THIS book draws on the work of thinkers and doers throughout the world who
have grappled with the challenge of planning complex institutions,
especially health systems and development projects. Their problem:
Conventional planning methods often do not work. The solution: Involve all
the key stakeholders in making the plan. The challenge: Devise a planning
system that the principals and stakeholders can trust, and that is
inclusive, balanced and dynamic.
Facilitated participatory planning (or FPP) is a new way of planning for a
world that is complex, competitive, and fast-changing; a world where
managers, staff and other stakeholders must have their say and own the
ideas for any plan to work. This book charts the evolution of FPP from
pioneer concepts of awareness, empowerment, learning-by-doing,
visualisation, creative group processes, and incremental questions into a
complete and up-to-date system of principles and techniques. It carries
case studies that show how FPP has been used successfully where other
planning methods have failed.
To mitigate, develop and
improve the lives of those vulnerable to intense natural disasters,
climate change and food insecurity, many agencies are funding and
implementing diverse activities from reconstruction to rehabilitation. In
particular, mid-to long-term interventions, strategies, and practical
approaches are being designed and adopted to build the resilience of the
poor. This book presents the lessons and impacts from a collection of
these projects, describing concepts, strategies, processes, and tools in
such a way that they can be easily replicated and shared with a wider
audience. It describes valuable practical experiences and lessons from the
field, capturing a range of diverse interventions from implementing
agencies involved in post-disaster rehabilitation.
Part 1 presents an overview of
the coastal threats and post-tsunami issues faced by the coastal
communities of South Asia. Part 2 examines the concept of risk reduction
and, in doing so, brings together the focal elements of resilience,
mitigation and adaptation. Part 3 describes the pathways for building the
capacity of vulnerable communities to withstand and rebuild from natural
disasters. Part 4 presents real-life stories of how post-disaster
rehabilitation and resilience-building projects have led to positive
change at the community level.
In this timely
book—a festschrift for Dr. C. Rangarajan—top experts, policymakers and
economists offer their assessments of India’s performance in the area of
economic and financial reforms and analyse the successes and continued
challenges. It provides an insight into critical macroeconomic and
macro-finance issues of today. The book covers a broad set of topics,
including fiscal, monetary and external sector policies, drivers of
banking and financial growth, infrastructure and financial inclusion.
A strategy of
gradual economic liberalisation combined with risk-averse prudential
regulation in the banking and financial sector helped limit India’s
exposure to the recent financial crises and the subsequent global economic
slowdown. The improved economic performance in recent years encouraged the
country to become more globally and regionally integrated. This process is
unlikely to be reversed by the current global economic slowdown, given the
economic and strategic benefits India has derived so far.
The authors in
this festschrift share a critical, but overall positive, view of the
country’s future and outline several areas and recommendations for
bettering the lives of citizens. Empirically rich and topically diverse,
the book is broad in scope and full of deep analytic insights and will
serve as a useful reference and planning tool for administrators,
planners, policymakers and students of development economics, monetary
economics and finance.
Reconnecting Britain and India: Ideas for an Enhanced
Partnership”
seeks to survey the main features of a diverse and complex bilateral
relationship. As the shadows of the colonial period fade into history,
this book aims to analyse the scope for a new relationship that recognises
the role the UK can play in India’s quest for international stature.
Original essays from more than three dozen thought-leaders from the worlds
of academia, business, politics and the arts assess the potential for the
two countries to forge an ‘enhanced partnership’, the objective set out by
the two prime ministers, Manmohan Singh and David Cameron during the
latter’s 2010 visit to India.
By 2040, over half of India's population will live in cities and towns.
How many of them will live in slums? To prevent intense migration pressure
on the handful of metros and state capitals and the resulting urban
dehumanisation, policymakers must urgently focus on reviving India's small
towns and big villages. Yet, most small town municipalities are in
shambles; they lack resources, planning, data, maps, incentives and proper
accounting. Corruption and power politics dog them, and citizens have no
say or role in their running.
This book looks at the kaleidoscope of municipal finance issues in India,
keeping the small towns at the core, and argues for a radical change in
the constitution and working of these municipalities, with effective
devolution of funds, functions, and functionaries from the state level. It
contends that municipal bodies need to function independently and with
real participation of citizens to be the force of change that gives birth
to a new urban India.
