Pakistan Development Review, Volume 14Pakistan Institute of Development Economics, 1975 - Pakistan |
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Page 124
to believe that these data tend to over - report yarn consumption but under- report cloth production . Therefore , we provide a second set of data on yarn consumption and production by the mill sector that are arrived at indirectly . We ...
to believe that these data tend to over - report yarn consumption but under- report cloth production . Therefore , we provide a second set of data on yarn consumption and production by the mill sector that are arrived at indirectly . We ...
Page 239
... consumption of cotton cloth for the undivided Pakistan for the period 1959-60 to 1967-68 and he observed a marked downward trend in the per capita consumption of cloth over this period , which had no logical explanation in terms of ...
... consumption of cotton cloth for the undivided Pakistan for the period 1959-60 to 1967-68 and he observed a marked downward trend in the per capita consumption of cloth over this period , which had no logical explanation in terms of ...
Page 242
... consumption . When per capita cloth consumption ( in logged form ) is simply regressed against time , as in equation 5 , significant results are obtained . Log Qd 3.03 - 0.03 T ( -3.06 ) R2 0.46 F 9.34 D.W. -1.89 The negative sign of ...
... consumption . When per capita cloth consumption ( in logged form ) is simply regressed against time , as in equation 5 , significant results are obtained . Log Qd 3.03 - 0.03 T ( -3.06 ) R2 0.46 F 9.34 D.W. -1.89 The negative sign of ...
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age distribution age groups agricultural analysis Appendix Table ASFR average Bahawalnagar calories capital changes coefficients cohort constant prices consumption contraception conversion factor cost cotton crops currently married demand for money demographic devaluation developing countries Development Economics differentials districts domestic effect employment estimates expected expenditure exports family planning Farms female fertility desires firms foreign growth rate Gujranwala Impact Survey imports income increase industries inputs Institute of Development investment Islamabad Jhang Karachi Khan Lahore life-time migrants living children marriage MNCs Mohammad Afzal Multan Muzaffargarh number of living Nuptiality Tables other-employed output Pakistan Development Review Pakistan Institute pattern percent Percentage Reporting period Peshawar problem production programme Punjab purdah Quetta Rahimyar Khan ratio Rawalpindi relationship relative rural areas rural wives Sahiwal sample Sargodha Sheikhupura Sialkot significant social Statistical Sukkur tion Total trade urban areas value added variables wage West Pakistan yarn