Theses and Dissertations from UMD

Permanent URI for this communityhttp://hdl.handle.net/1903/2

New submissions to the thesis/dissertation collections are added automatically as they are received from the Graduate School. Currently, the Graduate School deposits all theses and dissertations from a given semester after the official graduation date. This means that there may be up to a 4 month delay in the appearance of a give thesis/dissertation in DRUM

More information is available at Theses and Dissertations at University of Maryland Libraries.

Browse

Search Results

Now showing 1 - 2 of 2
  • Item
    Essays on Institutions, Governance and Economic Growth
    (2024) Batra, Kartikeya; Galiani, Sebastian; Economics; Digital Repository at the University of Maryland; University of Maryland (College Park, Md.)
    Economic development and growth are impacted by several factors. Among these, existing social institutions, and quality of governance are important determinants. These factors become especially relevant in the context of low and middle-income countries. Such nations are home to a large share of the world’s population, and aspire to grow their economies at high rates. Understanding constraints to their socio-economic development and prescribing policy solutions is, therefore, an important area of research. In the three chapters of this dissertation, I explore three different issues that impact social institutions and governance, which, in turn, impact socio-economic development. I do so in the context of India, which is home to approximately 20% of the world’s total population. In the first chapter, I explore whether historical land policies impact long-run socio-economic outcomes, including the persistent institution of the caste system and stereotypes associated with it. I find that lower land concentration does lead to improved socio-economic outcomes, especially for the socially marginalized landless communities. In the second chapter, I test whether enhanced state capacity by means of better public infrastructure improves the performance ofbureaucrats in rural India. I find that better roads lead to better bureaucratic performance, possibly due to improved monitoring by higher officials whose mobility is positively impacted. Finally, in the third chapter, I examine whether the size of a political party impacts its decisions to field wealthy candidates. I find that a smaller political party is likely to field a wealthier candidate than a bigger political party, possibly due to fewer avenues to mobilize resources. This is important, for the wealth profile of a candidate, in turn, has the potential to impact governance outcomes in their area. The three chapters are aimed at understanding causal relationships pertaining to important questions in the context of India’s society, political economy and economic development. My results provide novel contributions to relevant strands literature, and also allow me to provide relevant policy prescriptions.
  • Thumbnail Image
    Item
    UNDERSTANDING CONSUMERS' ONLINE INFORMATION RETRIEVAL AND SEARCH: IMPLICATIONS FOR FIRM STRATEGIES
    (2010) Ramachandran, Vandana; Viswanathan, Siva; Lucas, Hank; Business and Management: Decision & Information Technologies; Digital Repository at the University of Maryland; University of Maryland (College Park, Md.)
    The growth of the Internet and other digitization technologies has enabled the unbundling of the physical and information components of the value chain and has led to an explosion of information made available to consumers. Understanding the implications of this new informational landscape for theory and practice is one of the key objectives of my research. My dissertation seeks to understand how firms can use their knowledge of online consumer search and information seeking behaviors to design optimal information provision strategies. The main premise is that consumers' online search behaviors are key to understanding consumers' underlying information needs and preferences. In my first essay I specifically focus on big-ticket, high-involvement goods for which firms essentially have sparse information on their potential buyers - making information reflected in consumers' online search very valuable to online retailers. I use a new and rich source of clickstream data obtained from a leading clicks-and-mortar retailer to model consumers' purchase outcomes as a function of the product and price information provided by the retailer, and find interesting differences for sessions belonging to customers classified as browsers, directed shoppers and deliberating researchers. Since consumers typically straddle online as well as traditional channels, the second essay in my dissertation examines how online information acquired by consumers affects their choices in offline used-good markets. Secondary markets characterized by information asymmetries have typically resorted to quality-signaling mechanisms such as certification to help reduce the associated frictions. However, the value of traditional quality signals to consumers depends crucially on the extent of the asymmetries in these markets. The online information available to consumers today may help bridge such asymmetries. Drawing upon a unique and extensive dataset of over 12,000 consumers who purchased used vehicles, I examine the impact of their information acquisition from online intermediaries on their choice of (reliance on) one such quality signal - certification, as well as the price paid. These findings will help firms to better understand how the provision of different types of online information impacts consumers' choices and outcomes, and therefore help them in designing better and targeted strategies to interact with consumers.