Showing 3 results for Sahab Khodamoradi
Volume 17, Issue 3 (Autumn 2017 2017)
Abstract
Inefficiency and injustice of subsidy system in Iran over the years induced the government to implement targeted subsidy law since 2010. As a result, the share of poor households receiving government subsidies decreased. Utilizing the micro-data of Households’ Income and Expenditure Surveys (HIES) from 2005 to 2014 and applying seemingly unrelated regression(SUR) technique through feasible generalized least squares (FGLS) method, this study examines the effect of targeting subsidies on households’ consumption combination. The results show that the shares of necessary goods in households’ expenditure have increased. According to Engle theory, these indicate reductions in households’ welfare. In addition, the “subsidy” dummy variable has the most effect on food expenditure share among different goods groups. One reason for the welfare reduction is higher increase in relative prices compared to increase in income due to subsidy. Since, the permanent income is of the highest effect on allocation of households’ budget among different goods groups; therefore, policy makers should focus on increase in the households’ real permanent income instead of inflationary policies, which increase nominal cash subsidies.
Volume 20, Issue 3 (Autumn 2020 2020)
Abstract
This study aims to measure magnitude of capital flight from Iran by employing Ndikumana and Boyce (2003) method during the period 1976-2018. In order to check the existence of long-run relationship between capital flight and its determinants, it applies the Bounds Testing Approach developed by Pesaran et al (2001) within a general-to-specific econometrics methodology. Then, it applies the Autoregressive Distributed Lags approach to estimate the short run and long run behavior of capital flight from Iran. The results show that capital flight has high records during the first years of the Islamic revolution and the eight-year war between Iraq and Iran, so that the highest capital flight (141.1 billion dollars) has been estimated for 1979-1980 fiscal year. In addition, the findings indicate that the highest and lowest capital flights have been estimated in 2011 and 1997, respectively. In recent years, capital flight has been increasing due to sharp exchange rate fluctuations. Moreover, increases in inflation and the government fiscal deficit significantly contribute to capital flight and the increase in net foreign exchange reserves reduces the capital flight.
Mortaza Sahab Khodamoradi, Farshad Momeni, Alireza Naseri,
Volume 22, Issue 3 (7-2015)
Abstract
In this study, we have tried to identify two different approaches for dealing with social problems and issues. The first one is causal explanation, which is retrospective, static and physical. The other one, functional analysis, is prospective, dynamic, and normative. Institutions are the main subject of economics. Human social-institutional reality has a common underlying structure and these structures are matters of status functions. We proposed a method which aims at efficacy of these functions using intelligence rather than assuming these functions as intrinsic and trying to grasp the realty from without by a rationality apparatus. The aim of this article is to show that, Dewey’s Logic provides us with this alternative functionalistic approach in a comprehensive way.