Collection's Items (Sorted by Submit Date in Descending order): 181 to 200 of 254
Issue Date | Title | Author(s) |
2008-07 | Horticultural Prospect and Potential in India | Giri, Arun Kumar |
2016 | The Role of Globalization and Institutional Quality on Finance- Growth Nexus:Empirical Evidences from India | Giri, Arun Kumar |
2019 | Do Globalization and Institutional Reforms Matter for Financial Structure in Selected Asian Countries? A Panel Data Approach | Giri, Arun Kumar |
2019 | How Livelihood Diversification and Institutional Credit Help to Improve Household Well-Being in India? | Giri, Arun Kumar; Mohapatra, Geetilaxmi |
2021-02 | Dynamics of poverty and its determinants in rural India: Evidence from longitudinal farm households | Giri, Arun Kumar; Mohapatra, Geetilaxmi |
2022-03 | Do Institutional Quality and Trade Openness Influence Economic Growth? An Empirical Evidence from India | Giri, Arun Kumar; Mohapatra, Geetilaxmi |
2022-04 | Does ICT diffusion make human development sustainable in the era of globalization? An empirical analysis from SAARC economies | Giri, Arun Kumar; Debata, Byomakesh |
2022 | Examining the macro-determinants of tourist arrivals in India | Giri, Arun Kumar; Mohapatra, Geetilaxmi |
2022-08 | ICT diffusion, women empowerment, and sustainable development in SAARC countries | Giri, Arun Kumar; Debata, Byomakesh |
2022-09 | Foreign capital inflows and poverty linkages in South Asia: Do the forms of capital inflows matter? | Giri, Arun Kumar; Mohapatra, Geetilaxmi |
2022-09 | Do Trade Openness and Output Gap Affect Inflation? Empirical Evidence from BRICS Nations | Giri, Arun Kumar; Kumar, Arya |
2022 | Leapfrogging into knowledge economy: Information and communication technology for human development | Giri, Arun Kumar; Debata, Byomakesh |
2022-09 | The role of ICT diffusion in sustainable human development: an empirical analysis from SAARC economies | Giri, Arun Kumar; Debata, Byomakesh |
2022-10 | The Environmental Philips Curve from a gender perspective: empirical evidence from India | Giri, Arun Kumar; Mohapatra, Geetilaxmi |
2022-11 | Does financial inclusion reduce income inequality? Empirical evidence from Asian economies | Giri, Arun Kumar |
2022-12 | Environmental effects of ICT diffusion, energy consumption, financial development, and globalization: panel evidence from SAARC economies | Giri, Arun Kumar |
2023-01 | What Shapes Economic Growth in BRICS? Exploring the Role of Institutional Quality and Trade Openness | Giri, Arun Kumar; Kumar, Arya |
2014 | The aim of this study was to investigate the potential linkages between access to water and sanitation with household wellbeing in India. A few studies have been carried out on the expected benefits of investments in water and sanitation in spite of the fact that effect of investment in water and sanitation has a huge impact on overall performance of household in terms of health, education, employment, etc. This study uses data from Indian Human Development Surveys (IHDSs) collected by the University of Maryland and the National Council of Applied Economic Research in 2004–05 and 2011–12. Econometric analysis has been done to examine the relationship between access to water and sanitation and its consequential impact on the overall welfare of households. The main hypothesis is that an improvement in the accessibility of water and sanitation sources increases the overall standard of living with the assumptions that an improvement in the accessibility of water and sanitation sources reduces illness among household members, which also, in turn, tends to increase overall standard of living. The data indicated that there was no significant improvement in access to water sources in India from 2004–05 to 2011–12. Around 53% of the households surveyed used open fields as toilets in 2004–05, and this proportion only slightly decreased (44.72%) by 2011–12. While comparing the overall standard of living, about 38.5% respondents believe they became better off between two periods (from 2004–05 to 2011–12) while around 52% respondent feels there was no significant improvement in their standard of living. Ordered log it regression analyses were carried out to establish links between water and sanitation access and changes in household welfare. There is a positive relationship between improvements in households ’sources of water and sanitation and improvements in households ’(self-reported) overall welfare. In other words, households experiencing an improvement in their source of water supply and sanitation were more likely to report an improvement in their overall standard of living, and less likely to report deterioration. | Giri, Arun Kumar |
2018 | https://www.indianjournals.com/ijor.aspx?target=ijor:jiw&volume=40&issue=2&article=005 | Giri, Arun Kumar; Mohapatra, Geetilaxmi |
2021-08 | How Farm Household Spends Their Non-farm Incomes in Rural India? Evidence from Longitudinal Data | Giri, Arun Kumar; Mohapatra, Geetilaxmi |
Collection's Items (Sorted by Submit Date in Descending order): 181 to 200 of 254