Centres Of Excellence

To focus on new and emerging areas of research and education, Centres of Excellence have been established within the Institute. These ‘virtual' centres draw on resources from its stakeholders, and interact with them to enhance core competencies

Read More >>

Faculty

Faculty members at IIMB generate knowledge through cutting-edge research in all functional areas of management that would benefit public and private sector companies, and government and society in general.

Read More >>

IIMB Management Review

Journal of Indian Institute of Management Bangalore

IIM Bangalore offers Degree-Granting Programmes, a Diploma Programme, Certificate Programmes and Executive Education Programmes and specialised courses in areas such as entrepreneurship and public policy.

Read More >>

About IIMB

The Indian Institute of Management Bangalore (IIMB) believes in building leaders through holistic, transformative and innovative education

Read More >>

Research Seminar on 11 October 2023

01 OCTOBER, 2023: Dr Girsh Bahal, from the Economics area at the University of Western Australia Business School, will address students and faculty on October 11, 2023 at 4 pm in Classroom P11. His research seminar is on ‘The Effect of Supply Base Diversification on the Propagation of Shocks’.

The seminar is hosted by the Research and Publications Office at IIM Bangalore.

Dr Bahal’s paper studies the role of supply base diversification on the propagation of shocks through pro-duction networks. He and his co-authors identify exogenous shocks with the occurrence of natural disasters in the US between 1978 and 2017. They find that affected suppliers reduce customers’ sales growth by≈25%, on average. Notably, firms with intermediate input purchases spanning many suppliers, geographies, or industries attenuate shocks to their suppliers by≈70-80%. They interpret their empirical findings using a general equilibrium model of production networks. First, they establish that diverse firms exhibit gross substitutability among inputs relative to non-diverse firms, suggesting diverse firms in-sulate themselves by substituting away from disrupted suppliers. They then use the model to estimate the macroeconomic effect of supply base diversity, finding real GDP would have been≈$1.7 trillion lower in 2017 in the absence of diversified firms.

Speaker Profile: Dr. Girish Bahal is a Senior Lecturer in Economics at the UWA Business School. His key research areas are networks in economics, macroeconomics, and labor economics. He has published in journals like the Journal of Development Economics, American Journal of Agricultural Economics, and World Bank Economic Review, among others.

Before joining UWA, he worked at the International Monetary Fund (Washington D.C.) and the National Council of Applied Economic Research (New Delhi). He received his MPhil and Ph.D. degrees in Economics from Cambridge University (UK) where he was a Cambridge-Nehru scholar.

Research Seminar on 11 October 2023

01 OCTOBER, 2023: Dr Girsh Bahal, from the Economics area at the University of Western Australia Business School, will address students and faculty on October 11, 2023 at 4 pm in Classroom P11. His research seminar is on ‘The Effect of Supply Base Diversification on the Propagation of Shocks’.

The seminar is hosted by the Research and Publications Office at IIM Bangalore.

Dr Bahal’s paper studies the role of supply base diversification on the propagation of shocks through pro-duction networks. He and his co-authors identify exogenous shocks with the occurrence of natural disasters in the US between 1978 and 2017. They find that affected suppliers reduce customers’ sales growth by≈25%, on average. Notably, firms with intermediate input purchases spanning many suppliers, geographies, or industries attenuate shocks to their suppliers by≈70-80%. They interpret their empirical findings using a general equilibrium model of production networks. First, they establish that diverse firms exhibit gross substitutability among inputs relative to non-diverse firms, suggesting diverse firms in-sulate themselves by substituting away from disrupted suppliers. They then use the model to estimate the macroeconomic effect of supply base diversity, finding real GDP would have been≈$1.7 trillion lower in 2017 in the absence of diversified firms.

Speaker Profile: Dr. Girish Bahal is a Senior Lecturer in Economics at the UWA Business School. His key research areas are networks in economics, macroeconomics, and labor economics. He has published in journals like the Journal of Development Economics, American Journal of Agricultural Economics, and World Bank Economic Review, among others.

Before joining UWA, he worked at the International Monetary Fund (Washington D.C.) and the National Council of Applied Economic Research (New Delhi). He received his MPhil and Ph.D. degrees in Economics from Cambridge University (UK) where he was a Cambridge-Nehru scholar.