44 results
Search Results
2. Smokeless and combustible tobacco use among 148,944 South Asian adults: a cross-sectional study of South Asia Biobank.
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Xie, Wubin, Mridha, Malay Kanti, Gupta, Anaya, Kusuma, Dian, Butt, Awais Muhammad, Hasan, Mehedi, Brage, Soren, Loh, Marie, Khawaja, Khadija Irfan, Pradeepa, Rajendra, Jha, Vinita, Kasturiratne, Anuradhani, Katulanda, Prasad, Anjana, Ranjit Mohan, and Chambers, John C
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SOUTH Asians ,SMOKELESS tobacco ,TOBACCO use ,SMOKING cessation ,SMOKING - Abstract
Introduction: Tobacco use, in both smoking and smokeless forms, is highly prevalent among South Asian adults. The aims of the study were twofold: (1) describe patterns of SLT and combustible tobacco product use in four South Asian countries stratified by country and sex, and (2) assess the relationships between SLT and smoking intensity, smoking quit attempts, and smoking cessation among South Asian men. Methods: Data were obtained from South Asia Biobank Study, collected between 2018 and 2022 from 148,944 men and women aged 18 years and above, living in Bangladesh, India, Pakistan, or Sri Lanka. Mixed effects multivariable logistic and linear regression were used to quantify the associations of SLT use with quit attempt, cessation, and intensity. Results: Among the four South Asian countries, Bangladesh has the highest rates of current smoking (39.9% for male, 0.4% for female) and current SLT use (24.7% for male and 23.4% for female). Among male adults, ever SLT use was associated with a higher odds of smoking cessation in Bangladesh (OR, 2.88; 95% CI, 2.65, 3.13), India (OR, 2.02; 95% CI, 1.63, 2.50), and Sri Lanka (OR, 1.36; 95% CI, 1.14, 1.62). Ever SLT use and current SLT use was associated with lower smoking intensity in all countries. Conclusions: In this large population-based study of South Asian adults, rates of smoking and SLT use vary widely by country and gender. Men who use SLT products are more likely to abstain from smoking compared with those who do not. What this paper adds?: • Tobacco use remains a leading risk factor of chronic disease in South Asia. Smokeless tobacco use is particularly popular in this region, even among adult women. Evidence on smokeless tobacco use and smoking cessation are inconclusive and may be dependent on specific cultural and historical factors. • Contemporaneous data on smokeless and combustible tobacco use patterns in South Asia are limited. Little is known whether SLT use is associated with smoking cessation in South Asia where the vast majority of the world's SLT users reside. • This study provided information on patterns of SLT use and smoking in four South Asia countries using a large population-based sample of 148,944 adults collected between 2018 and 2022. We observed that SLT use was associated with higher smoking cessation and lower smoking intensity among men. Strengthening SLT product regulation may have important population health implications with the changing tobacco use landscape in South Asia. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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3. Modelling renewable energy adoption across south Asian economies: Empirical evidence from Bangladesh, India, Pakistan and Sri Lanka.
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Murshed, Muntasir, Abbass, Kashif, and Rashid, Seemran
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ECONOMIC conditions in Asia ,RENEWABLE energy sources ,RENEWABLE energy transition (Government policy) ,FOREIGN investments ,FINANCIAL policy ,CAPITAL movements - Abstract
This paper aims to empirically shed light on the pertinence of enhancing trade and foreign capital flows with relevance to stimulating greater use of renewable energy resources across selected South Asian economies namely Bangladesh, India, Pakistan and Sri Lanka. The economic transition from the use of non‐renewable energy tothe renewable alternatives is an interesting genre of research keeping the partial attainment of the United Nations' 2030 Sustainable Development Goals agenda into consideration. Against this milieu, trade and financial liberalization policies are anticipated to play a pivotal role in facilitating the renewable energy transition phenomenon across South Asia. The overall results from the econometric analyses imply that higher degrees of trade openness and greater foreign currency inflows can invariably play critically important roles in amplifying the shares of renewables in the total energy consumption levels across this region. Thus, these findings impose key policy implications for attainment of energy sustainability across South Asia. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
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4. Exploring the link between green energy, CO2 emissions, exchange rate and economic growth: Perspective from emerging South Asian countries.
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Rahman, Mohammad Rifat, Rahman, Md. Mufidur, and Akter, Roksana
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FOREIGN exchange rates ,SUSTAINABLE development ,ECONOMIC expansion ,CLEAN energy ,ENERGY consumption ,RENEWABLE energy sources ,ELECTRIC power consumption - Abstract
This paper investigates the nexus between renewable energy use, CO
2 emissions, exchange rate, and economic development within emerging South Asian nations, namely Bangladesh, India, Pakistan, and Sri Lanka, employing the Autoregressive Distributed Lag (ARDL) framework. It examines annual data spanning from 1990 to 2019, examining key indicators of renewable energy consumption, CO2 emissions, exchange rate, and economic development. The ARDL bounds test results demonstrate the existence of co-integration among the variables in the long run. The empirical result finds that the renewable energy consumption, CO2 emissions, and exchange rate have a significant impact on economic growth in Bangladesh, Pakistan, and Sri Lanka in the long run. In India no significant relationship found in the long run. In short run assessment, Bangladesh, India, and Sri Lanka also found same relationship with economic growth and renewable energy consumption, CO2 emissions, and exchange rate. Interestingly, In Pakistan no significant relationship has found in short run estimation analysis. Furthermore, study tried to determine the causality direction by using the Toda Yamamoto granger causality approach, which reveals bidirectional causation between exchange rate and CO2 emission in India. In Pakistan, study also found bi-directional causality among the variables renewable energy consumption, CO2 emissions, and economic growth. Finally, this paper emphasizes developing the policy as well as making a concrete decision regarding the renewable energy consumption, CO2 emissions, exchange rate, and economic development for ensuring sustainable economic growth in South Asian region. Future research could extend this work by including different dimensional data, additional countries, or using alternative or supplementary modeling techniques. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2023
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5. Post-intervention acceptability of multicomponent intervention for management of hypertension in rural Bangladesh, Pakistan, and Sri Lanka- a qualitative study.
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Jafar, Tazeen H., Tavajoh, Saeideh, de Silva, H. Asita, Naheed, Aliya, Jehan, Imtiaz, Kanatiwela de Silva, Chamini, Chakma, Nantu, Huda, Maryam, and Legido-Quigley, Helena
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COMMUNITY health workers ,COMMUNITIES ,BLOOD pressure ,RURAL women ,RURAL children ,HYPERTENSION ,QUALITATIVE research - Abstract
Background: COBRA-BPS (Control of Blood Pressure and Risk Attenuation-Bangladesh, Pakistan, Sri Lanka), a multicomponent, community health-worker (CHW)-led hypertension management program, has been shown to be effective in rural communities in South Asia. This paper presents the acceptability of COBRA-BPS multicomponent intervention among the key stakeholders. Methods: We conducted post-implementation interviews of 87 stakeholder including 23 community health workers (CHWs), 19 physicians and 45 patients in 15 rural communities randomized to COBRA-BPS multicomponent intervention in in Bangladesh, Pakistan, and Sri Lanka. We used Theoretical Framework for Acceptability framework (TFA) with a focus on affective attitude, burden, ethicality, intervention coherence, opportunity cost, perceived effectiveness and self-efficacy. Results: COBRA-BPS multicomponent intervention was acceptable to most stakeholders. Despite some concerns about workload, most CHWs were enthusiastic and felt empowered. Physicians appreciated the training sessions and felt trusted by their patients. Patients were grateful to receive the intervention and valued it. However, patients in Pakistan and Bangladesh expressed the need for supplies of free medicines from the primary health facilities, while those in Sri Lanka were concerned about supplies' irregularities. All stakeholders favoured scaling-up COBRA-BPS at a national level. Conclusions: COBRA-BPS multicomponent intervention is acceptable to the key stakeholders in Bangladesh, Pakistan and Sri Lanka. Community engagement for national scale-up of COBRA-BPS is likely to be successful in all three countries. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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6. Determinants of Human Wellbeing and its Prospect Under the Role of Financial Inclusion in South Asian Countries.
