Pakistan Development Review, Volume 16Pakistan Institute of Development Economics, 1977 - Pakistan |
From inside the book
Results 1-3 of 6
Page 17
... manufacturing and 27 % of its employment . The value of the installed textile machinery complex is around 15 % of ... manufacture of edible oils . However , our model does not cover its production as the basic exogenous variable of our ...
... manufacturing and 27 % of its employment . The value of the installed textile machinery complex is around 15 % of ... manufacture of edible oils . However , our model does not cover its production as the basic exogenous variable of our ...
Page 223
... manufacturing and non - durable consumer goods . Chapter 5 deals with various quantitative measurements of import substitution in each sector for the post war period , and concludes that there has been a continuous ISI in light as well ...
... manufacturing and non - durable consumer goods . Chapter 5 deals with various quantitative measurements of import substitution in each sector for the post war period , and concludes that there has been a continuous ISI in light as well ...
Page 347
... manufacturing , such as the ship - building and machinery industries . This was necessary if the coun- try was to take full advantage of the changing comparative costs which were becoming apparent in her foreign trade . Chapter 2 ...
... manufacturing , such as the ship - building and machinery industries . This was necessary if the coun- try was to take full advantage of the changing comparative costs which were becoming apparent in her foreign trade . Chapter 2 ...
Contents
Table3 Continued | 14 |
A Simple Optimisation Model for Cotton Processing Activities | 17 |
ON ON 02 | 21 |
16 other sections not shown
Other editions - View all
Common terms and phrases
adjusted age of marriage age of wife agricultural assumption average Bangladesh capital cloth coarse yarn coefficients constraints consumption contraception in Pakistan cost couples crops demand for contraception developing countries Deviation domestic Economic Development Economy of Pakistan educational level effective exchange rate employment estimates expenditure explanatory variable export factors family planning farm farmers favour fertility foreign inflow gross domestic product growth rate high parity illiterate Impact Survey import substitution important income groups increase industry Institute of Development intake investment Islamabad Karachi level of urbanization living children Mohammad Afzal number of children number of living objective functions opportunity cost output P₁ Pakistan Development Review Pakistan Institute percent period PIDE population growth poverty line primary education problem production programme Punjab ratio Rawalpindi regression rupees rural solutions spindles Statistical Table target tion trade vital rates Y₁ yarn