A Bibliometric and Thematic Analysis of Key Performance Indicators in Agricultural Supply Chains Deeksha Sindhwaani, Dipti Ranjan Mohapatra, Anil Kumar Goyal Prabandhan Indian Journal of Management, 2026 Purpose : This study sought to define and organize key performance indicators (KPIs) pertinent to agricultural supply chain management (SCM) and to investigate their interrelationships for the assessment of supply chain performance within the agricultural sector. Methodology : A comprehensive analysis of literature was conducted using the Scopus database, covering the period from 2014 to 2023. We used predefined inclusion and exclusion criteria to screen relevant papers and conducted thematic and keyword co-occurrence analyses to derive KPIs. We consulted experts to ensure that the shortlisted KPIs were applicable to agricultural supply chains. Findings : The research delineated a thorough KPI system organized into financial, operational, quality, and environmental performance categories. The results showed that metrics of financial stability, operational efficiency, and sustainability were critical for assessing the performance of the agricultural supply chain. The framework also showed how these characteristics were interconnected, supporting a more holistic evaluation of performance. Practical Implications : The proposed KPI framework provided managers with a formal framework for monitoring, comparing, and improving supply chain performance across different phases of agricultural operations. Originality : This research developed a sector-specific KPI framework for agricultural supply chains, grounded in bibliometric and expert-validated evidence. This feature differed from other studies that provided general indicators of supply chain performance.
A Bibliometric Analysis on the Impact of Corruption on Foreign Direct Investment Attractiveness Richa Patel, Dipti Ranjan Mohapatra, Sunil Kumar Yadav Vision, 2025 The purpose of this research is to investigate the asymmetric link between corruption and foreign direct investment (FDI). The article examines the literature to assess the impact of corruption on FDI attractiveness using bibliometric and content analysis based on 148 articles from Scopus database for a period of 24 years (1999–2022). The findings reveal that research on the theme has grown a lot in terms of publications. The geographical focus of the literature has been on developing economies as compared to developed economies. It has also been observed that majority of research contribution has been made by developed nations. The findings indicate that the impact of corruption on FDI differs on the basis of development level of economies. The foreign market attractiveness and corruption distance also influences the flow of foreign capital in bilateral trade. The study intends to contribute positively to the understanding of association of corruption with FDI, by analysing the existing literature, the most significant works, authors, journals and the emerging topics of concern on the theme.
Nexus between formal institutions and inward FDI in India: a nonlinear autoregressive distributive lag approach Richa Patel, Dipti Ranjan Mohapatra, Sunil Kumar Yadav International Journal of Social Economics, 2024 PurposeThis study presents time-series data estimations on the association between the indicators of institutional environment and inward foreign direct investment (FDI) in India utilizing a comprehensive data set from 1996 to 2021.Design/methodology/approachThe study employs the nonlinear autoregressive distributive lag (NARDL) model. The asymmetric ARDL framework evaluates the existence of cointegration among the factors under study and highlights the underlying nonlinear effects that may exist in the long and short run.FindingsThe significance of coefficients of negative shock to “control of corruption” and positive shock to “rule of law” is greater when compared to “government effectiveness, regulatory quality, political stability/absence of violence.” The empirical outcomes suggest the positive influence of rule of law, political stability and government effectiveness on FDI inflows. A high “regulatory quality” is observed to deter foreign investment. The “voice and accountability” index and negative shocks to the “rule of law” are exhibited to have no substantial impact on the amount of FDI that the country receives.Originality/valueThis study empirically examines the institutional determinants of FDI in India for a comprehensive period of 1996–2021. The study's findings imply that quality of the institutional environment has a significant bearing on India's inward FDI.Peer reviewThe peer review history for this article is available at: https://publons.com/publon/10.1108/IJSE-05-2023-0375
A Case Study on Economic Feasibility of Mass Rapid Transit Systems in the Nairobi Metropolitan Region Journal of Transport Economics and Policy, 2024
Effect of FDI Inflows on the Export Performance of India Economic and Political Weekly, 2024
Analysis of FDI Determinants Using Autoregressive Distributive Lag Model: Evidence from India R. Patel, D. R. Mohapatra, S. K. Yadav Finance Theory and Practice, 2024 The significance of foreign direct investment (FDI) for the expansion and advancement of emerging economies has long been recognized. Yet, research on the factors that influence FDI inflows is still developing. This study focuses on examining the long- and short-term association between FDI inflows and its determinants, employing ARDL bounds testing approach and Error Correction Model to understand the relationship between the variables under study. The findings evidence the existence long- and short-term association between FDI and domestic investment, inflation, infrastructure, and trade openness. However, market size is observed to be insignificant in influencing FDI inflows. The coefficients of domestic investment, infrastructure and Trade Openness are observed to be significantly positive. The influence of inflation is found to be negative. The study suggests that the Indian economy should accelerate the process of integration with the world economy along with the enhancement of domestic investment and infrastructure facilities to attain higher FDI.
