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Searching with a thematic focus on Finance policy, Trade Policy in India
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Trade reforms in India ten years on: how has it fared compared to its East Asian neighbours?
Institute of Southeast Asian Studies, 2002This paper examines the impact of India’s economic reforms in the 1990s on its international trade linkages with the rest of the world. The paper summarises recent trade reforms in India and documents the extent to which the country has integrated with the global trading system.DocumentFinancing of agricultural marketing: case studies from Asia
Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations, 2003This study looks at how traders of grains and horticultural produce in Asia finance their activities and how they use that finance.DocumentDistribution services: India and the GATS 2000 Negotiations
Indian Council for Research on International Economic Relations, 2002This study examines India’s opportunities and constraints to trade in distribution services in the context of the ongoing GATS (General Agreement on trade in Services) 2000 negotiations.India is a small player in the global market for distribution services.DocumentLiberalisation, multinational enterprises and export performance: evidence from Indian manufacturing.
Indian Council for Research on International Economic Relations, 2001This paper tests two hypotheses.DocumentThe Uruguay Round and South Asia : an overview of the impact and opportunities
Policy Research Working Papers, World Bank, 1995South Asia remains less liberal in trade policy than East Asia, including China. The Uruguay Round's most dramatic effect on South Asia will be the removal of non tariff barriers on the region's exports to the rest of the world.DocumentSources of growth in South Asian economies
Global Development Network, 2000This paper extracts insights from cross-country analysis about the performance of individual South Asian countries and the region as a whole.DocumentMultinational versus expatriate FDI: a comparative analysis of the Chinese and Indian experiences
Indian Council for Research on International Economic Relations, 2000This paper offers estimated econometric models of FDI inflows into both China and India, making a distinction between multinational versus expatriate investments and provides statistics and analysis for both countries.Findings include:FDI inflow into India in 1997-98 totaled $3.2 billion as against the 1997 Chinese aggregate of almost $39 billionin both countries, investment by largPages
