Dr.DEBESH BHOWMIK

Dr.DEBESH BHOWMIK

Monday, 28 September 2015

MID YEAR SEMINAR OF BEA AT IMI,KOLKATA ON 27/9/2015


MID YEAR SEMINAR OF BENGAL ECONOMIC ASSOCIATION ON 29-09-2015
AT INTERNATIONAL MANAGEMENT INSTITUTE ,KOLKATA
On Planning Commission and NITI Aayog: Experiences and Expectations
Bengal Economic Association held its Mid Year Seminar on “Planning Commission and NITI Aayog: Experiences and Expectations” at INTERNATIONAL MANAGEMENT INSTITUTE ,KOLKATA on 27-09-2015.
The seminar was inaugurated by Prof.Arindam Banik-The Director of IMI.In his inaugural lecture,he said that the NITI Aayog just came in and its goal ,motive,strategy are still unknown.Why the financial allocations of NITI Aayog was not incorporated is confusionary.Prof.Anup Kumar Sinha of IIM(Kolkata) delivered his key note speech where he mentioned the history of planning,the routes of planning,crisis of planning,change of strategy by NITI Aayog.In the history,he mentioned about growth of employment,poverty,and the models of planning from the first high lighting allocations,post colonial reconstruction,Bretton Woods System and exchange rate management system,growth and distribution,low productivity,problem of implementation,corruptions,faltry planning,problem of land reform and green revolution,naxalist and Maoist problem,lobbies from states,short run expectations,economic reform,Washington consensus,WTO,free trade policy,huge fiscal deficit,unregulated market,capital mobility,uncontrolled money supply,investment market in development process where FDI is invited ,foreign currencies outflowed.Now,NITI Aayog leading by BJP government,which is a think tank,giving no power of sanction of funds ,but declared cooperative federalism,and they did not define the role of Aayog and its power clearly, but many visions to be done,how they control service-led growth sustainability,infrastructure market are not focused.Their composition of Aayog is somehow complex.
In the technical session-1,two papers were presented for the session on planning commission.Retired prof.Anath Bandhu Mukherjee,told about “Transforming India –The Neo-liberal Way” through the process and history of planning commission.He opined very negative expectations from the new BJP led NITI Aayog.Granthana Sengupta-Assistant Professor of Sundarban Hazi Desarat College,said on “Planning Commission and NITI Aayog:Experience and Expectation” where she clarified the success and failures of planning commission and to what extent the NITI Aayog can do for the welfare of the people.In the second technical session,there were three papers.Souvik Mukherjee of Jadavpur University told about “From the Planning Commission to the NITI Aayog:An Intellectual Journey” where he emphasized on the post colonial reconstruction to the birth of birth of the NITI Aayog in which there are many unanswered questions to be explored”.Kishor Naskar and Sourav Kumar Das,in their paper,”NITI Aayog:Central Planning Agency of India”,showed by a present structure and  modeled structure comparing the different Central Planning Agency by which they concluded about NITI Aayog.

Dr.Debesh Bhowmik,in his paper “NITI Aayog:Some Challenges Ahead” spoke about,the principles,objectives,composition,of NITI Aayog,the difference between planning commission and NITI Aayog, political economy of NITI Aayog and he mentioned about the outcome of 65 years of planning of the planning commission.Such as,
21.9% of India’s population live still below the poverty line which is underestimated in terms of per capita per day consumption expenditure.10% of people are still hungry and cannot get pure drinking water.40% of people have not any access of health facility and sanitation facility. More than 30% of people in India are illiterate. Less than 4% of GDP are expensed in health and education- a bare minimum.22% of the population live in the slums. The GDP share of top 10% of the population is increasing and on the other hand the GDP share of bottom 10% population is decreasing and thus inequality is rising. During 65 years of planning the GDP growth rate is increasing at the rate of 4.3% during 1970-2014 only, agricultural growth rate is less than 3% during the plans, the industry growth rate is below 6% only and service sector growth rate 7% only. On the contrary, agricultural share, industrial share and service sector share have been increasing at the rate of 1.69%,0.93% and 0.747% per year respectively during 1950-51-2013-14.Inflation rate is clouded over the economy where unemployment rate is decreasing at the rate of 2.09% per year only during 1983-2013.India’s HDI rank is 135 and GDI rank is 135 which are too backward but corruption index is too high whose rank is 85 out of 175. In this situation India’s globalization index (92.52) is high whereas she is enjoying structurally a trade deficit country since long. Her debt GDP ratio (65.5) is also alarming. What have contributed the Planning Commission to us during last 65 years? Sustainable development, green growth, food security, social security-all are in dreams to Indians but India is a super power now in context of military and defense expenditure. She is playing strategic power game in the international relation whereas her citizens are half-fed having without shelter.
There are some important strategic problems that should be carefully handled by the NITI Aayog .These are the following:
[1]No coordination among RBI,NITI Aayog/Planning Commission,finance ministry,Finance Commission,National Institute of Public Finance and Policy
[2] Generally ,Government dictates all institutions
[3]Except First/Fourth plan,no targets of the plans were actually realized.
[4] Strategy to achieve the central macro variables ( growth,saving,capital output ratio, employment growth, inflation and sectoral growth) were found weak.
[5] Less priority to the public sector economy.
[6]Due to political interest there are many unproductive and non capital formation programmes and projects.
[7] Emphasis on environment and renewable energy in recent times
[8] Fiscal federalism is weak and no fiscal convergence among states(fiscal deficit is now 5.6% of GDP but target rate is 4.1% which does not follow FRBM target of 3%).
[9] Uneven industrial growth/expansion among states
[10] North Eastern States are deprived and neglected in the planning structure 
[11] Inputs/ingradients of rural development were neglected
[12] Land reforms are undone in most of the states
[13] No long term policy measures for correcting structural trade deficit and BOP deficits.
         ( dominated by SAF and ESAF of IMF)