Future belongs to Asia. Already a major transition of
wealth and power from the West to the East is being witnessed as never
before. Asia could withstand the economic Tsunami which engulfed most of
the developed world in 2008. Asian powers like China and India are being
envisaged as the drivers of the future global economy. On the other hand,
Asia is also facing major security challenges. How Asian states continue
with the present pace of their economic growth and simultaneously deal
with myriad international security threats is an intriguing question for
the world at large.
Bringing together a pool of renowned international
experts, the book deals with the potential drivers of future change in
Asia like economic growth, climate change, demographics, urbanisation,
migration, resource competition, technology, military modernisation,
globalisation, nationalism and identity politics, radical movements,
extremism and terrorism, and great power competition. It not only attempts
to describe the future for Asia in 2030, but also offers exciting
alternative future scenarios.
Indian agriculture is at
cross-roads. At one end, is the problem of ecologically unsound public
policies which have led to deep ecological distress. On the other, despite
large number of nutrition safety net programmes introduced by Central and
state governments, India still remains the home for the largest number of
malnourished children and adults in the world. The need of the hour is to
convert the green revolution into an ‘evergreen revolution’ by
mainstreaming the principles of ecology in technology development and
dissemination. India also urgently needs to focus on developing a
sustainable and equitable food security system.
Authored by Prof. M.S.
Swaminathan, a world scientist of rare distinction and a living legend,
this book stresses on considering the problem of food production
holistically. Evergreen revolution along with small farm management
revolution are hence the most important ingredients for hunger-free India
movement. Swaminathan’s consistent point has been, “rather than predicting
the future, it is our job to shape it.”
After a long career in central banking, the distinguished economist S.S.
Tarapore has been writing columns in financial dailies. There was a felt
need to reach out to a wider audience in a regional language. During the
period October 2005-August 2008, he turned to writing a regular column in
the widely circulating Gujarati newspaper, the Divya Bhaskar. This volume
brings to the English speaking readers, for the first time, his writings
in the Divya Bhaskar on monetary, fiscal, banking and external sector
management, but essentially from the viewpoint of the aam aadmi. The
volume would be of interest to the general reader who wishes to stay
abreast of developments in financial policies and it would also be of
interest to policymakers, opinion makers, bankers, academics and students.
To Define the Indian Grand Strategy for Foreign Policy
Admiral Raja Menon, Rajiv Kumar
Capitals of big
countries like India are supposed to have a Long View of their world. Does
Delhi have one? The US government, when presented with a Long View from
Washington by Herman Kahn of the Hudson Institute in the early seventies
is supposed to have protested “But they employed only three people for the
study.” Kahn replied “True, but that was three more than the government
employed to look at the future”. Laymen imagine that those in the lofty
reaches of government spend time in contemplation, brainstorming where
their societies will be two decades hence. Disappointed they are when they
learn that politicians drive policy more to ensure re-election four years
later, than to shape their environment. They say they have no choice.
This book, the
first such attempt, by Menon and Kumar, uses the Net Assessment Method to
write the scenarios India will be confronted with in 2020. Policy, they
feel, should address scenarios, that will inevitably evolve from myriad
complex drivers. Scenarios cannot be created: only God does that. Menon
and Kumar follow a transparent method to build, brick by brick, three
scenarios that India could face, comparing them to three others evolved by
the United States National Intelligence Council and by a group of Indian
practitioners. The book closes with a possible Grand Strategy of Foreign
Policy that will leave readers in India, and abroad with a clearer
understanding of the choices that await a rising India.
This book is one of the first
of its kind on socioeconomic aspects of agricultural biotechnology in the
country. It covers a range of issues relating to potential, performance
and concerns regarding biotechnology in India and offers valuable
suggestions for policymaking. The debate on biotechnology so far focused
mainly on the likely risks instead of objectively assessing the technology
on a case-by-case basis to come out with suitable policy implications.
The present book attempts to
fill this serious gap by discussing the nature and organisation of
biotechnology, present pattern of product development, concerns for
poverty reduction arising from the nature and pattern of product
development and the performance of the first biotech product in the
country viz., Bt cotton. It uses the results of two longitudinal surveys
conducted in all the cotton growing agro-climatic zones of Andhra Pradesh
and employs a conceptual framework to bring out the performance of this
technology.
The essays in this book,
Regional Disparities, Smaller States and Statehood for Telangana, written
on different occasions over a period of four decades reflect the
understanding and vision of the author with regard to the complex issues
of regional disparities and emerging regional tensions, and the revival of
the demands for the creation of smaller states.
