Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Dedication
- Contents
- List of Tables and Figures
- Foreword
- Acknowledgements
- Chapter 1 Introduction: A Critical Look at Two Decades of Market Reform in India
- Chapter 2 Development Planning and the Interventionist State versus Liberalization and the Neoliberal State: India, 1989–1996
- Chapter 3 Predatory Growth
- Chapter 4 On Some Currently Fashionable Propositions in Public Finance
- Chapter 5 The Costs of ‘Coupling’: The Global Crisis and the Indian Economy
- Chapter 6 Theorizing Food Security and Poverty in the Era of Economic Reforms
- Chapter 7 Globalization, the Middle Class and the Transformation of the Indian State in the New Economy
- Chapter 8 The World Trade Organization and its Impact on India
- Chapter 9 The Changing Employment Scenario during Market Reform and the Feminization of Distress in India
- Chapter 10 Privatization and Deregulation
- Chapter 11 Macroeconomic Impact of Public Sector Enterprises: Some Further Evidence
- 12 Liberalization, Demand and Indian Industrialization
- Chapter 13 On Fiscal Deficit, Interest Rate and Crowding-Out
- Chapter 14 Going, Going, But Not Yet Quite Gone: The Political Economy of the Indian Intermediate Classes during the Era of Liberalization
- Contributors
12 - Liberalization, Demand and Indian Industrialization
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 05 April 2014
- Frontmatter
- Dedication
- Contents
- List of Tables and Figures
- Foreword
- Acknowledgements
- Chapter 1 Introduction: A Critical Look at Two Decades of Market Reform in India
- Chapter 2 Development Planning and the Interventionist State versus Liberalization and the Neoliberal State: India, 1989–1996
- Chapter 3 Predatory Growth
- Chapter 4 On Some Currently Fashionable Propositions in Public Finance
- Chapter 5 The Costs of ‘Coupling’: The Global Crisis and the Indian Economy
- Chapter 6 Theorizing Food Security and Poverty in the Era of Economic Reforms
- Chapter 7 Globalization, the Middle Class and the Transformation of the Indian State in the New Economy
- Chapter 8 The World Trade Organization and its Impact on India
- Chapter 9 The Changing Employment Scenario during Market Reform and the Feminization of Distress in India
- Chapter 10 Privatization and Deregulation
- Chapter 11 Macroeconomic Impact of Public Sector Enterprises: Some Further Evidence
- 12 Liberalization, Demand and Indian Industrialization
- Chapter 13 On Fiscal Deficit, Interest Rate and Crowding-Out
- Chapter 14 Going, Going, But Not Yet Quite Gone: The Political Economy of the Indian Intermediate Classes during the Era of Liberalization
- Contributors
Summary
Introduction
While assessing the impact of liberalization measures initiated since 1991 on Indian industry, some historical background is worth keeping in mind. Every major capitalist nation in history has succeeded in attaining that position only on the back of a successful industrialization process. Following the British Industrial Revolution in the latter part of the eighteenth century, the nineteenth and twentieth centuries witnessed a number of industrialization-driven transformations of countries in the developed world. and in the second half of the twentieth century even in parts of the Third World. In the two-and-a-half century world history of modern industrialization, however, the Indian story stands out as a rather distinct one. It has been a long history of industrial development, but one that has failed to eliminate a persistent industrial backwardness.
India was one of the great manufacturing regions of the world of the pre-industrial revolution era, but its initial interaction with modern industry was a negative and destructive one. Colonialism and the forced integration of India into the international economy as an imperial appendage provided the context for its de-industrialization in the nineteenth century. Even before that process was completed, a modern factory sector came into being in the mid-nineteenth century. At that time much of what subsequently came to be called the industrialized world, with a few exceptions such as Britain, was still primarily agrarian. In the 150 years since, India's industrial sector has grown and its structure constantly evolved. Yet India has remained one of the most stunted cases of industrialization, understood as a process of rapid growth of per capita output and an increase in the share of the industrial sector in output and employment at the expense of agriculture.
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- Information
- Two Decades of Market Reform in IndiaSome Dissenting Views, pp. 197 - 212Publisher: Anthem PressPrint publication year: 2013