[14]Rupee convertibility was found premature death
[15]Revenue expansion policy should be revamped
[16]  unproductive government expenditure policy should be minimized
[17] No excuse on government corruptions
[18] Monitoring on Ministry of Finance,RBI,Planning Commission, Finance Commission is nil
[19]Progress of human development is marginal
[20] saving investment gap and trade gap is uncovered ( now saving is 30.1% of GDP but investment rate is 34.8% of GDP-a huge gap)
[21] rural development and urban development gap is widening
[22] more emphasis should given on natural resource mobilization
[23] less importance in the gender development and recently incorporated on gender budgeting
[24] poor infrastructure development but it is known that 1% increase in infrastructure will lead to 1% increase in GDP .
[25] to handle carefully the growth-employment,growth-inflation,and unemployment –inflation trade off.
Thus NITI Aayog has lot of works to do for the welfare of people.
Lastly,Vote of thanks was given by Bani Mukherjee.



Wednesday, 19 August 2015

DALIT WOMEN :EXPLOITATION AND SOCIAL EXCLUSION


My article-

Dr.Debesh Bhowmik—Dalit Women:Exploitation and Social Exclusion

Published in “WOMEN POLITICS IN SOUTH ASIA” –Edited by Dr.Sukanta Sarkar (ICFAI Uinversity,Agartala) and Dr.P.K.Pandey ( Dibrugarh University,Assam)
MANGLAM PUBLICATIONS,K/129,Gali No-3,Gautam Vhar,Delhi-110053,9968367559(M),PP vii+267.Price-895/-

This edited volume contains 18 articles which stated the women empowerment,women participation in social,economic,politics and in various institutions focusing on depreciation of women in area of education,health,governance,employment,social security,social justice and in developmental process.All these issued were discussed by the authors especially in South Asia. Wide gender gap and low gender role in the economic development may harm growth and sustainability because women contribution in national income is two third which is unpaid and unaccounted. Gender Development Indices in South Asian Countries are very low in comparison to developed nations. Gender poverty is uncovered to the Government.The religious role in the space of women’s deprivation is excluded in the policies to Government. All are discussed in the articles of this volume.

My article especially explains the deprivation of Dalit women who are exploited from every corners of the social policies, like in law, justice, educational disparity, social exclusion, and they are frequently raped and murdered and forced to surrender their free labour and untouched to every sections of the society. They are exploited and excluded from social transformation.    


Wednesday, 5 August 2015

AN ANALYSIS OF FINANCIAL INTEGRATION :NOW AND THEN

BUSINESS PERSPECTIVES -EDITED BY - Dr.AJIT DHAR DUBEY
RESEARCH INDIA PUBLICATIONS-B/2/84,GROUND FLOOR,ROHINI SECTOR-16,DELHI-110089,PP-175,PAPER PACK,Rs.500/-,Email-ripublication.com






see full paper in
page-61-78

AN ANALYSIS OF FINANCIAL INTEGRATION:NOW AND THEN

Dr.Debesh Bhowmik

Key words- financial integration, history of financial integration,growth and financial integration,crises and financial integration.

