ISSN (Print) - 0012-9976 | ISSN (Online) - 2349-8846

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Money, Output and Prices-A Macro Econometric Model

Money, Output and Prices A Macro Econometric Model C Rangarajan R R Arif This paper presents an econometric model of the Indian economy which emphasises the interrelationships among money, output and prices. The main linkages in the model are as follows: The stock of money varies endogenously through the feedback from reserve money which changes to accommodate fiscal deficits. The price level is determined by money supply and output. The government budget is affected by the price level and output. The latter is influenced, among other factors, by changes in real money supply acting as a proxy for real credit. The empirical results show that the price effects of an increase in money supply are stronger than the output effects. Since govern- ment revenue collections do not keep pace with government expenditures as nominal incomes rise, the resource gap widens during a period of continued price increases. The policy simulations show that while a substantial increase in government capital expenditures increases output, its impact on output and prices also depends on the extent of the resource gap met by borrowing from the Reserve Bank. As the proportion of the resource gap met by borrowing from the Reserve Bank increases, the trade-off between output and prices worsens sharply Introduction THE role of money and monetary policy in the determination of real output and price level is increasingly receiving a( tent ion. Empirical research on the factors influencing economic growth includes several attempts to develop econometric models of the Indian economy. Beginning with simple models, empirical research has made considerable progress in the study of the structure and functioning of various sectors of the economy. In recent years, a greater emphasis on policy issues is also' observed. The models differ in their approach and focus. In some models the emphasis is on production and supply while in others it is on demand factors. Some studies pay special attention to the government sector; some recent attempts focus on the interrelationship among money, output and prices and the identification of the sources of growth and inflation. Some of the recent studies in this area are indicated in the list of references at the end of the paper.

OBITUARY- Ravi Matthai

was in the currency component and the rest in deposit money, contrasting with 48 per cent expansion in currency and 52 per cent in deposit money in 1982, Though time deposits with banks rose by Rs 7,684 crore or by 17.4 per cent as compared with Rs 6,571 crore or 17.5 per cent in 1982, growth in M3 decelerated to 14.4 per cent from 16.8 per cent in 1982, reflecting the slower growth of M.

Industrial Growth Another Look

While India's performance in the industrial sector since independence is certainly impressive, there are some disturbing features and trends in the rate of growth of industrial production which call for serious attention. Most striking among these is the deceleration of the industrial growth rate and the sizeable underutilisation of capacities.

Corporate Investment in 1982-A Forecast

A Forecast C Rangarajan This paper attempts to make a forecast of the growth in private corporate investment in 1982. Corporate investment is taken to cover gross capital expenditures of all companies in the private and joint sectors. The study also provides a picture of the level and composition of corporate investment in

Private Corporate Investment in Gujarat in 1980 and Forecast for 1981


3 Ruth Dixon, "Jobs for Women in Rural Industry and Services," USAID, September 1979.
4 E Boserup, "Women's Role In Economic Development." Allen and Unwin, London, 1970.

Corporate Investment in 1981-A Forecast

This paper attempts to make a forecast of the growth in private corporate investment in 1981 Corporate investment is taken to cover gross capital expenditures of all companies in private and joint sectors.

Corporate Investment in 1980-A Forecast

A Forecast C Rangarajan An attempt is made in this paper to forecast the growth in private corporate investment in 1980. Corporate investment is taken to include gross capital expenditures of all companies including joint sector companies.

Choice of Technology in the Sugar Industry

C Rangarajan A H Karlo Can we objectively determine the trade-off between 'rate of return' and 'employment'?
One could possibly go from the potential surplus to actual surplus using a marginal propensity to save and then employing a capital-output ratio to determine the future rate of growth in output and employ- ment. Then this trade-off will be transformed into one between current and future employment.

Credit Policy and Production

C Rangarajan The rapid growth of bank credit during the last three months raises some important issues. The first question is how the commercial banks were able to extend credit which was way beyond the limits set by the Reserve Bank. The second and the more important issue is whether the policies and criteria followed currently by the commercial banks in determining the extent of credit for individual borrowers will ever lead to achieving the larger objectives of credit policy such as maintenance of price stability.

Corporate Investment in 1979 A Forecast

Corporate Investment in 1979: A Forecast C Rangarajan An attempt is made in this paper to forecast the behaviour of private corporate investment in 1979. Corporate investment is taken to include gross capital expenditures of all companies including pint sector companies. Government companies alone are excluded: This study also provides a picture of investment behaviour in 1978.

Private Corporate Investment in 1978 A Forecast

the tax, though it is not certain that the entire shortfall in income tax receipts, compared to the 1977-78 Budget Estimates, can be attributed to just this measure. What the change now proposed seeks to do is to withdraw the tax exemption of capital gains from re-investments in fixed deposits and to restrict the eligibility with respect to shares to only investments "made in equity shares of new industrial companies". So a big industrialist can sell his personal property at as high a price as possible and invest it in the equity of his newly floated industrial company and pay no tax at all. No questions are asked about how genuine is the new issue or how long must that investment remain locked there. In any case the industrialist concerned is in full control. So why bother? What a bonanza he gets, which others who placed their gains in fixed deposits and drew loans on their strength will hereafter be denied? I have frankly no sympathy for either group.

CAPITAL VIEW

of Kerala Joan P Mencher The purpose of this paper is to examine the nature of agrarian relations in the two main rice regions of Kerala, Kuttanad (a low-lying area covering parts of Alleppey, Kottayam and Quilon Districts) and Palghat, in order to examine one, forces interfering with production and, secondly, the elms relations that serve to impede a more equitable distribution of food and other commodities. The paper describes some of the striking contradictions in each area, and offers some tentative predictions for their future development.

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