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Monday 19 August 2013

AIMA assignments 2013 : Contact us for answers at contact@assignmentsolution.co.in

    IB08
    Economics for International Managers

    Assignment - I
    Assignment Code: 2013IB08B1              Last Date of Submission: 15th October 2013
              Maximum Marks: 100
Attempt all the questions. All the questions are compulsory and carry equal marks.

    Section-A

1.    Over the past decade, the demand for CDs has dramatically increased. What are some of the causes of this increase in demand?  According to supply-and-demand theory, price should rise when demand increases.  However, in recent years the average price of a CD has actually fallen.  Explain this apparent contradiction between the theory and fact.

2.    Explain the difference between short run and long run production function.  Cite one example of this difference in business situation.

3.    Explain key difference between perfect competition and monopolistic competition.

4.    “The best forecasting method is the one that give the highest proportion of correct predictions” Comment.  Enumerate the methods of qualitative and quantitative forecasting.  What are the major differences between the two?


Section-B
Case Study

According to a study, the price elasticity of shoes in the United States is 0.7, and the income elasticity is
0.9.

(a)    Would you suggest that the Brown Shoe Company cut its prices to increase its revenue?
(b)    What would be expected to happen to the total quantity of shoed sold in the Unites States if income rises by 10 percent?
(10+10)

   


    IB08
    Economics for International Managers

    Assignment - II
Assignment Code: 2013IB08B2                Last Date of Submission: 15th November 2013
                Maximum Marks: 100
Attempt all the questions. All the questions are compulsory and carry equal marks.
Section-A

1.    What are the advantages and disadvantages of export promotion and import substitution Industrialization?

2.     Write short notes on :
a.    European Monetary System
b.    Fixed and Free Float Exchange rate
3.     What are the major reasons of international trade among countries. What are the basic     documents necessary to conduct a typical foreign trade?

4.      “Regional Economic Integration is a blessing or burden”.  Explain

Section-B
Case Study: Household Investments in Gold are irrational

Gold is fantastic. Gold is a problem. Depending on who you are, you will choose one of these statements. For Indian households gold has emerged as the investment destination of choice. After declining over the first half of calendar year 2012, third quarter data shows an uptick in demand despite high prices and a higher customs duty. Not only is gold demand up, but that for coins and bars is growing faster than that for jewellery. Coins and bars demand grew 12% over the third quarter of 2012 over 2011 (for calendar year), while that of jewellery grew 7%. Coins, bars and exchang-traded funds are investment vehicles while jewellery is more of a traditional store of wealth for women.

Since India does not have enough gold we import it. Tonnes of it. About 700-800 tonnes are imported each year. Dollars are paid out and 2011-12 saw $62 billion or 3% of the gross domestic product (GDP) flow out of the country to purchase gold. This outflow of hard currency makes our balance of payments a mess. Payments for gold explain a large part of the current account deficit (the shortfall between imports and exports of goods, services, transfers and investment flows) of 4.2% of the GDP. Recent press statements by the Reserve Bank of India and the ministry of finance suggest that the government will announce a gold-linked deposit scheme soon to allow investors the benefits of holding gold without actually buying the metal, potentially reducing pressure on the balance of payments. Opinion pieces and reports on this gold rush of households are condescending in parts—the financially illiterate household knows no better and buys gold. But I don’t think the Indian household is making an irrational choice given the situation that the average household finds itself in. For the un-banked anyway gold has been the only way to accumulate money, but I refer to the switch that household savings have made towards gold and real estate.

A cash-fuelled run-away real estate market (it seems the Delhi real estate market rose 25% after the Commonwealth Games to soak all the cash the over-invoiced bills threw off) has priced real estate so high that the average household sees a large part of the disposable income get eaten up by the monthly mortgage payment. Food and other living cost inflation (caused by supply side blocks that the government has chosen not to address) has seen spending more than double over the last few years reducing the surplus left for discretionary spending and for savings. If the supply side of savings has shrunk, the behaviour of banks and financial product manufacturers and sellers has caused a breakdown of trust causing households to switch their investment vehicles. For example, over Rs.1 trillion have been lost by retail investors in just life insurance products due to sharp sales practices and trap-like products. Grumpy stock markets have added to the retail disenchantment with financial market-linked products while gold returns have been good. Investment in the metal, either buying it directly or through exchange-traded funds (ETFs) has seen Rs.1 lakh grow to Rs.3 lakh over the last five years. Over the same period, the Sensex has turned that Rs.1 lakh into Rs.94,000. If this was not reason enough, add the overall atmosphere of uncertainty about the future of India and the rush towards gold is explained. Household money has run towards safety. And therefore to gold. To blame the household for causing a balance of payment crisis is uneducated.

End note
The political and governance dysfunction has dented the India story very badly. A year back a senior financial sector regulator in the US spoke to me on condition of anonymity and said that the India story was suddenly over in high finance. “There is just silence about India,” she said. The buzz was over and India will have to re-sell the story. If there is a story left. What a pity, she said, to lose momentum mid-way. Speaking to the managing director of a large private equity firm earlier this week in New Delhi, her words looked prophetic. He was speaking of having to sell the India story all over again to investors overseas—and the story is a bit of a stretch given the political hubris and governance deficit. Worse, he said, not only is the money slow in coming now, the avenues of investment are also slowly shrinking. Sector by sector they are cutting off investment destinations. Not just the household, the smart money is sitting silent as well. Maybe we’ll see the private-equity firms turn to gold.

Source: Article form Live Mint published: Wed, May 29,2013

Questions:

1.    How has increase in Gold demand worsened the problem for balance of payment?          (10)

2.    What are the measures to correct the imbalances in Balance of Payments position?         (10)

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