JEL-E44,F15,F33,F41,G15,N10,O11

Abstract

The article endeavours to analyse on Financial integration which is a process through which a country’s financial markets become more closely integrated with those in other countries or with those in the rest of the world and which was also historically observed through domination of international trade and finance from the hands of Spain, Italy, Portugal, France ,England and USA and from one financial centre to other entrepot centres. Development of capitalism became unsuccessful in spite of introduction to globalization and financial integration because financial crises could not be avoided in course of accelerated financial integration although capitalism have spent the years of golden age as its success story of  international financial integration.The role of capital flows do not stimulate growth in all countries in all the periods where growth of FDI dominates in several sectors. Convergences in the indicators of financial integration process were not achieved even when trade integration showed successful. Thus,financial integration did not lead to expand growth in all countries when imbalance and financial crises were the outcome of integration and when international economy has no common international money with a stable exchange rate regime. 

[This paper was accepted for presentation in World Finance  Conference and Banking Symposium,Singapore on 12-13 December,2014.]

Saturday, 1 August 2015

Is there any relation of Euro Area's trade with foreign exchange and SDR reserves?



 INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF BUSINESS,MANAGEMENT AND SOCIAL SCIENCES
VOL-IV,ISSUE-I(II),APRIL 2015,45-49
           (This paper was presented on 24th April,2015, at Sadguru Gadage Maharaj College,Karad Vidyanagar,Karad.Maharastra.)


Is there any relation of Euro Area’s trade with foreign exchange and SDR reserves?

Dr.Debesh Bhowmik 
Key words- SDR, foreign exchange reserves, cointegration, VAR


Introduction
It is noted that Euro Area has not shown the identical behavior like USA and the world in describing the relation of export and import with foreign exchange and SDR from the survey period during 1999-2013.
It may be that Euro Area depends on Euro for its intra-trade and has utilised foreign exchange and SDR for international trade. Therefore, the role of foreign exchange and SDR in analyzing foreign trade is rather different that other big blocs and nations.
In this paper, we will verify this notion through the econometric model from 1999 to 2013.
Methodology and data
We have used the Johansen model (1988,) for cointegration and also used Johansen model (1991,1996) for applying VAR model. We collected data of exports, imports, foreign exchange reserves and SDR from International Financial Statistics (IMF) for Euro area.
Assume x1= exports of Euro Area, X2= imports of Euro Area.X3= foreign exchange reserves of Euro Area,X4= SDR reserves of Euro Area.
We also used the semi log and double log linear model for trend values.
The major findings of the Econometric model
There is inverse relation between exports of Euro Area with the total reserves of foreign exchange (excluding gold) in which the double log regression model observed that one percent increase in total reserves per year would lead to a decrease of 1.3636% export per year of Euro Area during 1999 to 2013.This is statistically significant. On the other hand, the Johansen co-integration test proved that both are not co-integrated because the Trace and λ Max statistic are insignificant and have no cointegrating vectors.
The export of Euro Area has the positive relation with the SDR reserves of Euro Area from the period of 1999-2013 which is shown by the double log linear model where it is observed that one percent rise in SDR reserves of Euro Area per year leads to 0.40258% increase in export of Euro Area per year. This estimation is statistically significant.
The Johansen co-integration test suggests that Trace and λ Max statistics showed one cointegrating equation in relating export and reserves of SDR of Euro Area during 1999-2013.
The double log multiple regression model tells us that one percent rise in total foreign and SDR reserves per year leads to decrease in 1.1988% in export and 0.3060 percent increase exports respectively in Euro Area during 1999-2013.The t are significant for all coefficients, high value of F and R2.
The regression equation is given below,
Logx1=13.288-1.1988logx3+0.3060logx4
              (10.156)* (-5.15)*     (3.312)*
 R2= 0.789  , F= 22.497*  , DW=1.893  ,
The Johansen co-integration test suggest that the Trace and λ Max statistics confirmed only one cointegrating equation .
Table-1: Cointegration test
No. of hypothesized (CEs)
Eigen value
Trace statistic
0.05 c.v.
Prob.
None*
0.93937
47.778*
29.797
0.0002
At most 1
0.4999
11.338
15.494
0.1915
At most2
0.16398
2.3284
3.841
0.1217


