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Browsing Academic Articles in Lahore School of Economics Journals by Title

Browsing Academic Articles in Lahore School of Economics Journals by Title

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  • Mohammed Duliem Al-Qahtany (© Lahore School of Economics, 2000-06)
    This study explores the obstacles facing Saudi exporters of non-oil products. The sampling frame comprised 411 firms, which have been involved in exporting for at least two years as identified by the Saudi Export Development ...
  • ASAD ZAMAN (© Lahore School of Economics, 2008-09)
    How do we arrest the decline of the social sciences in Pakistan? Is it a matter of money or one of sending more students to the West who might then return to teaching at the local universities? In this article I argue ...
  • Adnan Haider; Asad Jan; Kalim Hyder (© Lahore School of Economics, 2013-12)
    This study attempts to identify a stable money demand function for Pakistan’s economy, where the monetary aggregate is considered the nominal anchor. With evolving financial innovations and regulations, the stability of ...
  • M. Haider Hussain (© Lahore Schoool of Economics, 2004-12)
    This paper applies the technique of Granger Causality to determine the relationship between total government expenditures and total tax revenue using annual revised estimates. The analysis discovers a firm unidirectional effect ...
  • Onur Arugaslan; Louise Miller (© The Lahore School of Economics, 2006-12)
    Consistent with asymmetric information arguments, prior research has shown that the financial market typically responds negatively to the announcement of a seasoned equity offering (SEO). Korajczyk and Levy (2003), however, ...
  • Haroon Jamal (© Lahore School of Economics, 2002-12)
    The fad that different studies seeking to measure poverty in a given country often give differing results, although they apparently use the same method and same data source, has long disconcerted both experts in the ...
  • Hassan Naqvi (© Lahore School of Economics, 2000-06)
    One of the most important developments of modern finance is the Capital Asset Pricing Model (CAPM) of Sharpe, Lintner and Mossin. Although the model has been the subject of several academic papers, it is still exposed ...
  • Abdul Jalil Khan; Parvez Azim (© Lahore School of Economics, 2012-06)
    This study aims to capture volatility patterns using GARCH (1,1) models. It evaluates these models to obtain one-step-ahead forecastabilities by employing four major forecasting evaluation criteria, and compares two ...
  • Umer Khalid (© Lahore Schoool of Economics, 2003-06)
    The study analyses the degree of integration of Pakistan’s economy in global trade and financial flows. Pakistan’s integration into the global economy gained momentum in the late 1980s and early 1990s when it adopted more ...
  • Naved Hamid; Sarah Hayat (© Lahore School of Economics, 2012-09)
    While Pakistani trade with India could give a boost to Pakistan’s economy, there are other neighbors with whom trade could be equally important. We look at this aspect of regional trade and show that promoting trade with ...
  • Theresa Thompson Chaudhry; Mahvish Faran (© Lahore School of Economics, 2015)
    The electrical fan sector in Pakistan has existed since at least the country’s independence and produced for the domestic market for most of its history, although the sector has had strong export growth in the last 15 ...
  • Arshad Zaheer; Kashif ur Rehman; Abrar Ahmad (© The Lahore School of Economics, 2006-12)
    This paper is an ethnographic study defining and assessing the organizational culture exhibited by Small and Medium Enterprises (SMEs). It primarily focuses on four cultural categories: clan, adhocracy, hierarchy and ...
  • ZAHID SHARIFF (© Lahore School of Economics, 2009-12)
    The assumptions and practices associated with Orientalism were essential elements in the domination of colonial and post-colonial societies. Despite the long history of struggles against such oppression, no one else provided ...
  • Rashid Amjad (© Lahore School of Economics, 2016-09)
  • Matthew McCartney (© The Lahore School of Economics, 2011-09)
    Compared to the historical and even contemporary experience of India, Pakistan has long been regarded as a “dependent” economy. Gross domestic product growth in Pakistan is typically argued to be contingent on external ...
  • Naved Hamid; Maha Khan (© Lahore School of Economics, 2015)
    While “deindustrialization” is now considered normal for developed countries, recent trends show that many developing countries have seen their share of manufacturing employment peak at far earlier levels of income than ...
  • Shahid Amjad Chaudhry (© The Lahore School of Economics, 2010-09)
    This paper looks at the Indus Basin Water Strategy for Pakistan. It begins with a historical overview of the Indus Basin Irrigation System (IBIS), the Indus Basin Replacement Works (1960-1980) and the Indus Basin Salinity ...
  • Moazam Mahmood; Shamyla Chaudry (© Lahore School of Economics, Volume 25;No.2, 2020)
    Neoclassical price theory, and its extension to IMF country advice, argues that balance-of-payments crises such as Pakistan’s are better resolved by depreciating the exchange rate, making exports cheaper and imports dearer. ...
  • Nasir Iqbal; Ejaz Ghani; Musleh ud Din (© The Lahore School of Economics, 2014-09)
    With growing global and regional economic integration, Pakistan, too, is actively seeking to enhance regional economic cooperation; it has entered into various regional and bilateral trade agreements that encompass trade ...
  • Tariq Husain (© The Lahore School of Economics, 2010-09)
    This paper analyzes Pakistan’s energy sector issues and highlights (i) the importance of the link between energy and the environment, and (ii) the central importance of energy efficiency for high return demand-side solutions ...

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