Zobrazeno 1 - 10
of 15
pro vyhledávání: '"Sarthi Acharya"'
Autor:
Sarthi Acharya
Publikováno v:
The Indian Journal of Labour Economics. 66:1-5
Autor:
Sarthi Acharya
Publikováno v:
The Indian Journal of Labour Economics. 63:561-564
Autor:
Sarthi Acharya
Publikováno v:
The Indian Journal of Labour Economics. 63:195-198
Autor:
Sarthi Acharya
Publikováno v:
The Indian Journal of Labour Economics. 60:347-370
This paper examines whether the earnings of workers engaged at the lowest rungs in the labour market have risen in the recent years. It first constructs a wage series of agricultural workers pertaining to the period 1973-2015 for 16 major states to a
Autor:
Sarthi Acharya
Publikováno v:
The Indian Journal of Labour Economics. 60:303-308
Autor:
Santosh Mehrotra, Sarthi Acharya
Publikováno v:
Theoretical Economics Letters. :1607-1631
The Human Development paradigm states that for workers to create value and enjoy the fruits of their labour, they have to be adequately accomplished through better education, skills, adequate nutrition and health, among other factors. It makes a case
Autor:
Sarthi Acharya
Publikováno v:
Indian Journal of Human Development. 12:301-303
Himanshu, India Inequality Report 2018: Widening Gaps. New Delhi: Oxfam India, 2018, 82 pp. Available at https://www.oxfamindia.org/sites/default/files/WideningGaps_IndiaInequalityReport2018.pdf
Autor:
Sarthi Acharya
Publikováno v:
The Indian Journal of Labour Economics. 58:695-697
Autor:
Sarthi Acharya
Publikováno v:
Policy and Society. 23:78-100
This paper attempts to trace the economic performance in India, first through periods of heavy labour regulation and thereafter, through periods of deregulation. Heavy regulation was accompanied by low economic growth rates while relatively free labo
Autor:
Sarthi Acharya, Gustav F. Papanek
Publikováno v:
Development Policy Review. 13:23-40
There is an extensive literature on the relationship between rates of economic growth and the incomes of the poor.' Many of these studies have questioned whether the poor benefit from rising agricultural output (see Griffin and Chose, 1979; Saith, 19