A DEA Approach to Efficiency Analysis of Major Indian Airports Gopal Chand, Dipti Ranjan Mohapatra, Pratap Ranjan Jena Vision, 2024 Airports’ technical effectiveness contributes to the expansion of the aviation industry. Airports offer enormous potential for any economy. There is a recent initiative by the government to privatize airport operations in India. Private airports need to be technically and operationally efficient in order to be profitable. Data Envelopment Analysis (DEA) is a frontier technique used to assess the technical efficiency of airports. This study uses DEA to evaluate the technical efficiency of 20 major airports in India. It considers the average spending of the airport, the size, the number of parking bays and the runways as the input variables, and average passenger, average revenue, average aircraft movements and freight as output variables. The result observed reflects an increasing return to scale in 10 airports, a decreasing return in 2 airports and a constant return to scale in 8 airports. Malmquist Productivity Index (MPI) applied to measure the productivity index of airports. This index is further broken down into three components: Technical change, efficiency effects and scale effects. DEA implies the highest operational efficiency for Bangalore, Chennai, Cochin, Delhi and Mumbai airports with greater than unity value. By benchmarking airports for target setting and operation mechanisms, this study will support airport management with better decision-making tools.
Institutional Quality and Foreign Direct Investment in India An Econometric Analysis Economic and Political Weekly, 2023
Credit Quality of Indian Banking Sector: Implications of Basel III Regulations Dolly Gaur, Dipti Ranjan Mohapatra, Pratap Ranjan Jena Journal of Asia Pacific Business, 2022 In the last few years, due to a drastic increase in bad loans, the credit quality of banks has degraded in India. Along with national policies designed by banking regulator Reserve Bank of India (RBI) for management of credit quality, international best practices have also been implemented by the banking institutions. The Basel Accords proposed by the Basel committee have been provided for strengthening the banking sector and making it more resilient to any economic or financial shocks. Thus, the present study has been carried out with the objective to analyze the association between the recommendations of the most recent Accord by the Basel committee, that is, Basel III, and the credit quality of Indian banking industry. The study has undertaken a sample of 37 domestic commercial banks, examined over a time frame of 5 years (2015–2019). In order to address the endogeneity issue between capital regulations and credit quality representative, non-performing assets (NPA), the two-step system generalized method of moments has been applied for the purpose of regression analysis. The study has found that stringent capital requirements imposed by RBI are helpful in improving the credit quality of banks by reducing NPA. The results have further shown that the non-risk-based leverage ratio brings additional bad loans and, thus, bears an adverse influence on the asset quality of banks. The liquidity risk measure provided by Basel III, liquidity coverage ratio, does not carry any significant impact on NPA of domestic Indian banks. Results of the present study have implications for policymakers and bank management. Iinvestors can also benefit from the study. They can take the results presented on which banks are expected to be faced with a higher credit risk in future and the banking entities holding higher capital buffers which can protect the institutions from future loan losses.