The author observes that
inter-state and intra-state disparities in development have not only
persisted but have even increased in certain cases especially where
backward regions do not have the necessary political clout in
decision-making regarding public investment and provision of jobs. This
has led to regional tensions and persistent demands for carving out
separate states consisting of such backward areas. Uttarakhand, Jharkhand
and Chhattisgarh are some recent examples.
The need to reduce regional
disparities in development has emerged as one of the biggest challenges in
the post-reform period. According to Professor Rao, to ensure greater
accountability for the development of backward regions in bigger states,
it may be desirable to constitute Regional Development Boards and, where
necessary, to carve out separate states comprising some of the backward
regions. As early as 1969, he had argued for the economic viability of a
separate Telangana state, “There is every reason to believe that
separation would create conditions for the proper development of material
as well as human resources of the region.”
The book is of great relevance
today in view of the renewed interest in the subject.
Putting the right
infrastructure is critical to India’s plans for inclusive growth.
Increasingly, responsibilities for infrastructure development will be
decentralised to the local governments, whether rural or urban. There is
now an increasingly urgent need for large-scale environmental improvement
programmes and for strengthening governance and the capacity of local
institutions to plan, implement, and finance infrastructure provision and
service delivery.
Building from the Bottom:
Infrastructure and Poverty Alleviation provides critical insights into
infrastructure governance from different angles—policy making, urban and
rural aspects, technology, connectivity, capacity building and
participation. Some of the most distinguished scholars and practitioners
have contributed to this volume that encapsulates the key issues in
mainstreaming poverty alleviation strategies in infrastructure programmes.
Some important questions it seeks to answer are: How can we ensure
infrastructure access and affordability for the poor? What are the
implications for development planning and decision-making processes? What
are the financing options? The book also contains a number of best
practice case studies to reflect community participation, innovation and
commitment, all vital ingredients to the process of building from the
bottom.
The book will serve as a useful
reference and planning tool for administrators, planners, policymakers and
researchers of development economics.
The strategic partnership
between India and Russia was signed during the visit of President Putin to
India in the year 2000. Since then, the Indo-Russian relationship has
diversified enormously and today it is uniquely strong and also expanding
in the areas of defence, nuclear energy, hydrocarbons, space research and
in science & technology. This relationship is based on a strong national
consensus in both countries that has cut across ideologies or political
differences. Although differences arise over certain issues on certain
occasions, the overall parallelism in the Indo-Russian relationship
definitely symbolises the trust that still exists between them.
India and Russia have now
reached a stage where the economies of both the countries are resurgent
and at the same time diversifying. Both economies are developing
significantly to provide a good base for expanding business contacts and
promoting new projects. Nonetheless, in spite of accelerated growth and
immense opportunities, statistics show that business transaction is much
less than the potential which exists between them. On the whole, it is
necessary to publicise the positive experiences and growth of both
countries, which will help people in both countries to orient themselves
to the present realities and will boost bilateral cooperation in various
fields.
With these aspects as a
backdrop, this book India-Russia Strategic Partnership: Challenges and
Prospects has been conceived. This book is an outcome of the research
papers presented during the conference held at Indian Council of World
Affairs, New Delhi, India, along with the Moscow State Institute of
International Relations. The book covers a wide spectrum of issues and
concerns related to India-Russia Strategic Partnership, and outlines
various challenges and prospects for developing this relationship further.
An attempt has been made here to contextualise the debate in a more cogent
form.
Today more than ever it is
evident that financial organizations that fail to heed the principles of
sound financial management will rapidly find themselves in trouble. Over
ten years ago, Robert Peck Christen observed this in the context of
microfinance programs burgeoning in the late 1990's. His concern spurred
the writing of this manual.
Developed to help microfinance
program administrators manage for financial success, this best-selling
manual today still offers practical and clear applications of traditional
financial topics to microfinance institutions.
In this manual, Christen
addresses interest rate policy, management of assets and liabilities,
capital and portfolio risk, and strategic financial planning—all key
issues for microfinance institutions and all important for the donors,
consultants, and regulators who work regularly with microfinance
institutions to understand. The manual presents the theoretical framework
along with numerous examples, allowing the reader to deepen his or her
understanding of the subject matter.
