Wired Together


Book Description

This study investigates the efficiency dynamics of spot and futures electricity markets across a sample of European countries, while taking into account the impact of market couplings. The analysis employs three distinct efficiency measures, namely entropy, Hurst measure, and fractal dimension, to examine the markets of ten different countries. Specifically, entropy is used to gauge the randomness in market prices, while Hurst measure captures the long-term memory of prices, and fractal dimension measures the roughness and irregularity of price series. Our results indicate that these markets display analogous patterns of behavior, with improvements in efficiency observed subsequent to the introduction of structural and regulatory changes, such as market couplings. These findings underscore the potential advantages of market liberalization and energy market integration for both consumers and industry players, thus offering important insights for policy makers in this area.




Farm Size and Marketing Efficiency


Book Description

Study with reference to Kaithal and Sirsa Districs of the state of Haryana, India.




Total Factor Productividty Growth in Agriculture


Book Description

In this chapter we compute measures of total factor productivity (TFP) growth for developing countries and then contrast TFP growth with technological capital indexes. In developing these indexes, we incorporate schooling capital to yield two new indexes: Invention-Innovation Capital and Technology Mastery. We find that TFP performance is strongly related to technological capital and that technological capital is required for TFP and cost reduction growth. Investments in technological capital require long-term (20- to 40-year) investments, which are typically made by governments and aid agencies and are the only viable escape route from mass poverty.




Commodity Price Dynamics


Book Description

Commodities have become an important component of many investors' portfolios and the focus of much political controversy over the past decade. This book utilizes structural models to provide a better understanding of how commodities' prices behave and what drives them. It exploits differences across commodities and examines a variety of predictions of the models to identify where they work and where they fail. The findings of the analysis are useful to scholars, traders and policy makers who want to better understand often puzzling - and extreme - movements in the prices of commodities from aluminium to oil to soybeans to zinc.




Stock Market Integration


Book Description

India has much less exposure in the stock market integration literature until recently. Given India's fast-growing economic influence, research on the Indian stock market still seems to be inadequate and needs further investigation. The present study extends the existing stock market integration literature in the following ways. First, to provide further evidence, we examine the dynamic price linkages and interdependence between the stock market of India and that of the U.S., U.K., Japan, Singapore, Honk Kong, Malaysia, South Korea, Taiwan, and China using daily stock price indices data covering the period January 2, 2001 to November 28, 2008. Second, this research examines examine the long-term and short-term dynamic relationship among the stock prices using Johansen-Juselius cointegration, vector error correction model and Granger causality test. Additionally, the innovation accounting analysis is conducted to further investigate the interactions between the Indian markets and others world markets. And lastly, the results from this research provide implications regarding international diversification and market efficiency that are important for investors and fund managers who are interested in investing in these markets. From the study, we can conclude that, Indian market is having a cointegrating relationship with US financial market. But relationship with other financial markets is not well established.




Global Capital Markets


Book Description

This book is an economic survey of international capital mobility from the late nineteenth century to the present.




The Economics of Commodity Markets


Book Description

As commodity markets have continued their expansion an extensive and complex financial industry has developed to service them. This industry includes hundreds of participating firms, including asset managers, brokers, consultants, verification agencies and a myriad of other institutions. Universities and other training institutions have responded to this rapid expansion of commodity markets as well as their substantial future growth potential by launching specialized courses on the subject. The Economics of Commodity Markets attempts to bridge the gap between academics and working professionals by way of a textbook that is both theoretically informative and practical. Based in part on the authors’ teaching experience of commodity finance at the University Paris Dauphine, the book covers all important commodity markets topics and includes coverage of recent topics such as financial applications and intuitive economic reasoning. The book is composed of three parts that cover: commodity market dynamics, commodities and the business cycle, and commodities and fundamental value. The key original approach to the subject matter lies in a shift away from the descriptive to the econometric analysis of commodity markets. Information on market trends of commodities is presented in the first part, with a strong emphasis on the quantitative treatment of that information in the remaining two parts of the book. Readers are provided with a clear and succinct exposition of up-to-date financial economic and econometric methods as these apply to commodity markets. In addition a number of useful empirical applications are introduced and discussed. This book is a self-contained offering, discussing all key methods and insights without descending into superfluous technicalities. All explanations are structured in an accessible manner, permitting any reader with a basic understanding of mathematics and finance to work their way through all parts of the book without having to resort to external sources.




Market Integration in Mozambican Maize Markets


Book Description

Maize is the staple food and principal cash crop in Mozambique. Production is dominated by small-holders who sell their surpluses to generate income. Southern Mozambique is a maize deficit region while the North is in surplus, therefore trade between these two areas has implications for food security in the country and is expected to accelerate economic development. This study attempts to measure the extent of market integration between major maize markets in Mozambique. }The study is organised into six chapters. Chapter One presents findings of the investigation into the dynamics and operation of informal maize markets in Mozambique. Chapter Two presents a brief overview of the methods used in the analysis of market integration and gives a review of international studies and studies specific to Mozambique on market integration. Chapter Three reviews agricultural policies in Mozambique and provides an overview of the maize markets in Mozambique. The methodology applied in the study in discussed in Chapter Four while Chapter Five presents a discussion of results from the econometric analysis. In conclusion, Chapter six provides a summary of the results of the market survey and on the basis of the econometric analysis forwards recommendations.