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AUDI, Marc, POULIN, Marc, and ALI, Amjad
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WELL-being ,HEALTH facilities ,SCHOOL facilities ,INCOME inequality ,HEALTH promotion ,UNEMPLOYMENT ,UNEMPLOYMENT statistics - Abstract
This study aims to examine the impact of financial inclusion on human well-being in South Asian countries from 1996 to 2020. Specifically, Pakistan, India, Sri Lanka, and Bangladesh were selected for this investigation. Human well-being is treated as the dependent variable, while financial inclusion, health facilities, voice & accountability, income inequality, corruption, education facilities, and the unemployment rate are considered independent variables. The study's findings indicate that financial inclusion, health facilities, and education facilities have a positive and significant impact on human well-being. The improvement of health and educational facilities not only creates more employment opportunities but also contributes to the enhancement of income, education, and health status within a nation. These results explain that selected South Asian countries should prioritize the promotion of education and health facilities to elevate the overall level of human well-being. Voice & accountability, along with corruption, exhibit an inverse and significant influence on human well-being in selected South Asian countries. Income inequality, on the other hand, shows an inverse but insignificant impact on human well-being, while unemployment has a significant and positive influence. Based on the estimated results, it is recommended that to enhance the level of human well-being in South Asian countries, there is a need to improve financial inclusion, health facilities, and educational facilities. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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7. Assessing key performance indicators in the shipbuilding industry; an MCDM approach.
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Gavalas, Dimitris, Syriopoulos, Theodoros, and Tsatsaronis, Michael
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KEY performance indicators (Management) ,SHIPBUILDING industry ,MULTIPLE criteria decision making ,BALANCED scorecard ,EMPLOYMENT statistics - Abstract
A series of countries have focused on shipbuilding public policies, as it is commonly considered a deliberate industry and influences employment levels in many regions. Establishing key performance indicators can be a challenge to shipbuilding policymakers. This paper suggests an approach to this issue, based on three different MCDM techniques: the fuzzy DEMATEL, the Fuzzy ANP, and the MOORA. This approach makes it achievable to estimate performance and competitiveness, considering 25 different variables comprising four different viewpoints of a balanced scorecard approach. These dimensions include finance, customer, internal process, and learning and growth aspects. The methodology is applied to the analysis of the active shipyards of the Bay of Bengal Basin countries. Our main findings indicate that shipyards which are effective in 'customer' variables perform higher performance, while variables constituting the 'learning and growth' dimension demonstrate lower impact on it. Additionally, the dimensions of 'finance' and 'customer' show uttered impacts on the other dimensions, while 'learning and growth' has no impact on the other perspectives of the balanced scorecard. Through this methodology, researchers, practitioners, and policymakers might acquire a penetrating overview into the drivers of the global shift in shipbuilding industry. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2022
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8. Revisiting the CO2 emission-induced EKC hypothesis in South Asia: the role of Export Quality Improvement.
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Murshed, Muntasir and Dao, Nhung Thi Tuyet
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CARBON emissions ,CLIMATE change ,ECONOMIC conditions in Asia ,KUZNETS curve ,PANEL analysis ,NEPAL Earthquake, 2015 - Abstract
Global climate change adversities have particularly sparked the urgency in mitigating carbon dioxide emissions across the world. Against this backdrop, the paper attempts to investigate the validity of the carbon dioxide emission-induced Environmental Kuznets Curve (EKC) hypothesis controlling for the impacts of export quality on the economic growth-carbon dioxide emission nexus in the context of selected South Asian economies: Bangladesh, India, Pakistan, Sri Lanka and Nepal. Using annual data from 1972 to 2014, the results from the panel data econometric analyses provide statistical validity to the EKC hypothesis while the country-specific results depict heterogeneity of the findings in this regard. The EKC hypothesis is validated only for Bangladesh and India while in the context of Pakistan the economic growth-carbon dioxide emission nexus portrays a U-shaped association. In contrast, economic growth is found to monotonically decrease carbon dioxide emissions in Sri Lanka and Nepal. Besides, the results from both the panel and time-series analyses suggest that improvement in export quality lead to lower levels of carbon dioxide emissions. Moreover, the statistical significance of the interaction term between economic growth and export quality implies that the overall impacts of economic growth on carbon dioxide emissions are conditional on the quality of the exports. Thus, enhancing the quality of the export products is pertinent with respect to ensuring environmental sustainability across South Asia. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
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9. COVID-19 IN SOUTH ASIA: HEALTH, ECONOMICS AND POLITICS.
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Basu, Deepankar and Srivastava, Priyanka
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COVID-19 ,COVID-19 pandemic ,PANDEMICS ,VACCINATION coverage ,ECONOMIC stimulus ,COVID-19 testing - Abstract
Copyright of Investigación Económica is the property of Universidad Nacional Autonoma de Mexico, Facultad de Economia and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
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- 2022
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10. Thailand as a New International Higher Education Hub: Major Challenges and Opportunities, a Policy Analysis
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Pongsin, Viseshiri, Lawthong, Nuttaporn, Fry, Gerald W., Ransom, Lakeesha, Kim, Seongdok, and Thi My, Ngoc Nguyen
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The major analytical research question addressed in this paper is: What are Thailand's strengths and weaknesses as an international education hub for students from the Asian region? The key descriptive research question is: What is the nature of the educational experience of Asian students in Thailand? The two major research methodologies of the study are mixed research methods and comparative case studies, with the use of in-depth interviews of influential experts, surveys, and an autoethnography. In terms of major findings, there has been a dramatic growth of Asian students at Thai universities during the past two decades. Thailand's major advantages relate to low costs, location, quality campus facilities, and a welcoming attitude toward outsiders, while major disadvantages are the quality of many of Thailand's international programs often related to low English language capabilities. The paper concludes by presenting a creative new architecture for thinking about Asian study abroad in Thailand.
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- 2023
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11. The Influence Of Board Attributes And Gender Diversity On Risk-Taking In Banking Sector.
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Mehmood, Rashid, Khan, Muhammad Asghar, Khan, Muhammad Masood, and Javed, Naeem
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GENDER nonconformity ,BANKING industry ,RISK-taking behavior ,FIXED effects model ,GENERALIZED method of moments ,CREDIT risk - Abstract
The effective operation of board of directors is a key factor in a firm's ability to succeed. The function of boards in directing business operations has drawn a lot of attention in the area of corporate governance. Notably, it has been determined that having female board members is essential for improving the ability of decision-making processes. This paper aims to analyze the impact of board attributes and board gender diversity on the risk-taking of banks in South Asia i.e., Pakistan, Sri Lanka, India, and Bangladesh. For the analyses, data is taken from DataStream for the period of 2011 to 2022. Using the fixed effect model and generalized method of moment (GMM) model for testing the hypotheses, we find that board attributes such as board size, board meetings and board independence have significant and negative effects on the credit risk of banks. Additionally, board gender diversity also significantly and negatively reduces bank credit risk. The study adds to the body of knowledge that banks in South Asian countries may be able to understand how to effectively manage structure of board of directors and to consider female directors for proper monitoring in order to control credit risk. These findings can help banking sector develop strong corporate governance procedures and risk management plans. Keywords: corporate governance, board of directors, board gender diversity, credit risk, South Asian countries, fixed effect model. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
12. Navigating the inclusive and sustainable energy transitions in South Asia: Progress, priorities and stakeholder perspectives.
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Asif, Muhammad, Imran Khan, Muhammad, and Pandey, Asha
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RENEWABLE energy transition (Government policy) , *CLEAN energy , *SUSTAINABILITY , *ENERGY industries , *RENEWABLE energy sources , *WIND power - Abstract
• Analyzes South Asia's energy trilemma balancing energy access, security and sustainability. • Focuses on four major regional countries: India, Pakistan, Bangladesh, and Sri Lanka. • Identifies major challenges as lack of energy access, unreliable gird, and unaffordable prices. • Explores the prospects of renewable energy as the key toward a sustainable energy transition. • Presents stakeholder perspectives on crucial dynamics of energy transition. To address the faced challenges – i.e. rapidly growing energy needs, depleting fossil fuel reserves, surging energy prices, risks to security of supplies, and climate change – the World is targeting a sustainable energy transition. This energy transition is primarily propelled by a global decarbonization drive. South Asia, a developing region housing over 23% of the global population, faces the additional challenge of serious energy deprivation. The subject of energy transition has not been explored in the South Asian context in terms of drivers, challenges, and prospects. This paper investigates the prospects of sustainable energy transition in South Asia in terms of resources, consumption trends, and challenges encountered by countries in the region, particularly India, Bangladesh, Pakistan, and Sri Lanka. It also examines the sustainable and renewable energy options for the region. An original stakeholder survey provides salient behavioral insights into awareness, attitudes and opinions shaping societal response to energy transition. The findings of the study highlight the serious energy security issues faced by the region in terms of lack of access, inconsistent supplies, unreliable grids, and high energy prices. Renewables like solar energy, wind power, and hydropower have the potential to propel regional countries to energy and environmental sustainability. "Lack of consistent policies and regulations", "lack of political will" and "lack of investment" are found to be the three most important challenges to the energy transition. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
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13. Unleashing the potential: a quest to understand and examine the factors enriching research and innovation productivities of South Asian universities.