Today more than ever it is
evident that financial organizations that fail to heed the principles of
sound financial management will rapidly find themselves in trouble. Over
ten years ago, Robert Peck Christen observed this in the context of
microfinance programs burgeoning in the late 1990's. His concern spurred
the writing of this manual.
Developed to help microfinance
program administrators manage for financial success, this best-selling
manual today still offers practical and clear applications of traditional
financial topics to microfinance institutions.
In this manual, Christen
addresses interest rate policy, management of assets and liabilities,
capital and portfolio risk, and strategic financial planning—all key
issues for microfinance institutions and all important for the donors,
consultants, and regulators who work regularly with microfinance
institutions to understand. The manual presents the theoretical framework
along with numerous examples, allowing the reader to deepen his or her
understanding of the subject matter.
The Uttarakhand
Development Report review the experience of Uttarakhand and highlights
issues critical for the State's development in the years ahead. The report
is expected to be an important document and will impart value for
development practitioners interested in the state and act as a road map
for accelerated growth in the future has decided to prepare State
Development Reports (SDRs) for all States and Union Territories. The
purpose of bringing out these reports is to provide quality reference
document of the development profile of the States. The SDRs aim at
spelling out the constraints and challenges facing the States and suggest
blueprints for their overall progress and prosperity.
Vijay Laxman
Kelkar has been one of the most creative, contemplative and versatile
public policy makers of India. Whether it has been articulating a vision
for the role of markets and government, or stressing for the importance of
a sound public sector balance sheet, or arguing for tax reform and fiscal
federalism, or making simple and sound policies through consensus, his
contributions are non-parallel. The essays in this festschrift are by some
of the leading economists, bankers and policy planners of India. While
saluting his visionary role in the government, they also provide an
insight into some current and critical macroeconomic and finance issues.
The writings cover a broad set of topics, among them fiscal, monetary and
external sector policies, infrastructure, financial inclusion and
education.
This volume
commemorates the conferring of the Skoch Challenger Lifetime Achievement
Award 2010 on Dr. Kelkar for his unique contributions to the Indian
economy in general and his key role in financial sector reforms process in
particular. This timely book will appeal to policy makers, political
scientists, economists and other social scientists conducting research and
teaching courses in political economy, fiscal and monetary policy,
development studies, public policy and governance.
India grapples
with the paradox of endemic backwardness in over 200 districts while
certain sections and sectors are moving at a pace that is making global
headlines. This report on “Creating Vibrant Public-Private-Panchayat
Partnership (PPPP) for Inclusive Growth through Inclusive Governance”
presents some new perspectives and solutions by bringing together the
local governance agenda through the Panchayati Raj, the issue of
agricultural development which influences the livelihoods of a vast
majority of Indians, and the role that the business sector could play in
rural transformation. It presents case studies which show that partnership
models which could ensure an income of over Rs.25,000 per annum on 0.5
hectare plots are feasible even in the context of a highly hostile
eco-environment.
In view of its
cross-cutting theme, this crisp report is a ‘must read’ for policy makers
and practitioners in the area of pro-poor growth, rural development, local
governance and public-private partnership.
This book in your hands, I Can Do Financial Planning,
is a valuable addition to the several ongoing efforts of the Reserve Bank
towards enhancing financial literacy. It is aimed at youth who are just
about getting into jobs and careers, and who will have to wade through a
complex array of financial products and make judgements. It is an attempt
towards educating the readers on the importance of thrift and equipping
them with the skills of planning and budgeting for a financially secure
future. Written in an easy style and simple language with live examples,
the book’s central message is that people can improve their financial
security through defining their financial goals, then drawing up and
implementing a savings and investment plan to achieve those goals.
Jobless growth
is a major concern in today’s world. Over and above, employment becomes
the first casualty of financial crises that seem to occur almost in a
periodic manner. How well the countries have mainstreamed employment in
their macro strategies? How coherent are the macro policies that countries
follow from the perspective of centrality of Decent Work in the context of
investment and growth?
The volume
scans the macro-economic settings of the seven countries of South Asian
subregion that include Afghanistan, Bangladesh, India, Iran, Nepal,
Pakistan and Sri Lanka and explores how well the macro economic strategies
pursued by these countries cohere with the Decent Work objectives.
The papers
contributed by various authors in this volume present elaborate research
based empirical information and analyses for the readers, researchers,
policy makers and multilateral institutions.
