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2018 | Buch

Efficiency of Growth Drivers

An Analysis of Select Indian Industries

verfasst von: Dr. Susmita Chatterjee, Prof. Dr. Dhrubaranjan Dandapat, Prof. Dr. Bhaskar Bagchi

Verlag: Springer Singapore

Buchreihe : SpringerBriefs in Economics

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Über dieses Buch

This book covers three main areas, namely the pharmaceuticals industry, the telecommunications sector and the banking sector, with a focus on manufacturing and service. It includes a brief analysis of all three, particularly in the context of their evolution, current status, cost efficiency, and growth projections. The Indian pharmaceuticals market is the third-largest in the world in terms of volume and thirteenth-largest in terms of value; further, India is the world’s largest provider of generic drugs. India is currently the second-largest telecommunications market and has the third-highest number of internet users in the world. At the same time, the deregulation of foreign direct investment (FDI) norms has made banking one of the fastest-growing sectors and a top-five employment opportunity generator in the country. Further, the efficiency and profitability of India’s banking sector has assumed prime importance due to intense competition, customer demands and bank reforms. The book gauges the relative performance of the Indian banks based on certain key parameters. It then concisely presents the efficiency results, vividly portraying the industry’s current status and serving as a ready reference that will be valuable to students, academics and industry experts alike.

Inhaltsverzeichnis

Frontmatter
Chapter 1. Brief Note on Data Envelopment Analysis
Abstract
Efficiency analysis considers decision-making problem faced by an economic agent (like a consumer or a producer). The choice variables, constraints and some criterion function have to be identified in the process of decision-making
Susmita Chatterjee, Dhrubaranjan Dandapat, Bhaskar Bagchi
Chapter 2. Banking: Case Studies of Selected Banks
Abstract
The Indian banking industry has its establishments in the eighteenth century and has had a differed transformative ordeal from that point forward. The underlying banks in India were essentially brokers’ banks connected just in financing exercises.
Susmita Chatterjee, Dhrubaranjan Dandapat, Bhaskar Bagchi
Chapter 3. Telecom: Case Studies on Selected Service Providers
Abstract
The telecom industry processes are vertically integrated. In the era of voice-dominated landlines, operators were operating on a simple mode of operations though the network system was complex. The industry was characterized by technology with increasing returns to scale and was dominated by monopoly market structure, with little or no competition, and selling of the services was not rigorous.
Susmita Chatterjee, Dhrubaranjan Dandapat, Bhaskar Bagchi
Chapter 4. Pharmaceutical: Case Studies of Selected Pharma Companies
Abstract
Indian medical expertise is acclaimed and trusted across the globe. The modern allopathic system is well established in India but the country has long history of various types of medical and pharmaceutical systems. Homoeopathy came to India in 1810. In the pre-British rule era, Ayurvedic and Unani forms of medicine were used and these were related to religious practices as well. The British Government had introduced the allopathic form of medicine in colonized India.
Susmita Chatterjee, Dhrubaranjan Dandapat, Bhaskar Bagchi
Metadaten
Titel
Efficiency of Growth Drivers
verfasst von
Dr. Susmita Chatterjee
Prof. Dr. Dhrubaranjan Dandapat
Prof. Dr. Bhaskar Bagchi
Copyright-Jahr
2018
Verlag
Springer Singapore
Electronic ISBN
978-981-13-2919-7
Print ISBN
978-981-13-2918-0
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1007/978-981-13-2919-7