1,747,815 research outputs found
Arvind Chaturvedi Soils Experiment (884101) [version 1.0]
Arvind Chaturvedi Soils Experimen
Arvind Kejriwal detention In Tihar Jail: Alarming sign for human right
Arvind Kejriwal, Delhi chief minister, has been experiencing a significant decline in health in recent weeks. Kejriwal is now held in Tihar Jail on accusations that have generated controversy and discussion of what BJP is doing with a public leader. His failing health has highlighted the complex interplay between human rights, political assassination, and legal responsibility in the Indian legal system curtailed by BJP’s union government. Most importantly Arvind kejriwal is arrested but he has not been proven guilty and in law it clearly states that “a person is innocent till proven guilty” but it’s very sad and harsh that the brutal government of BJP is acting like pre-independence
Arvind Kejriwal’s historic resignation could redefine Delhi politics
Arvind Kejriwal is set to make a historic move at a time when holding onto power has become the norm. By resigning as Delhi’s Chief Minister, Kejriwal is signaling a significant sacrifice that could potentially reshape Delhi’s political landscape. His decision directly challenges the BJP’s long-standing goal of regaining control of Delhi, a pursuit they have maintained since losing it in 1998. More importantly, this bold move is likely to energize Delhi residents for the upcoming elections, uniting them against the BJP’s perceived misuse of authority and overreach
Gap-filled USGS sensor data for nitrate, discharge and temperature for selected sites in Iowa, U.S.A.
The raw data used in this project are available through the United States Geological Survey National Water Information System data portal. More information about this project and the associated files can be found in the Readme.National Science Foundation under Grant EAR-1415206 Science, Engineering and Education for Sustainability (SEES) Fellows to A.T.H.: SEES Fellows: Leveraging the waterscape to increase agricultural landscape sustainability. Donor of American Chemical Society Petroleum Research Fund to A.S.Singh, Arvind; Hansen, Amy, T. (2018). Gap-filled USGS sensor data for nitrate, discharge and temperature for selected sites in Iowa, U.S.A.. Retrieved from the Data Repository for the University of Minnesota (DRUM), https://doi.org/10.13020/D6T106
Economic reforms: Policy and institutions some lessons from Indian reforms
Economic policy and policy reform over the last few decades has been motivated by the need to accelerate growth or equivalently to reverse a decline in growth rate. The economic literature on the determinants of growth has burgeoned and disagreement has followed consensus on the policy prescriptions that need to befollowed to achieve this purpose. Sometimes the disagreement is exaggerated by the titans of the profession, so as to distinguish themselves from those constituting the conventional wisdom. The present paper moves the focus from this "macro"debate to concrete issues of policy formulation and policy change and explores the links between policy and institutions in the context of economic reforms. Thus successful introduction of new policies may require new institutions and the degree of success in changing policies may depend on the degree to which existing institutions are modified. The literature on Institutions and Development has dealt with questions of grand design such as the Constitution, the rule of law (personal safety), property rights and informal rules embodied in culture. These are matters that happen on a timescale of a quarter/half century or more and can be thought of as the "superstructure" of institutions. The quantitative work on institutions and growth has explored the linkage between these institutional issues and economic growth. In the current paper we focus on what may be called the "microstructure" of institutions, a smaller scale at which change can occur over a time frame of decades (or half decades). Among the issues that a rise in this context are how changing institutions requirechanges in policies.Economic Reforms, India, Policy, Institutions
China’s Socialist Market Economy - Lessons Of Success
Through the 1990s China was widely and often held up as a paragon of economic policy reform driven growth and an example for others to follow. We in India were not immune to the temptation to do the same. There is no doubt that China has lessons that India and many other countries can learn, lessons that will help improve their growth rate. Some of these lessons have been correctly learned, for instance those related to the export led growth model adopted by many S. E. Asian and E Asian countries. There is however a great danger of learning wrong lessons, This danger arises from the fact that information can and is controlled much more easily in a communist party ruled State than it is in a democracy, even a flawed one. China has also gone out of the way to make economic interaction with it (e.g. FDI, outsourcing of manufacturing) profitable for foreigners (non-Chinese), so their interests are best served by publicising information that ensures that profitable interaction with the Chinese Communist Party (CCP) and the State continue. The present paper is an attempt to derive a more balanced picture of Chinas past success so that better and more fruitful lessons can be drawn for the use of other noncommunist countries. In this context the economic history of India, characterised as it is by 30 years of Indian Socialism can be quite beneficial as it comes closest to the market based Socialism with Chinese Characteristics. In contrast comparisons of China with Soviet socialism (USSR) can be very misleading and those with Cuba or North Korea are deliberate red herrings. With the exception of the degree of external openness (FDI & foreign trade), Chinas economy in 2005 is still much more socialist than Indias was in the heyday of the Indian Version of socialism.China, Market Economy, Economic Transition, Socialist Market Economy
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Arvind
textThis report will summarize the process of developing, producing and finishing the short documentary film ARVIND. Shot on HD video in Austin, TX from May 2012 to March 2014, the film was produced as my Graduate Thesis Film in the Department of Radio-TV-Film at the University of Texas at Austin in partial fulfillment of my Master of Fine Arts in Film Production degree.Radio-Television-Fil
Emerging market chrises : an asset markets perspective
Additional author listed in caption title on p. 1: Arvind KrishnamurthyOctober, 1998--t.p. -- This draft: Novebmer 5, 1998--P.
How Debt Markets have Malfunctioned in the Crisis
This article explains how debt markets have malfunctioned in the crisis, with deleterious consequences for the real economy. I begin with a quick overview of debt markets. I then discuss three areas that are crucial in all debt markets decisions: risk capital and risk aversion, repo financing and haircuts, and counterparty risk. In each of these areas, feedback effects can arise, so that less liquidity and a higher cost for finance can reinforce each other in a contagious spiral. I document the remarkable rise in the premium that investors placed on liquidity during the crisis. Next, I show how these issues caused debt markets to break down: fundamental values and market values seemed to diverge across several markets and products that were far removed from the “toxic” subprime mortgage assets at the root of the crisis. Finally, I discuss briefly four steps that the Federal Reserve took to ease the crisis, and how each was geared to a specific systemic fault that arose during the crisis.
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