India's Emerging Economy: Performance and Prospects in the 1990s and Beyond

Pirmais vāks
Kaushik Basu
MIT Press, 2004 - 319 lappuses

Essays by leading academics, policymakers, and industrialists examine India's economic success in the late 1990s.

India's economy over the last decade looks in many ways like a success story; after a major economic crisis in 1991, followed by bold reform measures, the economy has experienced a rapid economic growth rate, more foreign investment, and a boom in the information technology sector. Yet many in the country still suffer from crushing poverty, and social and political unrest remains a problem. These essays by leading academics, policymakers, and industrialists -- including one by Amartya Sen, the 1998 winner of the Nobel Prize in economics for his work on poverty and inequality -- examine the facts of India's recent economic successes and their social and cultural context.

India's rate of economic growth after the 1991 reforms were instituted reached a remarkable 7 percent for three consecutive years, from 1994 to 1997. Several contributors to India's Emerging Economy ask what this means for the nation as a whole. In his essay "Democracy and Secularism in India," Amartya Sen argues that economic progress is not the only way to measure a nation's performance. Other essays examine the actual effect India's economic growth has had on reducing poverty and recommend policies to empower the poor. Essays also address such issues as globalization and the vulnerabilities and opportunities it creates, India's experience with monetary and fiscal reform, the rapid growth of the information technology sector (including a case study of India's software industry), and India's grassroots economy.

 

Saturs

Democracy and Secularism in India
35
Reflections
49
Some Macroeconomics of Indias Reform Experience
83
StateLevel Fiscal Reforms in India
115
Policies for ProPoor Growth in India
153
Who Is Getting the Public Goods in India? Some Evidence
183
A Case
217
Facing the TwentyFirst
265
Index
313
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Par autoru (2004)

Kaushik Basu is Senior Vice President and Chief Economist at the World Bank and Professor of Economics and C. Marks Professor of International Studies at Cornell University. He is the author of Beyond the Invisible Hand: Groundwork for a New Economics.

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