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Javed, Saima, Rong, Yu, Zafeer, Hafiz Muhammad Ihsan, Maqbool, Samra, and Abbasi, Babar Nawaz
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INFORMATION technology ,SCHOOL enrollment ,PANEL analysis ,POSTSECONDARY education ,ECONOMIC development - Abstract
South Asian universities play a crucial role in driving economic development through research and innovation. However, these institutions often face challenges that hinder their productivity in these areas. To address these challenges, this study aims to understand and examine the factors enhancing research and innovation productivity in universities across South Asian countries, specifically Bangladesh, India, Nepal, Pakistan, and Sri Lanka. Using panel data from 2009 to 2021, the study employs the newly developed dynamic common correlated effects (DCCE) approach by Chudik and Pesaran (2015a). The results revealed that the factors found to be enriching research productivity, though the impact is negligible, are patent rights, funding for tertiary education, information technology, and publications. However, tertiary school enrollment is not a significant factor. On the other hand, for innovation productivity, the influencing factors with a negligible impact are patent rights, funding for tertiary education, and information technology. In this case, neither tertiary school enrollment nor publications play a significant role. Furthermore, the research productivity of the universities in South Asian countries is negligibly stimulating the countries' GDP per capita, while the innovation productivity of the universities is not. Moreover, examining these relations using models such as mean group (MG), pooled mean group (PMG), and augmented mean group (AMG) can produce misleading results due to cross-sectional dependence among the units. Nonetheless, PMG outperformed AMG, followed by MG. Policy recommendations were suggested based on the findings. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
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14. Trustworthiness of the Female Civil Servants in Three South Asian Countries: Exploring Key Determining Factors.
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Jamil, Ishtiaq, Baniamin, Hasan Muhammad, and Ramasamy, Ramesh
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CIVIL service ,TRUST ,LIFE satisfaction ,FEMALES ,COUNTRIES - Abstract
The study aimed to answer what explains the perceived trustworthiness of female civil servants in three South Asian countries using a country-representative survey (n = 6240; 2,740 in Bangladesh; 2,256 in Nepal and 1,244 in Sri Lanka). The study finds that efficiency, level of corruption, life satisfaction, and generalized trust seem to have varied levels of impact in determining the trustworthiness of female civil servants. Perceived efficiency level is closely associated with the degree of trust in female civil servants in Bangladesh and Nepal, whereas corruption seems to have a significant influence in Sri Lanka. Life satisfaction affects all three countries, gender affects Bangladesh and Sri Lanka, whereas education has a positive association in Nepal and Sri Lanka. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
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15. Linking social wellbeing and intersectionality to understand gender relations in dried fish value chains.
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Galappaththi, Madu, Collins, Andrea M., Armitage, Derek, and Nayak, Prateep Kumar
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VALUE chains ,INTERSECTIONALITY ,GENDER inequality ,GENDER ,CULTURAL values ,PARTICIPATION - Abstract
The purpose of this perspective paper is to advance a comprehensive framework to integrate gender within the study of dried fish value chains. We do so by linking three complementary areas of scholarship: social wellbeing, intersectionality, and value chains. Social wellbeing literature emphasizes the range of benefits generated through dried fish value chains (e.g., social ties, cultural values, and material goods). An intersectional perspective, however, brings attention to the relational structures (e.g., caste, ethnicity) that intersect with gender to uniquely position women and men within value chains in relation to the benefits they can generate. In developing this framework, a key point of departure from existing literature is the notion of relationality (i.e., the creation of experiences in relation to one another within a given context). The value chain analysis further reveals how such unique positions determine the wellbeing outcomes women can generate through their participation in value chains. We demonstrate the contribution of this novel framework by applying it within dried fish case examples from Bangladesh, Tanzania, and Sri Lanka. In doing so, we systematically unpack how gender intersects with other structures of oppression and perpetuate gender inequity. Our framework thus results in a 'thick description' of gender relations operating in dried fish value chains. The insights that emerge can inform relevant policies, decision-making processes, and programs to ensure the creation of equitable wellbeing outcomes by those participating in dried fish value chains. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
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16. Investigating capital flight in South Asian countries: The dual influence of terrorism and corruption.
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Khan, Farina, Abbass, Kashif, Qun, Wu, and Asif, Muhammad
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CAPITAL movements ,TERRORISM ,GENERALIZED method of moments ,CORRUPTION ,ECONOMIC conditions in Asia - Abstract
This specific research initiative aims to intricately examine the intricate dynamics connecting terrorism, corruption, and capital flight within the context of South Asian economies, encompassing countries including Bangladesh, India, Pakistan, and Sri Lanka. The principal objectives of this study entail a comprehensive investigation into the synergistic impacts of terrorism and corruption on the prevalence of capital flight. To realize these objectives, the study employs longitudinal data from 1990 to 2019, adopting the portfolio choice framework as its theoretical underpinning. In terms of methodology, the empirical inquiry uses the Generalized Method of Moments (GMM) estimation technique. The empirical findings derived from this analysis distinctly establish a statistically noteworthy and positive correlation between terrorism, corruption, and the occurrence of capital flight across multiple South Asian nations. In light of these discerning outcomes, it is strongly recommended that the governments of South Asian countries prioritize and actively pursue the fortification of their institutional governance mechanisms. This strategic approach is deemed crucial in efficaciously counteracting the escalation of capital flight. Specifically, a targeted focus on augmenting institutional governance practices, fostering transparency, fortifying anti-corruption measures, and intensifying counterterrorism efforts could collectively contribute to reducing capital flight tendencies. By undertaking these recommendations, South Asian governments can foster an environment of enhanced economic stability, attractiveness for investment, and sustainable growth, thereby deterring the adverse impact of capital flight while concurrently combatting the underlying challenges posed by terrorism and corruption. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
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17. Do weather patterns effect investment decisions in the stock market? A South Asian perspective.
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Chowdhury, Emon Kalyan
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GENERALIZED method of moments ,WEATHER ,STOCK price indexes ,NATURAL disasters ,STOCK index futures ,RATE of return ,AGRICULTURAL insurance - Abstract
Do weather patterns in South Asia have an impact on investment decisions? This question is particularly relevant given the region's vulnerability to natural disasters such as floods, cyclones, and droughts. To explore this issue, we apply regression and generalized method of moments using yearly data of weather, stock indices, borrowing opportunity, economic growth, interest, and inflation rates from 1995 to 2021. Based on data availability, this study has taken Bangladesh, India, Pakistan, and Sri Lanka as sample countries. The research results indicate that weather significantly influences investment decisions and that consideration of weather factors can mitigate risk and enhance investment return. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
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18. EPINEST, an agent-based model to simulate epidemic dynamics in large-scale poultry production and distribution networks.