λ Max Statistic


None*
0.93937
36.440*
21.131
0.0002
At most1
0.4999
9.0096
14.264
0.2854
Atmost 2
0.16398
2.328
3.841
0.1270
Source- Calculated by author
 The import of Euro Area has inverse relation with the total reserves of foreign exchange during 1999-2013 where double log regression equation states that one percent rise in foreign exchange reserves of Euro Area per year leads to 1.388261% fall in imports of Euro Area per year during the survey period. This is statistically significant .
The Johansen cointegration test suggests that the Trace and λ Max statistics confirmed no cointegrating vector.But the imports of Euro Area has the positive correlation with the reserves of SDR during the period of 1999-2013 in which the double log regression model suggest that one percent increase in SDR reserves of Euro Area per year would lead to 0.40897% increase in imports of Euro Area per year during the specified period. This result is statistically significant .The Johansen cointegration test suggests that there is one cointegrating vector as observed by the Trace Statistics and λ Max statistics.
The double log multiple regression model confirms that one percent increase in SDR reserves would leads to 0.3107 % increase in imports of EU and one percent increase in total foreign exchange would lead to 1.22088% decrease in import of EU during 1999-2013 respectively where both are statistically significant with high R2 and F values.
Logx2=13.3835-1.220889logx3+0.3107logx4
              (10.845)*  (-5.415)*      (3.565)*
  R2= 0.8135  , F= 26.172*  , DW=1.839
Moreover, the Johansen cointegration test suggests that there is only one cointegrating vector as observed by the Trace and λ Max statistics which are given below in Table-2.
  Table-2: Cointegration test of imports, foreign exchange and SDR of Euro Area
No. of hypothesized (CEs)
Eigen value
Trace statistic
0.05 c.v.
Prob.
None
0.93335
45.9238*
29.797
0.0003
At most 1
0.48233
10.7150
15.494
0.2296
At most2
0.15279
2.1555
3.8414
0.1420


λMax Statistic


None
0.93335
35.2088*
21.131
0.0003
At most1
0.48233
10.7150
14.264
0.9246
At most2
0.15279
2.1555
3.841
0.1420
Source- Calculated by author
Thus, it is proved that Euro Area export and import have no cointegration with total foreign reserves but have cointegration with the reserves of SDR during the period of 1999-2013.
Let us have a VAR model of x1, x3, x4 respectively in one period lag to show the relationship explicitly. The estimated equations are given below,
X1t=2290.512+0.4665X1t-1 -6.093X3t-1+35.4603X4t-1
         (1.167)       (1.332)           (-0.963)         (1.359)
 R2= 0.769   ,  F= 11.137
X3t= 207.936 -0.02692X1t-1 +0.2094X3t-1+0.8222X4t-1
          (1.744)      (-1.265)           (0.529)             (0.518)
  R2= 0.514       F= 3.53  
X4t=10.692+0.00142X1t-1 -0.04409X3t-1 + 0.71303X4t-1
         (0.818)    (0.610)             (-1.017)              (4.104)*
 R2= 0.858   , F= 20.152*  
   Loglikelihood = -219.77 , SC= 33.65  , AIC=33.110,*= significant at 5% level.
Thus, the VAR model of Euro Area export with foreign exchanges and SDR is a good fit with high R2 but the t values of the coefficients are not significant. Moreover, the Impulse Response Functions in all cases do not converge  to zero which concludes instability that are shown below in Fig-1.
Fig-1: Impulse Response Function of export, foreign exchange and SDR 

       Source- Calculated by author
Yet the unit root circle test showed that all the roots of Characteristic Polynomial are less than zero and lie inside the unit circle which means VAR satisfies the stability condition. The values of the roots are shown in the table and their positions are shown in the unit root circle in Fig-2.
    Table-3:Roots of Characteristic polynomial
roots
Modulus
0.967855
0.967855
0.435367
0.435367
-0.01265
0.014265
            Source- Calculated by author                       
                           Fig-2
Source- Calculated by author
Doornik-Hansen VAR residual normality test confirms that only joint kurtosis is significant at Chi square distribution but skewness, kurtosis and Jarque-Bera showed insignificant , that’s why the normality is rejected.
   Table-4:Doornik-Hansen normality test
       component
Skewness
Chi-sq
df
prob
1
0.228856
0.205167
1
0.6506
2
-0.458241
0.805338
1
0.3695
3
0.071878
0.020371
1
0.8865
joint

1.030877
3
0.7938
component
Kurtosis
Chi-sq
df
prob
1
2.960292
1.611232
1
0.2043
2
3.068134
1.212961
1
0.2707
3
3.669513
5.310471
1
0.0212
joint

8.134664
3
0.0433
component
Jarque-Bera



1
1.816399

2
0.4032
2
2.018300

2
0.3645
3
5.330842

2
0.0696
joint




Source- Calculated by author
The VAR model of Euro Area imports with foreign exchange reserves and SDR is shown below by estimating the equations were found as before.