The analytical
import in this volume also provides a perspective on globalization. Are
these countries reaping the benefits of this process? Is globalization
helping in achieving the Decent Work goals? The book raises many issues
and opens up wide areas of debate.
Mustafizur Rahman • Wasel Bin Shadat • Selim Raihan
The present volume makes an important contribution to
the rich literature on impact of trade reforms on growth and employment by
undertaking an indepth investigation into relevant issues in the context
of the developing economy of Bangladesh. The study tracks and investigates
the various phases of trade reforms pursued by Bangladesh over the past
years. By applying appropriate analytical and estimation techniques, the
study captures how and to what extent trade reforms have impacted on
growth of manufacturing sector of the country during the various stages of
the reforms and how employment scenarios have changed in labour-intensive
and export-oriented sectors of the country over the corresponding periods
as a consequence of the reforms. The book argues that further trade
reforms should be guided by concerns of employment creation and should be
tailored to the demands of accelerated industrial growth as Bangladesh
enters into a heightened pace of global integration of her economy.
Developed country experts on international affairs and
the global economy have consistently underestimated the speed with which
China’s economy and power would rise relative to Germany, Japan and the
USA. They are now similarly underestimating the speed at which India’s
economy will close the economic size and power gaps. This book shows, why
and how a tri-polar global power structure will emerge from the current
confused system variously described as ‘multipolar’, ‘apolar’, ‘pluripolar’,
‘West and the rest’ and ‘unipolar with an oligopolistic fringe’. The Book
goes on to draw out the implications and consequences of this evolving
global power structure and makes suggestions on the policy options that
need to be explored and pursued to increase the possibility of a peaceful
transformation .
These essays
have wide-ranging themes on different aspects of socio-economic
development. All of them were written during the last four decades and
some were published in well-known national and international journals like
Economic and Political Weekly, International Journal of Development
Banking in India, American Economic Review (USA), Bulletin of the Oxford
University Institute of Economics and Statistics (UK) and KYKLOS (Europe).
Some others were published in the publications of international institutes
like United Nations, International Monetary Fund and the World Bank.
The context in
which these essays were written (as others in author's develop-ment
perspectives) is indicated in his latest book Perspectives on Development:
Memoirs of a Development Economist (Academic Foundation, 2008).
The South Asia
Economics Students' Meet is a unique platform created in 2003-04 to give
young undergraduate students of Economics an opportunity to interact
academically and discuss important contemporary economic issues pertaining
to South Asia. The papers in this volume were presented at the 5th Meet,
held in Delhi in March 2008, on the theme “Economic Challenges to Make
South Asia Free from Poverty and Deprivation.”
This collection
of papers is special in several ways. It is topical; it not only
reiterates the capabilities of the young contributors, it also reflects
the quality of teaching and academics on the sub-continent. The youth of
the contributors is well compensated by their intellectual maturity. This
volume is the repository of the hope and effort that we have invested in
our students, and in our future. It will give the reader some idea of the
capabilities of our ‘future economists'.
Agriculture production and farm incomes in India are
frequently affected by weather and climatic aberrations like droughts,
floods, cyclone, frost, storms, land slides, etc. Outbreak of epidemics,
fire, and market fluctuations are the other factors which seriously affect
production and farm income. All these events are beyond the control of the
farmers. With the growing commercialisation of agriculture, the magnitude
of shock due to unfavourable eventualities is increasing and the need to
protect farmers against production and income losses is becoming stronger.
Agricultural insurance is considered an important mechanism to effectively
address the risk to output and income resulting from various natural and
manmade events. Despite various schemes launched from time to time,
agricultural insurance in India has not made much headway even though the
need to protect country’s farmers from agricultural variability has been a
continuing concern of agriculture policy. This book examines the genesis
of agricultural insurance in India and discusses various agricultural
insurance schemes launched in the country from time to time and the
coverage provided by them. The book also looks into the role of government
in implementing various agricultural insurance schemes and suggest
effective agriculture insurance programme for India.