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Pinotti, Francesco, Lourenço, José, Gupta, Sunetra, Das Gupta, Suman, Henning, Joerg, Blake, Damer, Tomley, Fiona, Barnett, Tony, Pfeiffer, Dirk, Hoque, Md. Ahasanul, and Fournié, Guillaume
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POULTRY farms ,POULTRY farming ,POULTRY ,AVIAN influenza ,VETERINARY epidemiology ,POULTRY growth ,POULTRY as food - Abstract
The rapid intensification of poultry production raises important concerns about the associated risks of zoonotic infections. Here, we introduce EPINEST (EPIdemic NEtwork Simulation in poultry Transportation systems): an agent-based modelling framework designed to simulate pathogen transmission within realistic poultry production and distribution networks. We provide example applications to broiler production in Bangladesh, but the modular structure of the model allows for easy parameterization to suit specific countries and system configurations. Moreover, the framework enables the replication of a wide range of eco-epidemiological scenarios by incorporating diverse pathogen life-history traits, modes of transmission and interactions between multiple strains and/or pathogens. EPINEST was developed in the context of an interdisciplinary multi-centre study conducted in Bangladesh, India, Vietnam and Sri Lanka, and will facilitate the investigation of the spreading patterns of various health hazards such as avian influenza, Campylobacter, Salmonella and antimicrobial resistance in these countries. Furthermore, this modelling framework holds potential for broader application in veterinary epidemiology and One Health research, extending its relevance beyond poultry to encompass other livestock species and disease systems. Author summary: Poultry meat is important for improving nutrition in developing countries. However, the rapid growth of poultry production raises concerns about the risks of diseases that can be passed from animals to humans and cause outbreaks. To understand and manage these risks, we developed EPINEST, an agent-based modelling framework that allows investigating how diseases can spread within the networks of poultry farms, markets and their associated transportation systems. EPINEST can be adjusted to match the way in which poultry are raised and traded in specific countries. It considers different traits of pathogens, how they are transmitted, and how different strains or pathogen types can interact. While EPINEST was primarily developed to simulate the transmission of zoonotic pathogens (namely avian influenza, Campylobacter, Salmonella and other bacteria carrying resistance genes) in poultry populations in South and Southeast Asia, this modelling framework can also be useful for studying the transmission of other pathogens in other livestock species. EPINEST will help understand how poultry farming and trading shape pathogen spread, maintenance and evolution, and support decision-making to make poultry production safer and more sustainable. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
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19. Grouping women of South Asian ethnicity for pregnancy research in New Zealand.
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De Graaff, Esti, Sadler, Lynn, Lakhdhir, Heena, Simon‐Kumar, Rachel, Peiris‐John, Roshini, Burgess, Wendy, Okesene‐Gafa, Karaponi, Cronin, Robin, Mccowan, Lesley, and Anderson, Ngaire
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CULTURE ,STATISTICS ,KRUSKAL-Wallis Test ,HUMAN research subjects ,PATIENT selection ,FISHER exact test ,PREGNANCY outcomes ,COMPARATIVE studies ,SOCIOECONOMIC factors ,PREGNANCY complications ,DATA analysis software ,DATA analysis ,BODY mass index ,SMOKING ,MEDICAL research - Abstract
Background: The New Zealand (NZ) Ministry of Health ethnicity data protocols recommend that people of South Asian (SAsian) ethnicity, other than Indian, are combined with people of Japanese and Korean ethnicity at the most commonly used level of aggregation in health research (level two). This may not work well for perinatal studies, as it has long been observed that women of Indian ethnicity have higher rates of adverse pregnancy outcomes, such as perinatal death. It is possible that women of other SAsian ethnicities share this risk. Aims: This study was performed to identify appropriate groupings of women of SAsian ethnicity for perinatal research. Materials and Methods: National maternity and neonatal data, and singleton birth records between 2008 and 2017 were linked using the Statistics NZ Integrated Data Infrastructure. Socio‐demographic risk profiles and pregnancy outcomes were compared between 15 ethnic groups. Recommendations were made based on statistical analyses and cultural evaluation with members of the SAsian research community. Results: Similarities were observed between women of Indian, Fijian Indian, South African Indian, Sri Lankan, Bangladeshi and Pakistani ethnicities. A lower‐risk profile was seen among Japanese and Korean mothers. Risk profiles of women of combined Indian‐Māori, Indian‐Pacific and Indian‐New Zealand European ethnicity more closely represented their corresponding non‐Indian ethnicities. Conclusions: Based on these findings, we suggest a review of current NZ Ministry of Health ethnicity data protocols. We recommend that researchers understand the risk profiles of participants prior to aggregation of groups in research, to mitigate risks associated with masking differences. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
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20. Review of Outdoor Air Pollution in Sri Lanka Compared to the South Asian Region.
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Rathnayake, L. R. S. D., Sakura, G. B., and Weerasekara, N. A.
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AIR quality ,AIR pollution ,INDOOR air pollution ,POLLUTION monitoring ,DEVELOPING countries ,AIR quality standards ,INDIAN Ocean Tsunami, 2004 - Abstract
Air pollution is a significant issue that affects almost all the countries in the world while predominating in South Asian Regional countries due to poverty, less attention, and less awareness towards the implementation and obeying of air quality guidelines in public. As a developing country, Sri Lanka stands at an optimum state of national air quality compared to other SARC because it is an island with a minor population compared to India, Pakistan, Bangladesh, etc. Maldives and Bhutan lie straightforwardly in owing mild air quality in SARC. However, SARC is far behind the world in maintaining optimistic air quality nationwide. Ambient air pollution-attributable deaths have become interim in past decades, a severe burden to the sustainable existence of SARC. A well-established systematic epidemiological, empirical studies and revisions regarding air pollution, strategic planning for mitigating air pollution, and frequent Spatio-temporal pollution monitoring nodes are necessary for Sri Lanka to achieve the sustainable goal. Other South Asian countries: India, Bangladesh, Pakistan, Afghanistan, Nepal, Bhutan, and Maldives, also should pay attention to minimizing outdoor air pollution nationwide for the betterment of future existence. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
21. Green innovation, globalization, financial development, and CO2 emissions: the role of governance as a moderator in South Asian countries.
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Naz, Ayesha and Aslam, Misbah
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FINANCIAL globalization ,TECHNOLOGICAL innovations ,GLOBALIZATION ,ENVIRONMENTAL degradation ,KUZNETS curve ,ENVIRONMENTAL policy - Abstract
The current study is designed to analyze the relationship between, environmental innovations, globalization, financial development, and CO
2 emissions in the South Asian region over the period of 1996 to 2019. In this regard, the role of governance is also incorporated as a moderator along with Environmental Kuznets Curve (EKC) hypothesis. The sample size includes Bangladesh, India, Pakistan, Nepal, and Sri Lanka. The results of the robust least square show the validity of EKC in the sample countries. Environmental innovations show desirable results on CO2 emissions, while globalization, financial development, and governance are increasing environmental degradation. The role of governance as a moderator is only effective and favorable with environmental innovation. However, in the case of globalization and financial development, governance appeared to be ineffective in lessening the rate of emissions; rather, it contributes to emissions. It clearly shows the missing link in formulating coherent policy to achieve sustainability targets. Therefore, it is desirable to improve the role of governance with respect to environmental policies not only to handle directly environmental issues but also indirectly while promoting the process of globalization and financial development. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
22. Sovereign Debt Crisis in Sri Lanka and Bangladesh: A Comparative Study.
- Author
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Sinha, Paritosh Chandra
- Subjects
DEBT-to-GDP ratio ,ECONOMIC forecasting ,COVID-19 pandemic ,DEBT management ,EUROPEAN Sovereign Debt Crisis, 2009-2018 ,PUBLIC debts ,BALANCE of payments ,GROSS domestic product - Abstract
Using IMF's World Economic Outlook (WEO) data for the macroeconomic variables, this study comparatively examines the sovereign debt crises in Sri Lanka and Bangladesh. It identifies different macroeconomic factors related to the sovereign debt crisis, investigates their interrelations, and explores if their debt crises are similar. It shows that the general revenue to Gross Domestic Product (GDP) ratios of Sri Lanka degraded to converge with the upgrading status of Bangladesh during the Covid-19 period. Since 2010, Sri Lanka has maintained a well-off economic status with per capita GDP, while Bangladesh has a long way to go yet. The general expenses to GDP ratio of Sri Lanka shows stresses on its GDP, while that of Bangladesh is more relaxed. Sri Lanka has overstressed debt to GDP ratio along with Balance of Payments (BOP) deficits, while Bangladesh has continued traces of managed debt to GDP ratio along with BOP surpluses. Bangladesh has taken enough precautions in their sovereign debt management, compared to Sri Lanka. Even in 2020, Bangladesh maintained progressive investment track over the threshold limit of 30%, while Sri Lanka fell into a debt trap. Following the pandemic, Bangladesh has enjoyed a gross national savings to GDP ratio of above the threshold of 25%, while Sri Lanka is going through a critical phase. It shows governance myopia of Bangladesh regarding its imbalanced current account positions, while governance myopia of Sri Lanka exists with reference to its imbalanced current account positions, adverse gross debts, and government borrowing as well. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
23. Impact of economic and green growth on poverty, income inequalities, and environmental degradation: a case of South Asian economies.