X2t=2045.064+0.5089X2t-1 – 5.4219X3t-1+35.880X4t-1
         (1.06)         (1.449)              (-0.846)           (1.383)
R2=0.794  , F= 12.606
X3t=214.455 -0.0286X2t-1+0.1857X3t-1+0.959X4t-1
          (1.77)      (-1.298)          (0.4608)           (0.587)
 R2=0.518 , F= 3.58
X4t=10.852+0.00141X2t-1-0.0443X3t-1+0.7107X4t-1
          (0.812)   (0.580)          (-0.998)           (3.950)*
 R2= 0.857   , F= 20.07* 
AIC=32.95  , SC= 33.501  , loglikelihood=-218.673,*= significant at 5% level.
This is good fit with high R2 and F
The Impulse Response Functions of the VAR model showed that they are diverging and the VAR model is unstable. It is shown in Fig-3.
                      Fig-3: Impulse Response Function

     Source- Calculated by author
The unit root circle test assured that the roots of characteristic polynomial lie inside the unit circle and are less than one and satisfies the stability condition.
 Table-5: Roots of characteristic polynomial
Root
modulus
0.978754
0.978
0.407833
0.407833
0.017995
0.017995
Source- Calculated by author.
The unit circle is given below
  Fig-4
Source- Calculated by author
The Doornik-Hansen VAR residual normality test confirmed that the normality is rejected since the component values of skewness, kurtosis and Jarque-Bera are not significant.
Table-6: Doornik-Hansen normality test
Component
Skewness
Chi-sq
df
prob
1
0.352922
0.483147
1
0.4870
2
-0.441389
0.748688
1
0.3869
3
0.085350
0.028714
1
0.8654
joint

1.260549
3
0.7385
component
Kurtosis
Chi-sq
df
prob
1
3.018876
1.455512
1
0.2276
2
3.015199
1.106527
1
0.2928
3
3.644780
5.157678
1
0.0231
joint

7.719717
3
0.0522
component
Jarque-Bera

df
prob
1
1.938659

2
0.3793
2
1.855215

2
0.3955
3
5.186392

2
0.0748
joint
8.980266

6
0.1747
Source- Calculated by author
Conclusion
The paper concludes that the exports and imports of Euro Area have no cointegration with total foreign exchanges reserves showing unstable VAR but these have cointegration with SDR having unstable VAR during the study period of 1999-2013 and SDR have positive impact on international trade.
The shortcoming of the model is that the paper has taken only 15 years for analyzing VAR and cointegration which are too short but we were bound to take such data because the Euro Area and its currency Euro have been started since 1999.
References
[1]Bhowmik,Debesh, 2003, Essays on International Money, Deep and Deep, New Delhi
[2]……………, 2014, The Euro crisis and international liquidity problems, Synergy publications, New Delhi
[3]……………,2014, A new track of reform in international monetary system, D.N.Konar and A.K.Karmakar ed(2014)-Post reforms :Indian Economy, Regal Publications, New Delhi.
[4] Boorman,Jack T. and A.I.Card.,2011, Reform of the international monetary system,Sage Publications,NewDelhi
[5]Enders,Walter.,2011,Applied Econometric Time Series.Wiley Student Edition.
[6]Engle R.F. and Granger C.W.J., 1987, Cointegration and error correction: Representation, estimation and testing. Econometrica, 55:251-276.

[7]Johansen,S., 1988,Statistical Analysis of Cointegrating Vectors. Journal of Economic Dynamics  and Control, Vol. 12,231-254.
[8]……………….,1991,Estimation of Hypothesis Testing of Cointegration Vectors in Gaussian Vector Autoregressive Models, Econometrica  59,Nov,1551-80
[9]……………..,1994, The role of the constant and linear terms in cointegration analysis of nonstationary variables. Econometric Reviews,13, 205-229
[10] Johansen S., 1995, Likelihood-Based Inference in Cointegrated Vector Autoregressive Models. Oxford University Press.

[11]………….,1996, Likelihood-Based Inference in Cointegrated Vector Autoregressive Models,2nd edition, Oxford University Press.

[12]……….. and K.Juselius.,1990,Maximum likelihood estimation and cointegration with application to the demand of money. Oxford Bulletin of Economics and Statistics,52(2),169-210.
[13]Johnson.A.,2006,The effects of FDI inflows on Host Country Economic growth. CESIS Electronic working paper series no-58.
[14]I.M.F.- International Financial Statistics-Various Years.
[15] Ocampo,Jose Antonio.,2010,Building an SDR based Global Reserve system,Journal of Globalisation and Development,No-2.
[16] Williamson,John.,2005, Revamping the International Monetary System.Institute for International Economics.