prabha01

WordPress.com site

Liability Structure of Indian Commercial Banks

The Indian banking industry has undergone a paradigm shift after the commencement of liberalization in 1991. The impact of deregulation, technological improvements, and accessibility of banks to capital market for raising funds led to a revolutionary transition in corporate financing policies. Such changing circumstances have created a need for investigating the capital structure of Indian commercial banks.

This book focuses on the liability structure of Indian commercial banks and presents the empirical work undertaken by the author during her doctoral study. The book is a blend of comprehensive coverage and detailed analysis, which would help students and researchers acquire factual and analytical knowledge on the key factors influencing liability structure across banks.

This book is intended for students pursuing postgraduate studies in management, banking and finance, economics and commerce. The book would also be useful to the researchers, academicians and banking professionals, who are inclined towards having a better understanding of the variations in the influence of various factors across the different liability categories of banks.

Annotations About the Book

  • Comprehensive overview of Indian Banking Sector
  • Analytical discussion on determinants
  • Decompositional Analysis of Liability Cate

Liability, Structure, Indian Commercial Banks, Economics Commerce, Management, Scenario, Decompositional , Ownership Groups, Literature

February 21, 2011 Posted by | Commerce | , , , , , , , , | 1 Comment

Buddhist Psychology

Mind is a problematic concept; sundry attempts have already been made from different view points to clear up the problem. However, in this book an endeavour has been made to deal with the problem from Buddhist point of view. An attempt has been made not only to show how Mind functions, rather the task is undertaken to reveal what Mind is. Of course, Mind is not a material object, it is a stream of consciousness, a flow of thought and the body which rooms it is, according to Buddha, an aggregate of four great elements.

Buddhist, Psychology, Realm of Mind, Structure,

Buddhist-Psychology

February 19, 2011 Posted by | Social Sciences | , , , | Leave a comment