- Author
-
Kousar, Shazia, Bhutta, Aamir Inam, Ullah, Muhammad Rizwan, and Shabbir, Aiza
- Subjects
ECONOMIC conditions in Asia ,ENVIRONMENTAL degradation ,INCOME inequality ,ECONOMIC impact ,ECONOMIC expansion ,COINTEGRATION - Abstract
This study aims to investigate the impacts of traditional and green economic growth on poverty, income inequalities, and environmental degradation in the case of South Asian economies. In this regard, the study collects data for the period 2000 to 2018 from five South Asian economies (Pakistan, India, Sri Lanka, Nepal, and Bangladesh) from world development indicators (WDI). The study applies second-generation unit root test and co-integration technique, CIPS unit root and Westerlund co-integration tests, to establish the stationarity of the series and co-integration relationship among variables. Furthermore, this study utilized dynamic ordinary least square (DOLS) and fully modified ordinary least square (FMOLS) models to investigate the long-run empirical estimates. The study finds that both traditional economic growth (GDP) and green economic growth (GGDP) have a negative impact on poverty and inequality; however, GGDP contributes more than traditional GDP to reducing poverty and inequality. Moreover, the study shows that economic growth has a positive long-run impact on environmental degradation while GGDP has a negative and significant long-run association with environmental degradation. The study recommends that policymakers should develop policies to develop green economic growth to save the environment and for the reduction in poverty and income inequalities in south Asian economies. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
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- View/download PDF
24. Tourism, Remittances, and Foreign Investment as Determinants of Economic Growth: Empirical Evidence from Selected Asian Economies.
- Author
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Tabash, Mosab I., Anagreh, Suhaib, Subhani, Bilal Haider, Al-Faryan, Mamdouh Abdulaziz Saleh, and Drachal, Krzysztof
- Subjects
ECONOMIC conditions in Asia ,INTERNATIONAL tourism ,FOREIGN investments ,ECONOMIC expansion ,TOURISM ,REMITTANCES - Abstract
This research discovers how international tourism affects the economic growth of selected Asian states, e.g., Bangladesh, China, India, Pakistan, and Sri Lanka, throughout 2001–2019. To attain this objective, we have employed various regression estimation approaches, e.g., Fixed Effect Model (FEM) and Fully Modified Ordinary Least Square (FMOLS) technique. The statistical results of the applied techniques reveal that international tourism activities have a positive and significant effect on the GDP growth rate because such kinds of activities considerably contribute to creating opportunities that lead to hoist economic activities and economic growth. Moreover, an influx of tourism increases tourism activities and operations, which opens further doors to opportunities and generates revenue for the government. Similarly, the GDP per capita has been positively and significantly influenced by international tourism activities. The government and host country should emphasize the activities and operations regarding tourism and should also concentrate on the dynamic role, importance, and sensitivity of tourism operations in under-analyzed economies. This research brings a new arrangement of the variable, which has never been considered in prior literature. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
25. Rice Production Chain: Environmental and Social Impact Assessment—A Review.
- Author
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Vinci, Giuliana, Ruggieri, Roberto, Ruggeri, Marco, and Prencipe, Sabrina Antonia
- Subjects
SOCIAL impact assessment ,ENVIRONMENTAL impact analysis ,PRODUCT life cycle assessment ,LIFE cycles (Biology) ,RICE ,ORGANIC farming - Abstract
Rice is the most widely used cereal for human consumption, attributing its production as one of the most important activities for the global population. Therefore, given its economic and nutritional value, assessing the sustainability of this production process could be worth noting. In this regard, this research aims to investigate the most recent literature related to Life Cycle Assessment (LCA) of rice primary production, to clarify the extent to which Life Cycle Thinking (LCT) and thus the three pillars of sustainability have been applied in the rice sector, as well as to highlight possible research gaps. Thus, 40 articles (2012–2022) were analyzed. The main research gaps that were found were, firstly, that there was a lesser tendency to consider multiple functional units, highlighting how little multifunctionality is considered. As to be expected, there was also a great difference in methodological choices, which often leads to a great variability of results, making evaluations and comparisons of impacts uncertain. These were also highly dependent on soil and climate conditions in the various countries, which could in turn affect input utilization, and results. The study of the impacts of primary rice production was then addressed by a few countries, among which some of the largest producers were absent, while the least considered aspects were related to the depletion of abiotic resources and the promotion of organic farming. Finally, sustainability assessments in rice production had little focus on the socio-economic dimension, showing how little LCT is considered. Therefore, based on this consideration, a Social Life Cycle Assessment was integrated into the study, the results of which show that the countries with medium to high social impacts could be India, Sri Lanka, Thailand, and Bangladesh. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
26. COVID-19 Effects on Public Finance and SDG Priorities in Developing Countries: Comparative Evidence from Bangladesh and Sri Lanka.
- Author
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Colombage, Sisira R. N., Barua, Suborna, Nanayakkara, Madurika, and Colombage, Udari N.
- Subjects
DEVELOPING countries ,EXTERNAL debts ,PUBLIC finance ,ECONOMIC recovery ,GLOBAL Financial Crisis, 2008-2009 ,COVID-19 pandemic ,COVID-19 - Abstract
Copyright of European Journal of Development Research is the property of Palgrave Macmillan Ltd. and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
27. Victims of armed conflict in India: psychosocial impact and available support.
- Author
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Sharma, Vasudha, Sharma, Vikrant, Arora, Harshit, Singh, Waryaam, Gulati, Nihal, and Sharma, Rajeev
- Subjects
WAR ,SOCIAL support ,PSYCHOLOGICAL factors ,VICTIMS ,MENTAL health - Abstract
Copyright of European Journal of Psychotraumatology is the property of Taylor & Francis Ltd and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
28. Taxonomic recircumscriptions in the Aglaia elaeagnoidea complex (Meliaceae).
- Author
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Joyce, E. M., Crayn, D. M., Rossetto, M., Yap, J. Y. S., Thiele, K. R., and Pannell, C. M.
- Subjects
MELIACEAE ,TAXONOMISTS ,MOLECULAR phylogeny - Abstract
Aglaia is the most widespread and species-rich genus in Meliaceae, comprising 124 species. Aglaia elaeagnoidea has presented a longstanding dilemma for taxonomists; it is highly morphologically and ecologically variable, and has a range extending across India, Southeast Asia, Australia and islands of the western Pacific Ocean. Previous work has examined molecular variation in the eastern part of the species' range; however, molecular variation in the western half of its distribution remained uncharacterised, precluding taxonomic resolution of the complex. In this study, we used DArT-seq analysis to investigate genetic structure in A. elaeagnoidea from India, Sri Lanka, Bangladesh, Thailand, Java and Bali. We find a strong genetic disjunction between Sri Lanka and Bangladesh, suggesting that western A. elaeagnoidea comprises two taxa. On the basis of these results, in combination with morphology and previous molecular work on eastern A. elaeagnoidea, we resolve A. elaeagnoidea into three species, retaining A. elaeagnoidea for the eastern (type) species, and reinstating A. wallichii for a species in Bangladesh, Thailand, Java and Bali, and A. roxburghiana for a species occurring in India and Sri Lanka. We provide descriptions for each taxon and a key to the species, thereby resolving a previously difficult species group in a notoriously complex genus. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
29. Health and socioeconomic resource provision for older people in South Asian countries: Bangladesh, India, Nepal, Pakistan and Sri Lanka evidence from NEESAMA.