Juxtaposing the influence of digitalization and supply chain disruption on green innovation: moderating role of human capital development R Patel, K Bharti, DR Mohapatra, SK Yadav International Economics and Economic Policy 23 (2), 32 , 2026 2026
A bibliometric analysis on the impact of corruption on foreign direct investment attractiveness R Patel, DR Mohapatra, SK Yadav Vision 29 (3), 375-386 , 2025 2025 Citations: 12
Nexus between formal institutions and inward FDI in India: A nonlinear autoregressive distributive lag approach R Patel, DR Mohapatra, SK Yadav International Journal of Social Economics 51 (10), 1247-1261 , 2024 2024 Citations: 8
A Case Study on Economic Feasibility of Mass Rapid Transit Systems in the Nairobi Metropolitan Region DR Mohapatra Journal of Transport Economics and Policy (JTEP) 58 (3), 278-306 , 2024 2024
Nexus between economic factors and FDI equity inflows: a causality analysis in ARDL approach NK Kanodia, DR Mohapatra, PR Jena Vilakshan-XIMB Journal of Management 21 (1), 91-104 , 2024 2024 Citations: 7
Effect of FDI inflows on the export performance of India R Patel, DR Mohapatra Economic & Political Weekly 59 (2), 13 , 2024 2024 Citations: 2
Analysis of FDI determinants using autoregressive distributive lag model: Evidence from India R Patel, DR Mohapatra, SK Yadav Финансы: теория и практика 28 (3), 144-156 , 2024 2024 Citations: 5
A DEA Approach to Efficiency Analysis of Major Indian Airports G Chand, DR Mohapatra, PR Jena Vision, 09722629241255741 , 2024 2024 Citations: 1
Credit quality of Indian banking sector: Implications of Basel III regulations D Gaur, DR Mohapatra, PR Jena Journal of Asia-Pacific Business 23 (3), 234-253 , 2022 2022 Citations: 11
The nexus of economic growth, priority sector lending and non-performing assets: case of Indian banking sector D Gaur, DR Mohapatra South Asian Journal of Business Studies 10 (1), 70-90 , 2021 2021 Citations: 46
Non-performing Assets and Profitability: Case of Indian Banking Sector. Vision, 25 (2), 180–191 D Gaur, DR Mohapatra 2021 Citations: 10
Non-performing assets: drag for stability of Indian banking sector D Gaur, DR Mohapatra, PR Jena International Journal of Economics and Business Research 21 (2), 235-253 , 2021 2021 Citations: 8
Non-Performing Assets: Drag for Stability of Indian Banking Sector Mohapatra International Journal of Economics and Business Research ISBN1756-9850, DOI … , 2020 2020
A Study of inception and Growth of Civil Aviation in India Mohapatra International Journal of Advanced Science and Technology 29 (10), 6285-6296 , 2020 2020
Non-performing Assets and Profitability: Case of Indian Banking Sector D Gaur, DR Mohapatra Vision: The Journal of Business Perspective, 0972262920914106 , 2020 2020 Citations: 65
Asset Quality of Indian Banking Sector and the Role of Government Directed Credit Schemes D Gaur, DR Mohapatra, PR Jena Journal of Critical Reviews , 2020 2020 Citations: 5
Ethiopia - South Korea Trade Dynamics: An Analysis Mohapatra, Abraham Amity Journal of Commerce and Financial Review - ISSN: 2456-8600 (Print) 2 … , 2019 2019 Citations: 1
An Economic and Financial Analysis of Chennai, Kolkata and Ahmedabad Airports in India Mohapatra, Chand International Journal of Recent Technology and Engineering (IJRTE) https … , 2019 2019
Non-Performing Assets In India: Priority Vs Non-Priority Sector Lending D Gaur, DR Mohapatra NMIMS Management Review 37 (3), 53-65 , 2019 2019 Citations: 11
An Economic and Financial Analysis of Chennai Kolkata and Ahmedabad Airports in India20200307 12421 1bayil3 DR Mohapatra, G Chand International Journal of Recent Technology and Engineering (IJRTE) , 2019 2019
MOST CITED SCHOLAR PUBLICATIONS
Non-performing Assets and Profitability: Case of Indian Banking Sector D Gaur, DR Mohapatra Vision: The Journal of Business Perspective, 0972262920914106 , 2020 2020 Citations: 65
