Chapter 1. Globalization of Indian Industries: How to move forward?.- Chapter 2. Infrastructure, ICT and Firms’ Productivity and Efficiency: An Application to the Indian Manufacturing.- Chapter 3. R&D spillovers across the supply chain: Evidence from the Indian automobile industry.- Chapter 4. Direction of Outward FDI of Indian Manufacturing Firms: Influence of Technology and Firm Productivity.- Chapter 5. Productivity heterogeneity and export market participation: A study of Indian.- Chapter 6. Exports and Participation in CDM in Technology Intensive Industries in India.- Chapter 7. Role of Technological and Knowledge Resources in a Firm’s Decision to Export: The Case of Inward Oriented Indian Industries.- Chapter 8. FDI, Technological choices and Spillovers in Indian Manufacturing Industries.- Chapter 9. Does Feed-in-tariff explain foreign investment in Wind energy sector in India?.
Filip De Beule is professor of
international business at the Faculty of Economics and Business, KU Leuven
University, Antwerpen, Belgium. He is
board member of the European International Business Academy (EIBA) where he
serves as national representative for Belgium. He is also academic secretary
for the Western European Chapter of the Academy of International Business
(AIB). Filip De Beule focuses his research on internationalization, innovation,
multinational companies and emerging economies. He is senior fellow at the Leuven
Centre for Global Governance Studies and research fellow at the LICOS Centre
for Institutions and Economic Performance, KU Leuven University. His research
has been published in the Journal of International Management, European
Management Journal, Transnational Corporations Journal and International
Business Review among others.
K. Narayanan obtained
his PhD in Economics from the Delhi School of Economics, University of Delhi,
India, and carried out Post-doctoral research at Institute of Advanced Studies
United Nations University, Tokyo, Japan during 2000-01. For the research
studies in India, he was a recipient of the ICSSR fellowship at the Institute
of Economic Growth. His research interests span the areas of industrial
economics, international business, Socio-economic empowerment through ICT,
Environmental Economics, Economic impacts of Climate Change and Development
Economics. He has a number of publications in the field of industrial
competitiveness, technology transfer, ICT, international trade and
socio-economic impacts of Climate Change. The research journals in which he has
published include Research Policy, Journal of Regional Studies, Technovation,
Oxford Development Studies, International Journal of Energy Economics and
Policy, and Economic and Political Weekly. Two of his recent publications
includes edited books on (i) Indian and Chinese Enterprises: Global Trade,
Technology, and Investment Regimes, and (ii) Human Capital and Development: The
Indian Experience [both of them were jointly edited with N.S. Siddharthan]
published by Routledge & Springer, respectively. He also guest edited a
Special Issue of the IASSI Quarterly on the theme “Human Capital and
Development”, a Special Issue of the Sage published international journal, Science,
Technology and Society on the theme “Agglomeration, technology clusters and
networks”. He is actively engaged in a web based research group, Forum for
Global Knowledge Sharing, which interfaces Scientists, Technologists and
Economists. Dr. Narayanan is currently Institute Chair Professor at the
Department of Humanities and Social Sciences, Indian Institute of Technology
Bombay, Mumbai, India.
This book focuses on Indian
manufacturing industries and analyses the impact of inward foreign direct
investment on the domestic sector on the one hand, and exports and outward
foreign direct investment by Indian companies on the other. Although the
emphasis is mostly general, specific industries, such as the automotive
industry or the wind energy sector are also explored. The differences between low
and high technology industries are also addressed.
In terms of theoretical setting
and analysis, the book draws both from international business and industrial organization
literature. The various characteristics of Indian industries, such as the
determinants and impacts of R&D, the effects of spillovers, the drivers of
productivity and technical efficiency are thoroughly researched employing
appropriate quantitative methodologies that are relevant to the specific domain
and topic under investigation. The book also focuses on the bearing of
policy on promoting manufacturing industries in India and is therefore of
interest to researchers, industrialists and policy makers alike.