Harnessing Gains from Trade
Domestic Challenges and Beyond
Editors: B.S. Chimni, Saman Kelegama, Mustafizur Rahman,
Linu Mathew Philip
The South Asian
Yearbook of Trade and Development is an annual series of publication
launched by the Centre for Trade and Development (Centad) New Delhi, India
in 2005, with the primary objective of articulating debates on development
impacts of trade through rigorous policy research and analysis. The
Yearbook is envisaged as a comprehensive collection of research papers,
which attempt to reflect the South Asian perspectives at the multilateral
and regional trade negotiations and provides policy suggestions for the
trade negotiators and policy makers of the region
The South Asian
region is becoming increasingly prominent as an economic power house on
the world stage particularly as India's economic prowess expands at a
breath-taking pace....The value of this yearbook is that it examines the
challenges the region is facing in this process of growth, and provides
policy makers, business and civil society groups an opportunity to pause
and reflect on how the potential in the region can be shaped for the
betterment of all... commendable that Centas's tackled these challenges
from a development perspective in this yearbook.
The International Civil Service
of the United Nations is not fully aligned with the compelling demands of
the 21st century. Once reputed as one of the most attractive organisations
to work due to its noble objectives, global outreach, and attractive
conditions of service, the world body has been fast losing its lustre and
pulling power and its ability to perform. As a result, the organisation
has been sustaining loss in its ability to deliver on its principles,
purposes and mandates in a timely, efficient and effective fashion and in
its good will, image and reputation. If it does not pursue far-reaching
reforms urgently, particularly in the area of human resource management (HRM),
the United Nations will surely decline and become irrelevant not too far
into the future.
This book identifies strategic
issues facing the HRM of the world body, analyses their impacts on its
performance, suggests remedies to address these lacunas and proposes
measures to make the entity competitive, efficient, and effective. It
tells you where you need to strengthen UN's HRM, where to make cutbacks,
and where to remove duplication and overlaps. Frequent references to the
HRM of the European Commission and national governments gives a refreshing
taste of best practices. This volume will make an interesting read for
general readers and a great source of information for experts and
professionals. In particular, it is a must-read for politicians and
diplomats as a reference source, for UN staff to have a better perspective
of their HRM, and for academics and students of international relations,
diplomacy and political science in universities and colleges as a textbook
and reference material. There is a special chapter to assist prospective
new entrants seeking a career with the United Nations.
Community participation or
people's participation in the process of development has entered into
development lexicon permanently in the past 50 years. New methods, tools
and approaches (variously called as Participatory Learning and Action (PLA),
Participatory Rural Appraisal (PRA) or its earlier incarnation Rapid Rural
Appraisal) to enlist people's participation, have been invented,
improvised and developed by development practitioners and academicians all
over the world.
This book is an unique exercise
in exploration and synthesis, demonstrating and documenting the
experiments which have revealed that the participatory tools, methods and
approaches can be very efficiently used in several fields of human
exploration, including organisation and institutional development, action
research (on the need to adopt an inter-sectoral approach to dealing with
development issues, on hunger, participatory poverty assessment,
bio-diversity conservation and conflict resolution over sharing of
resources), macro-policy evaluation and democratic processes. Each
chapter, dealing with these issues, describes both the process followed in
the application of participatory tools and methods in the respective field
and the synthesis of the theory of participation with practice as well.
The book will be an invaluable guide to practitioners, researchers,
academicians and students of development economics and poverty planning.
K.S.
James, Arvind Pandey, Dhananjay W. Bansod and Lekha Subaiya (EDs.)
Demographic processes and
health outcomes are highly gendered in India. At the same time, studies on
the impact of gender on demography and health issues are scarce and the
impact of demographic changes on gender is nearly nonexistent. Mere
recognition of the gender issues does not provide policy guidance to make
appropriate changes in the programmes. This calls for innovative methods
to understand demographic changes, health scenario and gender systems and
also a critical analysis of various public interventions. India is also
experiencing rapid demographic changes in recent years which will have
definite implications for demographic pattern, gender system, health
progress and governmental policies and programmes. There are several
policy and programmatic interventions to generate conducive demographic
and health changes through gender equity.
This volume brings together
contributions from scholars on demographic changes, gender and health
system and health policies and programmes in India. It highlights
achievements and challenges facing the country in the area of population,
gender and health in different settings. It also brings up new methods of
analysing the relationship. This volume, undoubtedly, will be a useful
guide to students, researchers and policy makers in India and across the
world.
