Books on the topic 'Market efficiency- India'

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1

P, Gupta O. Behaviour of share prices in India: A test of market efficiency. New Delhi: National, 1985.

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2

P, Gupta O. Behaviour of share prices in India: A test of market efficiency. New Delhi: National, 1985.

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3

T, Geetha, ed. Indian capital market: Informational signalling and efficiency. New Delhi: A.P.H. Pub. Corp., 1996.

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4

Amanulla, S. Indian stock market: Price integration and market efficiency. Bangalore: Institute for Social and Economic Change, 2000.

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5

Velmurugan, P. S. Excessive speculation and market efficiency of U.S. and Indian agri-commodity futures markets. New Delhi: Serials Publications, 2013.

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6

Gupta, O. P., Reader, Dept. of Commerce., ed. Stock market efficiency and price behaviour: The Indian experience. New Delhi: Anmol Publications, 1989.

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7

Administrative Staff College of India. Constructing change: Accelerating energy efficiency in Indias buildings market. Hyderabad: Administrative Staff College of India, 2012.

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8

Bhattacharya, Basabi. Indian equity market since liberalization: Efficiency, voltility, and structural break. Kolkata: World View in collaboration with Dept. of Economics, Jadavpur University, 2008.

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9

Nandi, Sukumar. Growth, financial cycles & bank efficiency: A study of the Indian money market. Mumbai: Business Publication Inc, 1998.

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10

Madhusoodanan, T. P. Mean reversion in the Indian Stock Market. Mumbai: UTI Institute of Capital Markets, 1996.

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11

N, Agarwal R. Financial integration and capital markets in developing countries: A study of growth, volatility and efficiency in the Indian capital market. Delhi: Institute of Economic Growth, 2000.

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12

Hiremath, Gourishankar S. Indian Stock Market: An Empirical Analysis of Informational Efficiency. Springer London, Limited, 2013.

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13

Indian Stock Market: An Empirical Analysis of Informational Efficiency. Springer (India) Private Limited, 2013.

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14

Groundwater irrigation in North India: Institutions and markets. Kathmandu: South Asian Network for Development and Environmental Economics, 2006.

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15

Trade liberalisation, market power and scale efficiency in Indian industry. Thiruvananthapuram, Kerala: Centre for Development Studies, 2002.

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16

Cahill, Cathleen D. “An Indian Teacher among Indians”. University of Illinois Press, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.5406/illinois/9780252037153.003.0014.

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Scholars have emphasized that policymakers designed the federal Indian school system to assimilate Native children and create a colonial labor force by training Native female students for primarily menial domestic labor. Inadvertently, these policies brought thousands of Native people into the Indian Service in both the white-collar and the menial sector. However, we know very little about them, why they took those jobs, and how they strategically used their positions. This chapter shows that Native women adapted to the changes wrought by the modern economy; but racially marked as Indians, they also struggled for economic and cultural survival in a hostile world. In order to access their voices, it draws upon fifty-five personnel files from the Indian School Service. Beginning in 1905 the Office of Indian Affairs kept individual files for each employee that afford an intimate portrayal of the everyday work lives of female personnel. Assembling personal and professional correspondence, efficiency reports, requests for transfers or retirement, and more, the files illuminate the occupational paths of these women.
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17

O'Hara, Kieron, Wendy Hall, and Vinton Cerf. Four Internets. Oxford University Press, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780197523681.001.0001.

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The book describes the Internet, and how Internet governance prevents it fragmenting into a ‘Splinternet’. Four opposing ideologies about how data flows around the network have become prominent because they are (a) implemented by technical standards, and (b) backed by influential geopolitical entities. Each of these specifies an ‘Internet’, described in relation to its implementation by a specific geopolitical entity. The four Internets of the title are: the Silicon Valley Open Internet, developed by pioneers of the Internet in the 1960s, based on principles of openness and efficient dataflow; the Brussels Bourgeois Internet, exemplified by the European Union, with a focus on human rights and legal administration; the DC Commercial Internet, exemplified by the Washington establishment and its focus on property rights and market solutions; and the Beijing Paternal Internet, exemplified by the Chinese government’s control of Internet content. These Internets have to coexist if the Internet as a whole is to remain connected. The book also considers the weaponization of the hacking ethic as the Moscow Spoiler model, exemplified by Russia’s campaigns of misinformation at scale; this is not a vision of the Internet, but is parasitic on the others. Each of these ideologies is illustrated by a specific policy question. Potential future directions of Internet development are considered, including the policy directions that India might take, and the development of technologies such as artificial intelligence, smart cities, the Internet of Things, and social machines. A conclusion speculates on potential future Internets that may emerge alongside those described.
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