- Author
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Matthews, Natasha Roya, Porter, George James, Varghese, Mathew, Sapkota, Nidesh, Khan, Murad Moosa, Lukose, Ammu, Paddick, Stella-Maria, Dissanayake, Malathie, Khan, Naila Zaman, and Walker, Richard
- Subjects
MEDICAL care for older people ,MEDICAL care costs ,PUBLIC administration ,SOCIOECONOMIC factors ,SOCIAL security ,LABOR supply ,AGING ,DEVELOPING countries ,OLD age - Abstract
The global population is ageing rapidly, with low- and middle-income countries (LMICs) undergoing a fast demographic transition. As the number of older adults in LMICs increases, services able to effectively address their physical and mental health needs will be increasingly important. We review the health and socioeconomic resources currently available for older people in South Asian countries, Bangladesh, India, Nepal, Pakistan and Sri Lanka, to identify gaps in available resources and assess areas for improvement. We conducted a search of grey and published literature via Google Search, Compendex, EBSCO, JSTOR, Medline, Ovid, ProQuest databases, Scopus and Web of Science. Data on population demographics, human resources, health funding and social protection for older people were extracted. Local informants were consulted to supplement and verify the data. In the study countries, the number of health professionals with expertise in elderly care was largely unknown, with minimal postgraduate training programmes available in elderly medicine or psychiatry. Older adults are therefore cared for by general physicians, nurses and community health workers, all of whom are present in insufficient numbers per capita. Total average healthcare expenditure was 2.5–5.5% of GDP, with 48.1–72.0% of healthcare costs covered by out-of-pocket payments. Pakistan did not have a social pension; only India and Nepal offered financial assistance to people with dementia; and all countries had disproportionately low numbers of care elderly homes. Inadequate healthcare funding, a shortage of healthcare professionals and insufficient government pension and social security schemes are significant barriers to achieving universal health coverage in LMICs. Governing bodies must expand training programmes for healthcare providers for older adults, alongside increasing social protection to improve access to those in need and to prevent catastrophic health expenditure. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
30. Globalization and politico‐administrative factor‐driven energy‐growth nexus: A case of South Asian economies.
- Author
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Islam, Md. Monirul and Islam, Md. Saiful
- Subjects
ECONOMIC conditions in Asia ,GLOBALIZATION ,ELECTRIC power consumption ,COVID-19 pandemic ,ECONOMIC globalization ,ENVIRONMENTAL quality ,ECONOMIC expansion ,ENERGY consumption - Abstract
In modern days, economic growth is energy‐dependent and vice versa. Earlier studies concentrated a bit to analyze the influence of globalization and politico‐administrative factors on the energy consumption‐economic growth nexus in developing economies. The motivation for the current research is to scrutinize the energy consumption‐economic growth nexus while accounting for the influence of globalization and country risk indicators—the politico‐administrative factors in a panel of 4 South Asian countries (Bangladesh, India, Pakistan, and Sri Lanka) during 1980–2018. To check the issues of heterogeneity and cross‐sectional independence, the study employs the pooled mean group estimation method. The investigated results provide a nexus between energy consumption and economic growth where globalization ‐ a long‐run force positively affects this nexus in the long run and negatively in the short run. Besides, the politico‐administrative factors have an adverse impact in the long run and an insignificant effect on this nexus in the short run. The Dumitrescu–Hurlin non‐causality test establishes the feedback hypothesis concerning energy consumption‐economic growth nexus in South Asian economies. The study results remain robust across the dynamic ordinary least square estimator. Therefore, this study suggests sustaining the energy‐growth nexus to properly handle globalization and politico‐administrative and the Covid‐19 pandemic issues through institutional quality. Moreover, the objective‐oriented policies are critical to strengthening the energy‐growth nexus without decaying environmental quality in South Asian countries. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
31. International Information Spillovers and Asymmetric Volatility in South Asian Stock Markets.
- Author
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Gajurel, Dinesh and Chawla, Akhila
- Subjects
VOLATILITY (Securities) ,STOCK exchanges ,INFORMATION asymmetry ,MARKET volatility ,INTERNATIONAL economic integration ,REGIONAL cooperation - Abstract
This is the first comprehensive study to investigate the dynamics of international information spillovers, regional linkages and fundamental forces driving return volatility in the SAARC (South Asian Association for Regional Cooperation) member nation equity markets. We propose a multi-factor model nested within the generalized autoregressive conditional heteroskedasticity framework and enlist comprehensive equity market data. While modeling, we consider global, regional (Asia), and largest neighboring (India) equity markets as sources of information spillover. Our results show that equity returns in all these South Asian markets have positive autocorrelation. The equity markets of India, Pakistan, and Sri Lanka have some degree of global integration; however, their degree of regional integration is comparatively higher. The stock markets of Bangladesh and Nepal, in contrast, lack both global and regional integration. We find limited evidence of neighborhood (India) spillover effect on other markets in the sample. The stock markets of Bangladesh, India and Pakistan stock markets exhibit asymmetric volatility responses, while Nepal exhibits an inverted asymmetric volatility response, and in contrast Sri Lanka exhibits a symmetric volatility response to return shocks. Finally, most of these markets experience volatility spillover effects from the US, Asia, and India stock markets. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
32. When Women Lead: Legislating against Gender-based Violence in Bangladesh, Indonesia, the Philippines and Sri Lanka.
- Author
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Vijeyarasa, Ramona
- Subjects
VIOLENCE against women ,WOMEN leaders ,FEMINISM ,LAW reform ,WOMEN'S societies & clubs ,INDIGENOUS women ,SOCIOCULTURAL factors - Abstract
History apportions little credit to women leaders for the advancement of fellow women. Here I revisit this position, with an evidence-based, quantitative and qualitative approach to understanding the impact of woman leaders on law reform in the area of gender-based violence. Five leaders are the subject of study: Sri Lanka's President Kumaratunga (1994-2005); the Philippines' President Macapagal Arroyo (2001-10); Indonesia's President Megawati Soekarnoputri (2001-04); and Bangladesh's Prime Ministers Sheikh Hasina (1996-2001 and 2009-present) and Khaleda Zia (1991-96 and 2001-06). Women in all four countries enjoyed significant legislative wins throughout the tenures of the five women leaders. While the findings vary as to how much credit can be attributed to each leader, the presence of a woman in the presidential or prime ministerial seat appears to motivate the mobilisation of resources by women's movements at a faster pace. Co-beneficial alliance building between women's groups and women's parliamentary bodies seek to translate the opportunity of a woman leading a nation into positive legal and policy developments. When it comes to the specific role of the leaders themselves, this article identifies often-overlooked political, sociocultural and patriarchal factors that have shaped their decision-making vis-à-vis gender-based violence law reform and considers: the timing of elections; shifts in majority government; a leader's political roles prior to holding executive office; and the heightened expectation on the shoulders of women leaders to be hyper-conscious of the importance of gender-based violence as an issue for fellow women. While assigning credit is a challenging task, this article concludes by inviting further study of how a woman leader 'lays her hands' on the law and a deconstruction of how, why and which women benefit. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
33. Assessing the linkages of economic freedom and environmental quality in South Asian Countries: application of CS-ARDL.
- Author
-
Li, Zhonghua, Hu, Shengde, Mehmood, Usman, and Agyekum, Ephraim Bonah
- Subjects
ECONOMIC liberty ,ENERGY consumption ,GROSS domestic product ,AIR quality ,RESEARCH & development projects - Abstract
We examine the linkages of economic freedom (ECF), energy use, and CO
2 emissions in selected South Asian countries of Pakistan, India, Bangladesh, and Sri Lanka. Annual data from 1995 to 2018 are analyzed by employing second-generation methodologies. Cross-sectional autoregressive distributed lag (CS-ARDL) is used because this method incorporates the cross-sectional dependence among the data. This work uses three models, where the dependent variables are gross domestic product (GDP), CO2 emissions, and energy use. The findings reveal that ECF and energy use contributes to more economic development. ECF is improving air quality by lowering CO2 emissions. The findings suggest that these countries need to increase the percentage of renewable energy in their energy generation mix. At the same time, there is a need to integrate ECF with environmental awareness programs. This will not only increase air quality but also increase economic growth. GDP is found to be dependent on energy use; however, increased energy use from non-renewable also contaminates the environment. Therefore, South Asian countries need to invest more in research and development projects to promote renewable energy. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
34. Causality analysis of CO2 emissions, foreign direct investment, gross domestic product, and energy consumption: empirical evidence from South Asian Association for Regional Cooperation (SAARC) countries.
- Author
-
Nur Mozahid, Md., Akter, Sharmin, and Hafiz Iqbal, Md.
