of Diversity for India's Corporate Sector, Ashwini Deshpande
19: A 'Rights-Based' Approach to Optimal Tax Policy, Eduardo Zambrano
20: The Many Faces of Corruption: Which One(s) to Target?, Ajit Mishra

Edited by Ajit Mishra and Tridip Ray

Edited by Ajit Mishra and Tridip Ray

Edited by Ajit Mishra and Tridip Ray

Description

Written in honour of Kaushik Basu, Markets, Governance, and Institutions in the Process of Economic Development is a celebration of over forty years of contributions to development economics. Written by Professor Basu's past and present collaborators and research students it offers original insights and perspectives on issues relating to well-being, freedom, and institutions in the developmental context.
Throughout his career, Kaushik Basu has addressed policy issues such as rent control, child labour, labour laws, harassment, shared prosperity, and gender empowerment. The contributions in this volume, theoretical as well as empirical, reflect this range of issues in the broader context of interactions between markets, governance, and institutions in the process of economic development. The broader roles of markets as key resource allocation mechanisms cannot be disputed. But they need suitable governance structures and institutions, working both as facilitators and as regulators. Markets, Governance and Institutions in the Process of Economic Development looks at the complex interactions between these three forces of development.
Divided into three distinct sections covering foundational and measurement issues associated with economic development and well-being; functioning (and non-functioning) of the market in the context of development; and structure and design issues relating to governance and institutions, this book provides a clear focus for academics and economists considering development policy questions.

About the Editors

Ajit Mishra
is a development economist with research interests in the economics of corruption and enforcement, inequality, vulnerability, and applied microeconomics. He is currently a Associate Professor of Economics at the University of Bath. He graduated from the Delhi School of Economics and, prior to University of Bath, taught at various institutions including Delhi School of Economics, Indira Gandhi Institute of Development Research, Ashoka University, the University of Dundee, and the University of Edinburgh. He has written several articles on corruption and is the Editor of The Economics of Corruption (Oxford University Press, 2005).
Tridip Ray is a Professor of Economics at the Indian Statistical Institute (ISI), Delhi. He received his Ph.D. in economics from Cornell University and taught at the Hong Kong University of Science and Technology before joining ISI Delhi. His research areas include economic development and growth, inequality, financial development, economics of education, and issues in applied microeconomics. He has published several articles on economic development and is the Co-Editor of New and Enduring Themes in Development Economics (World Scientific, 2009).

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Table of contents


Foreword: Early Kaushik and the World Lately, Amartya Sen
Development: Foundations and Measurement
2: Markets, State, and Institutions, Joseph E. Stiglitz
3: On a Concept of Freedom, Prasanta Pattanaik and Yongsheng Xu
4: Multi-dimensional Poverty: Some Comments, Bhaskar Dutta
5: The Quintile Income Statistic and Distributional Analysis, S. Subramanian
6: Sensitivity of Stationary Equitable Preferences, Tapan Mitra
7: The Link between Preferences, Price, Inequality, and Poverty: The Indian Evidence, Ranjan Ray
Markets and Development
8: Private versus Public Monopoly, Jörgen W. Weibull and Jun Chen Jun Chen
9: U.S.-Japanese Differences in Employment Practices: New Explanations and Predictions, Hodaka Morita
10: On Quality Traps and Economic Development, Patrick M. Emerson
11: Inequality and Neighbourhood Effects: Market Access and Welfare of the Poor, Namrata Gulati and Tridip Ray
12: The Great Recession and Life Satisfaction: The Unique Decline for Americans Approaching Retirement Age, John Ifcher, Homa Zarghamee and Amanda Cabacungan
13: Does Rising Inequality Delay Marriage? Evidence from India, A.V. Chari, Annemie Maertens, and Sinduja Srinivasan
14: The Impact of Migration on Child Labour: Theory and Evidence from Brazil, Garance Genicot, Annea-Mariea Mayda and Mariapia Mendola
Governance and Institutions
15: Relation-Based Governance and Competition, Avinash Dixit
16: Labour and Tenancy in Retrospect: Two Bihari Villages in 1970, Clive Bell
17: Holding India Together: The Role of Institutions of Federalism, Nirvikar Singh
18: The Dividend of Diversity for India's Corporate Sector, Ashwini Deshpande
19: A 'Rights-Based' Approach to Optimal Tax Policy, Eduardo Zambrano
20: The Many Faces of Corruption: Which One(s) to Target?, Ajit Mishra

Read More