Journal of Growth, Development and Poverty

 

Aims and Objectives

 

There are many questions that bother people in developing economies. How to provide basic needs for majority of population living below the poverty line? How can poverty be alleviated in a shortest span of time? What sort of policies can guarantee education and health for all? What sort of policies can create gainful employment? How can these economies solve gender biases in economic opportunities particularly in relation to access to education and jobs? How can they resolve conflicts and maintain cooperation required for peaceful structural transformation of their economies? How can they learn from the experience of advanced economies in the West and in the East? How can they learn from emerging giants such as China and India? What are the roles of households, firms and government in process of rapid economic growth? How can they choose optimal trade and tax policies? How can they develop natural recourses such as hydro-electricity and massive manpower? How can developing economies raise regional and international cooperation?  What are the problems of running efficient business organisations or making national and local government more efficient? How can private corporations adopt better production techniques? How can they train their work for to raise productivity? What sorts of financial sector policies are helpful in assuring the efficient mobilisation of resources? How should these economies resolve mergers and acquisition, union-firm bargaining, marketing issues?  What are strategic choices of these economies in a competitive global economy?  How can they gain efficiency from privatisation? What sort of model can explain the process of national development clearly? How can they develop skills for negotiations and settlements, incentives and mechanism on important issues? What kind of models explain dynamics of consumption, saving, investment or rural credits in these economies? What sorts of models can be used for settlement of disputes relating to political economy? What sort models can be used to explain links between nations, states, regions, or across countries?   It is hoped that this journal will publish papers that aim to answer these important questions from institutions and intellectuals who have worked in these issues for many years.

Applied and theoretical papers are invited for an international audience on growth, development and poverty alleviation. Modelling of technological advancement, process of human and physical capital formation, development of clean energy and environment, transport and telecommunication networks, direct foreign investment and policy reforms for rapid growth with redistribution and social justice that can bring sustainable growth with democratic and market oriented policies in developing countries like Nepal will be more appreciated.

This is a refereed journal. Every article will be reviewed by the editor, members of the editorial board or by another suitable authority. First issue is targeted for publication in 2008 from the Serials Publications, New Delhi; serials@bol.net.in. Papers should contain new and original idea and be written between 3000 to 5000 words. Type it in double space with systematic numbering of tables and figures.

Editor: Dr. Keshab Bhattarai, Business School, University of Hull
K.R.Bhattarai@hull.ac.uk

 

Editorial Board ( Thank you for your consents; yet to be reorganised)

Ahsan [ahsan722001@yahoo.com]

Ahmed Khalid [akhalid@bond.edu.au]

Alexandru Minea [alexandru.minea@univ-orleans.fr]

aruna chandramouli [arunacm03@yahoo.co.in]

arup@iegindia.org [arup@iegindia.org]

Chan Tze Haw [thchan@mmu.edu.my]

Celso Nunes [clpnunes@uma.pt]

kiqbal@myuw.net [kiqbal@myuw.net]

Katsufumi Fukuda [katsufumi.fukuda@gmail.com]

kjjoseph [kjjoseph@cds.ac.in]

kk@asci.org.in [kk@asci.org.in]

Parmeter, Christopher [parms@vt.edu]

Rahman, Muhammad S [murahman@indiana.edu]

mnm [mnm@iegindia.org]

Raghbendra

 Jha [r.jha@anu.edu.au]

Ryan A Compton [compton@cc.umanitoba.ca]

Ravshanbek Dalimov [rdalimov@list.ru]

selvam jesiah [sjesiah@yahoo.com]

Sandeep Kapur [s.kapur@ems.bbk.ac.uk]

Tochkov, Kiril [K.Tochkov@tcu.edu]

Vadiraj VRPanchamukhi [iejpanch@yahoo.co.in]

som3@vsnl.com [som3@vsnl.com]

wangyong@uchicago.edu [wangyong@uchicago.edu]

Instructions to Authors for submission to the
Journal of Growth, Development and Poverty (JGDP)

Submission: The contents of the papers shall be the sole responsibility of the authors and publication shall not imply the concurrence of editors or publishers.

The manuscript: Manuscripts must be typed with a double spacing throughout, on one side of A4 paper only, with a 4cm left-hand margin. The text and references should be checked thoroughly for errors before submission. It is the responsibility of the author to ensure that the typescript is correct in style, syntax and spelling (Oxford English Dictionary). Papers should normally be divided into headed sections.

Title page: The first page of the typescript must contain: the full title; the affiliation and full address of all author(s); a running title of not more than 75 letters and spaces; an abstract of not more than 200 words; the name, full postal address and email of the author who will be responsible for correspondence and correcting of proofs.

Abbreviations: Any word or words to be abbreviated should be written in full when first mentioned followed by the abbreviation in parentheses.

Illustrations: All illustrations of any kind should be submitted as sequentially numbered figures. Illustrations should not be inserted in the manuscript but supplied either after the main body of text or uploaded as separate files.

Tables: Tables should be numbered and headed with short titles. As with illustrations, they should not be inserted in the manuscript but supplied either after the main body of text or uploaded as separate files.

Acknowledgements: Acknowledgements should appear at the end of the text.

References: The Harvard system is used. When quoted in the text style is:…Smith (1972)…or (Brown and Jones, 1972) or …Smith et al. (1972a). References are listed alphabetically after the text. Journal and book titles should be written out in full. Examples are:
Brigham, E. F. (1965) The determinants of residential land values, Land Economics,
41, 325-e34.
Phelps-Brown, H. (1981) Labour market policy, in Changing Perceptions of Economic Policy (Ed.) F. Cairncross, Methuen, London, pp. 68-113.e

Footnotes: These should be numbered consecutively in the text and gathered at the bottom of each corresponding page.

Proofs: Proofs will be sent electronically to the 'corresponding' author for correction. These must be corrected and returned within 48 hours otherwise publication may be delayed. Alterations to proofs other than corrections of printer's errors may be charged to the authors.

Copyright: Submission of a paper to JGDP will be taken to imply that it presents original unpublished work, not under consideration elsewhere.