- Subjects
FOREIGN investments ,GROSS domestic product ,ENERGY consumption ,REGIONAL cooperation ,GRANGER causality test ,CLEAN energy ,CARBONACEOUS aerosols - Abstract
Over the period 1980–2016, this study looks into the causal relations between carbon dioxide (CO
2 ) emissions, energy consumption (EC), foreign direct investment (FDI), and gross domestic product (GDP) in five South Asian countries (Bangladesh, India, Nepal, Pakistan, and Sri Lanka). To achieve the research objectives, panel unit root tests, panel co-integration, autoregressive distributed lag model, and Granger causality tests are used. In the long run, GDP has a positive impact on CO2 emissions, while squared GDP has a negative impact, confirming the framework of the environmental Kuznets curve (EKC) in Pakistan and Sri Lanka. However, in the short run along with these two countries, Bangladesh also confirms the EKC hypothesis. Among these five countries, Bangladesh and Nepal support the pollution haven hypothesis, but India, Pakistan, and Sri Lanka support the FDI halo hypothesis. The EC has a large positive impact on CO2 emissions across five countries. In the long run, the Granger causality test confirms one-way causation from EC to CO2 emissions and bidirectional causality of FDI and CO2 . These countries might encourage clean energy technology through FDI without jeopardizing GDP and environmental quality. The findings of the study provide a guideline for these countries to reduce CO2 emissions, achieve a long-term green GDP, and combat global warming. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
35. Tropical Cyclone Exposure in the North Indian Ocean.
- Author
-
Kabir, Rubaiya, Ritchie, Elizabeth A., and Stark, Clair
- Subjects
TROPICAL cyclones ,OCEAN ,RAINFALL ,COASTS ,MONSOONS ,SEASONS - Abstract
The North Indian Ocean is a region with a high coastal population and a low-lying delta, making it a high-risk region for tropical cyclone impacts. A 30-year period from 1989–2018 has been used to examine the TC landfalling exposure in the North Indian Ocean and its changes by considering 30 years of IBTrACs data, ERA5 atmospheric data, and 20 years of TRMM and DAV data. A total of 185 TCs made landfall in the NIO during the 30-year period with the majority of the TCs making landfall during the pre- and post-monsoon seasons. Rainfall associated with landfalling TCs decreased in the last 10 years of analysis (2009–2018) compared to the first 10 years of available data from 1999–2008. During the monsoon, TC activity is relatively lower compared to the post-monsoon periods, even though higher accumulated TC-associated rainfall typically occurs during the monsoon period, particularly along the eastern coastlines of the Arabian Sea and the Bay of Bengal. The TC winds impact most of the Bay of Bengal coastline, including Sri Lanka. The spatial distribution of landfalling TCs changes with the season, with most of the landfalling activity occurring during the pre- and post-monsoon periods. Interestingly, more recent TC activity has shifted to the northeast India and Bangladesh coasts, suggesting that these regions may be more vulnerable to TC impacts in the future. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
36. Investigating the linkages of female employer, education expenditures, renewable energy, and CO2 emissions: application of CS-ARDL.
- Author
-
Mehmood, Usman
- Subjects
CARBON emissions ,RENEWABLE energy sources ,POLLUTION ,EMPLOYERS ,FEMALES - Abstract
This work investigates the impacts of female employers, renewable energy, and education expenditures on CO2 emission in Pakistan, India, Bangladesh, and Sri Lanka. The annual data of 1990–2020 has been analyzed to present the empirical results. This work uses cross-sectional autoregressive distributed lag (CS-ARDL) approach to know long- and short-run coefficient values. The findings reveal that 1% increase in female employers, renewable energy, and education expenditures will decrease 0.04%, 0.64%, and 0.03% CO2 emissions, respectively, in the long run, which means female employers, renewable energy, and education spending are useful for South Asian countries to lower environmental pollution. This means that increasing female employers, ratio of renewable energy, and education expenditures are very important for South Asian countries to lower environmental pollution. This work recommends that education spending is providing environmental awareness, which is compulsory for cleaner environment. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
37. CONTROL CAUSALITY IN THE FINANCE-GROWTH NEXUS: Super-Exogeneity Test Evidence from SAARC Countries.
- Author
-
KAKAR, Mehmood Khan, MAHMOOD, Tariq, and SHAHAB, Sadaf
- Subjects
CORPORATE reorganizations ,ECONOMIC expansion ,COUNTRIES - Abstract
This study utilizes concepts of super-exogeneity and control causality to examine the causal relationship between financial deepening and economic growth. For the assessment, the purpose study has explored data from South Asian countries, namely Pakistan, India, Bangladesh and Sri Lanka, for the period 1980-2018. Results indicate that financial deepening causes economic growth and the reverse is also true in the case of Pakistan and Bangladesh. This study provides evidence of super-exogeneity in the case of India and Sri Lanka that economic growth causes financial deepening while the reverse does not hold. Overall, causal directions in the finance-growth nexus of sample countries are mixed. Results imply that sample economies should prioritize financial reform over growth to accelerate the pace of financial restructuring and sustainable growth. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
38. The Mediating Role of Competitiveness Between Entrepreneurial Challenges and Willingness of Female Business Graduates.
- Author
-
Parmar, Vishnu, Ahmed, Rizwan Raheem, Streimikiene, Dalia, and Streimikis, Justas
- Subjects
BUSINESSWOMEN ,BUSINESS success ,FINANCIAL stress ,FEMALES ,INDEPENDENT variables ,ORGANIZATIONAL performance ,ENTREPRENEURSHIP education - Abstract
This research examines the challenges of female business graduate entrepreneurs; we have developed a modified conceptual framework in which willingness to become an entrepreneur has been taken as a dependent variable. However, financial, cultural, marketing, and technological challenges are independent variables. Additionally, we incorporated competitiveness as a mediation variable between independent and dependent variables. The competitiveness could be beneficial to the female business graduates' entrepreneurs and might be reduced by their financial, marketing, cultural, and technological challenges. The data was collected through a modified structured questionnaire from the entrepreneurs of female business graduates. The information was collected from Pakistan, India, Bangladesh, and Sri Lanka; we have collected 386 responses for the period from February 2021 to July 2021. We employed a structural equation modelingbased (SEM-based) multivariate approach and conditional process modeling for the data analysis. The findings of this research exhibit that the financial challenges, cultural challenges, marketing challenges, and technological challenges have a significant negative impact on female business entrepreneurs. These are the constraints that restrict female business graduates' entrepreneurial opportunities. On the other hand, the mediation analysis showed that competitiveness has a positive and significant impact between financial challenges, cultural challenges, marketing challenges, & technological challenges, and willingness to become an entrepreneur. The perfect mediation of competitiveness established that the business success of SMEs does not rely on the individuals' competencies and success factors only, but organizational competitiveness is equally essential for organizational performance. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
39. A cross-country efficiency and productivity evaluation of commercial banks in South Asia: A meta-frontier and Malmquist productivity index approach.
- Author
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Shah, Wasi Ul Hassan, Hao, Gang, Zhu, Nan, Yasmeen, Rizwana, Padda, Ihtsham Ul Haq, and Abdul Kamal, Muhammad
- Subjects
BANKING industry ,INDUSTRIAL productivity ,DIGITAL divide ,DATA envelopment analysis - Abstract
South Asia primarily consists of developing economies with diverse financial systems. The commercial banking industry plays a crucial role in each country's financial development in the region. This research aims to evaluate commercial banking industries' efficiency and productivity growth in the South Asian (SA) region over 6 years (2013–2018). In addition, the technology gap among the banking industries of all countries is also explored. Data envelopment analysis (DEA) Meta-frontier is employed to measure the technical efficiency (TE) and technology gap ratio (TGR) among the countries. Further Malmquist productivity index (MPI) is used for productivity change estimation. Results indicate that, on average, 147 commercial banks (CBs) have a technical efficiency score of 0.6208, while CBs in Nepal are the most efficient in the region with an average score of 0.7153. The Meta frontier analysis also confirms the presence of different production technologies in CBs. Nepal's CBs group frontier is closer to meta-frontier (technology gap ratio, TGR = 0.9361) While, Bangladesh, Pakistan, India, and Sri Lanka rank second, third, fourth, and fifth, respectively. The results of productivity contend that the total factor productivity change of all 147 CBs decreases by 0.8 percent on average over the study period. CBs have enhanced their productivity growth in Sri Lanka, Nepal, and Pakistan, but declining trends have been witnessed in Indian and Bangladesh's commercial banking industries. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
40. Renewable energy and foreign direct investment: does the governance matter for CO2 emissions? Application of CS-ARDL.