The nexus of economic growth, priority sector lending and non-performing assets: case of Indian banking sector D Gaur, DR Mohapatra South Asian Journal of Business Studies 10 (1), 70-90 , 2021 2021 Citations: 46
An Economic Analysis of Djibouti-Ethiopia Railway Project DR Mohapatra European Academic Research 3 (10), 11376-11400 , 2016 2016 Citations: 22
Foreign Direct Investment Inflows to Ethiopia during 1992 to 2012: An Empirical Analysis DR Mohapatra European Academic Research 2 (9), 12085-12106 , 2014 2014 Citations: 17
A bibliometric analysis on the impact of corruption on foreign direct investment attractiveness R Patel, DR Mohapatra, SK Yadav Vision 29 (3), 375-386 , 2025 2025 Citations: 12
Credit quality of Indian banking sector: Implications of Basel III regulations D Gaur, DR Mohapatra, PR Jena Journal of Asia-Pacific Business 23 (3), 234-253 , 2022 2022 Citations: 11
Non-Performing Assets In India: Priority Vs Non-Priority Sector Lending D Gaur, DR Mohapatra NMIMS Management Review 37 (3), 53-65 , 2019 2019 Citations: 11
An Economic Analysis of Light Rail Transit in Addis Ababa Ethiopia DR Mohapatra European Academic Research 3 (3), 3114-3144 , 2015 2015 Citations: 11
Non-performing Assets and Profitability: Case of Indian Banking Sector. Vision, 25 (2), 180–191 D Gaur, DR Mohapatra 2021 Citations: 10
Nexus between formal institutions and inward FDI in India: A nonlinear autoregressive distributive lag approach R Patel, DR Mohapatra, SK Yadav International Journal of Social Economics 51 (10), 1247-1261 , 2024 2024 Citations: 8
Non-performing assets: drag for stability of Indian banking sector D Gaur, DR Mohapatra, PR Jena International Journal of Economics and Business Research 21 (2), 235-253 , 2021 2021 Citations: 8
Economic and Financial Analysis of Infrastructure Projects DR Mohapatra ISBN 9781545702758 1, 1-184 , 2017 2017 Citations: 8
Nexus between economic factors and FDI equity inflows: a causality analysis in ARDL approach NK Kanodia, DR Mohapatra, PR Jena Vilakshan-XIMB Journal of Management 21 (1), 91-104 , 2024 2024 Citations: 7
An Economic Analysis of Improvement of Road Infrastructure: A Case Study DR MOHAPATRA European Academic Research 2 (11), 14636-14651 , 2015 2015 Citations: 7
Analysis of FDI determinants using autoregressive distributive lag model: Evidence from India R Patel, DR Mohapatra, SK Yadav Финансы: теория и практика 28 (3), 144-156 , 2024 2024 Citations: 5
Asset Quality of Indian Banking Sector and the Role of Government Directed Credit Schemes D Gaur, DR Mohapatra, PR Jena Journal of Critical Reviews , 2020 2020 Citations: 5
Feasibility of Non-Motorized Transport Facilities in Addis Ababa City of Ethiopia: An Economic Analysis DR Mohapatra European Academic Research 2 (10), 13347-13369 , 2015 2015 Citations: 5
An Empirical Analysis of Progress and Prospects of the Economy of Odisha State of lndia DR MOHAPATRA European Academic Research 2 (2), 14620-14635 , 2015 2015 Citations: 4
Trade and Investment Flows Between India and the European Union: Issues and Challenges DR Mohapatra, B Center Bridge Center , 2015 2015 Citations: 3
Techno-Economic Analysis of Integrated Municipal Solid Waste Processing Complex Ghazipur, Delhi DR Mohapatra European Academic Research 2 (7), 9571-9589 , 2014 2014 Citations: 3
Publications
Web of Science Publications:
1. Non-Performing Assets in India: Priority Vs Non-Priority Sector Lending, NMIMS Management Review (ISSN: 0971-1023, Vol. XXXVII, Issue 3, pp. 53-65) - Web of Science Journal)
2. An Economic Analysis of Urban Infrastructure Development Project in Northern Indian City Bharatpur, Growth and Change (Wiley Inc. USA & Blackwell), pp. 1134-1163, , No.3 (Scopus Indexed Journal)- ISSN -1468-2257