- Author
-
Mehmood, Usman
- Subjects
FOREIGN investments ,RENEWABLE energy sources ,CARBON emissions ,UNITED Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change (1992). Protocols, etc., 1997 December 11 ,CLIMATE change - Abstract
Climate change is a global problem, and the policy-makers are trying their best to mitigate the impacts of drastic climate variability. Considering the mandate of Kyoto Protocol, this work investigates the individual and interactive impacts of renewable energy, economic growth, government effectiveness, and foreign investment towards carbon emissions in selected South Asian countries of India, Pakistan, Sri Lanka, and Bangladesh. The annual data of 1996–2019 has been analyzed by adopting advance methods. After confirming the cross-sectional dependence in the panel data, Westerlund cointegration test confirms the strong association of 1% level among the variables. Cross-sectional autoregressive distributed lag approach is employed to present long- and short-run coefficient values, which shows all data is having cross-sectional dependence at 1% level. Renewable energy and its interactive terms with government effectiveness and FDI are environmental friendly. A 1% increase in renewable energy is lowering CO2 emissions by 13.95%. Moreover, 1% increase in governance is reducing carbon emissions by 7.68%. This shows that these governments should integrate the FDI with renewable energy in the context of strict environmental policies. The attention should be on to generate more renewable energy. This can be done by importing latest technologies and to develop the domestic research and development expenditures. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
41. Does drinking modify the relationship between men's gender‐inequitable attitudes and their perpetration of intimate partner violence? A meta‐analysis of surveys of men from seven countries in the Asia Pacific region.
- Author
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Laslett, Anne‐Marie, Graham, Kathryn, Wilson, Ingrid M., Kuntsche, Sandra, Fulu, Emma, Jewkes, Rachel, and Taft, Angela
- Subjects
INTIMATE partner violence ,MEN'S health ,META-analysis ,POPULATION geography ,SURVEYS ,ALCOHOL drinking ,LOGISTIC regression analysis ,ODDS ratio ,GENDER inequality ,SECONDARY analysis - Abstract
Background and aims: Although men's alcohol misuse and less gender‐equitable attitudes have been identified as risks for perpetration of intimate partner violence (IPV), less is known about how men's gender‐equitable attitudes and drinking act together to increase risk of IPV. This study aimed to assess the independent relationships of lower gender‐equitable attitudes and drinking to perpetration of IPV and their interaction among men in seven countries. Design Secondary analysis of the United Nations Multi‐Country Study on Men and Violence (UNMCS) and Nabilan Study databases consisting of (1) unadjusted and adjusted logistic regression to measure the association of perpetration of IPV with gender‐equitable men (GEM) scale score and regular heavy episodic drinking (RHED) and (2) meta‐analyses of prevalence and effect estimates adjusted for country‐level sites and countries. Setting and participants: A total of 9148 ever‐partnered 18–49‐year‐old men surveyed in 2011–15 from 18 sites in Bangladesh, Cambodia, China, Indonesia, Papua New Guinea, Sri Lanka and Timor Leste. Measurements The outcome variable is reported perpetration of physical or sexual IPV in the previous year. Independent variables: GEM scale scores; RHED, defined as six or more drinks in one session at least monthly (compared with other drinkers and abstainers). Findings Pooled past‐year prevalence of perpetration of IPV was 13% [95% confidence interval (CI) = 9–16%]. GEM scores and RHED were independently associated with perpetration of IPV overall and in most sites. Pooled odds ratios (ORs) for perpetration of IPV with less equitable GEM scores were 1.07 (95% CI = 1.04, 1.09) and with RHED were 3.42 (95% CI = 2.43, 4.81). A significant interaction between GEM score and RHED (P = 0.001) indicated that RHED increased the relationship of less gender‐equitable attitudes and perpetration of IPV. Conclusion: Both gender‐inequitable attitudes and drinking appear to be associated with perpetration of intimate partner violence by men, with regular heavy episodic drinking increasing the likelihood of intimate partner violence among men with less equitable gender attitudes. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
42. Sustainability Practices at Higher Education Institutions in Asia
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Leal Filho, Walter, Dinis, Maria Alzira Pimenta, Sivapalan, Subarna, Begum, Halima, Ng, Theam Foo, Al-Amin, Abul Quasem, Alam, Gazi Mahabubul, Sharifi, Ayyoob, Salvia, Amanda Lange, Kalsoom, Qudsia, Saroar, Mustafa, and Neiva, Samara
- Abstract
Purpose: It is still unclear how Asian universities incorporate the theory or practice of sustainable development (SD) in their research and education programmes. To address this gap, the purpose of this paper is to report on a study that has examined how universities in Asian countries handle and address matters related to SD. Design/methodology/approach: The study used a bibliometric analysis and an online survey-method. The online survey data were analysed through descriptive analysis and one-sample student's "t"-test. Findings: The study indicates that there is considerable variation among the Asian countries regarding sustainability practices in higher education institutions (HEIs). The HEIs in far eastern countries, such as Indonesia, Malaysia and Thailand are perceived to demonstrate more sustainability practices. Research limitations/implications: Even though a substantial number of participants participated in the survey, it did not cover all Asian countries. The online survey was carried out over a limited period of time, and not all HEIs in the field may have received information about the study. Practical implications: Asia is the largest continent facing a number of sustainability challenges. In this context, the contribution of HEIs is very important. The findings of the current study may serve as a baseline for Asian HEIs to take more initiatives towards SD goals, as HEIs are responsible for the education and training of hundreds of thousands of students who will be occupying key positions in industry, government or education in the coming years. Originality/value: The study contributes to the existing literature in two distinct ways. First, it was possible to develop a comprehensive instrument to measure sustainability practices in HEIs. Second, this study has filled the gap of the scarcity of studies regarding sustainability practices in HEIs in Asia.
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- 2022
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43. Electricity Consumption and Economic Growth: Evidence from South Asian Countries.
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Majewski, Sebastian, Mentel, Urszula, Salahodjaev, Raufhon, and Cierpiał-Wolan, Marek
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ELECTRIC power consumption ,ECONOMIC expansion ,COINTEGRATION ,CLEAN energy ,ENERGY consumption ,RURAL population ,RENEWABLE energy sources - Abstract
The purpose of this study is to shed light on the nexus between electricity supply and economic growth in South Asian countries during 1990–2018. The study employs Pedroni's panel cointegration test as well as Dumitrescu and Hurlin's (DH) causality test for panel data. The empirical results confirm a long-term relationship between electricity supply and economic growth. We fail to reject the non-causal relationship between electricity supply and economic growth for the panel, thereby affirming the neutrality hypothesis. Single country causality analysis reveals the growth hypothesis in the case of Pakistan. These results have a number of policy implications. For example, governments can introduce measures to improve energy efficiency in Bangladesh, India and Sri Lanka without fear of harming economic growth. The results for Pakistan may also imply that fostering green energy generation would lead to a positive effect on economic growth via improved electricity production. The government may use various policy tools to stimulate adoption of renewable energy, such as fiscal incentives, low interest loans, or grants for rural populations to speed up the green energy transformation. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2022
- Full Text
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44. The Role of Ownership Structure and Board Characteristics in Stock Market Liquidity.
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Abbassi, Wajih, Hunjra, Ahmed Imran, Alawi, Suha Mahmoud, and Mehmood, Rashid
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STOCK exchanges ,FIXED effects model ,GENERALIZED method of moments ,LIQUIDITY (Economics) ,STOCK prices - Abstract
Corporate governance plays a significant role in the value of shareholders and share prices, hence stock market liquidity is affected. Previous research has mainly focused on the issue in developed markets, whereas in developing countries there is a need to analyze the influence of corporate governance on stock market liquidity. Therefore, the present study aims to examine the impact of ownership structure and board characteristics on stock market liquidity of non-financial firms of South Asian countries such as Pakistan, Sri Lanka, Bangladesh, and India. The data in the study is collected from the DataStream for the 2011–2020 period. The study uses a fixed effect model for the analysis of the data and hypotheses testing and generalized method of moments (GMM) is used to check the robustness of the results. The findings of the study indicate that institutional ownership, board size, board independence, and CEO duality have a significant and positive impact on stock market liquidity, whereas managerial ownership has a significant and negative effect on stock market liquidity. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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