The importance of Uttar Pradesh
in India's socio-political firmament is never overstated. That evolves
naturally on account of a variety factors, which includes its position as
the most populous State in the country and the consequent influence
wielded by its people and their leadership in the nation's polity. This
unique status has been the subject of consistent debate among the
political class as well as the academia. The studies and reflections in
this volume, Uttar Pradesh: The Road Ahead, advances this debate
addressing a number of specific issues from historical, contemporary and
futuristic perspectives. The components of the volume were first presented
in a two-day national seminar conducted by the Observer Research
Foundation (ORF) in 2008.
Central to this volume is the
churning that manifold manifestations of identity politics brought to
Uttar Pradesh since the mid-1980s, the seemingly never-ending political
instability that it imposed as well as the possibilities and problems that
the stability verdict of 2007 offers to the State. These issues are
addressed by experts in the fields of politics, economics, sociology,
governance and public administration.
Scaling-up access to finance for India’s rural poor presents a formidable
developmental challenge in a country as vast and varied as India. It was
in this context that Skoch Development Foundation undertook the first-ever
nationwide multi-stakeholder study entitled "National Study on Speeding
Financial Inclusion". This study sought to collate primary research based
on our grassroots experiences from several project sites and field visits;
and, views from all stakeholders so as to arrive at key interventions and
intermediations to speed up the process of financial inclusion, and
thereby poverty alleviation. Apart from providing key recommendations in
the form of a roadmap to speed up the process of financial inclusion, the
study also sought to determine the viability and cost-effectiveness of the
Business Correspondent (BC) model and has identified several options to
make the model viable.
The idea of trilateral
cooperation between Russia-India-China, launched in the 1990s, has been
growing from strength-to-strength. The track one and half dialogue, which
began with the meeting of the Foreign Ministers, culminated at the
gathering of the heads of states of the three countries. Since 2001,
experts, scholars and diplomats have met to demarcate areas of
collaboration in various sectors. Trade and economic sector and energy
security are the vital area for cooperation as all the three countries
have registered the fastest growth rates in the world. They are equally
concerned with issues of disarmament and non-proliferation. Conscious of
the damage being caused to natural resources, Russia, India and China have
sought to address the issue of restoring the environment and tackling
climate change.
While there are differences
among these three countries, the areas where their interests converge are
several. They hold similar views on multilateralism, giving primacy of
place to a multi-polar world order, the need to democratise international
relations and develop a just international system. They hold similar
perspectives on the emerging threat of terrorism, the importance of
promoting the regional cooperative mechanism to address the problems faced
by the region, the challenges posed by globalisation, as well as new
threats like the current financial crisis that have effected them to some
degree or other.
The emerging relationship between the
United States, India and China in the changing world order
Harsh Bhasin
The evolving
relationship between India, the US and China is generally regarded by
scholars of international relations as among the key features, perhaps
even the most crucial one, that will shape the geopolitical contours of
the emerging international political landscape in the twenty-first
century.
Written by a
scholar and academician who for long years served as a career diplomat and
hence a practitioner of international relations, the book meticulously
analyses each strand of the mutual bilateral relations of the three
countries, including their troubled past and uncertain present, to unravel
clues for the possible future course of their relationship
Ultimately,
this book is aimed at an informing its readers – scholars and laypersons
alike - about the forces at work in the evolving saga of the triangular
relationship between the world’s most powerful nation, the world’s largest
nation and the world’s largest democracy.
A Critical Analysis of FDI Policies and Performance
Ashok Kundra
This volume
offers an in-depth comparative analysis of FDI policies pursued by India
and China since opening up. The nature, type, sources and direction of
inflows to both the countries have been analysed exhaustively. It is an
incisive and comprehensive work which brings to fore the key differences
in their policy framework, approaches and the implementation strategies.
The far reaching impact of FDI on trade, transfer of techno-logy and
employment generation has been examined critically. It also explores the
reasons for skewed regional distribution of FDI in both the countries.
The book
articulates the role played by pragmatic policy, developed infrastructure
and conducive operating environment in driving massive FDI flows into
China. The author convincingly advocates reorientation of Indian policies
relating to development of infrastructure for export-oriented
labour-intensive manufacture, labour laws regime and vesting of authority
for investment approval in favour of state governments to accelerate the
pace of FDI inflows. The conclusions are based on rich empirical evidence
supported by statistical backup. The book contains cogent and compelling
arguments and interesting insights. It will prove useful to policy
planners, researchers, academicians and students of international trade.
This book of late Manu Shroff contains his assorted
articles and lectures on different aspects of the Indian economy in its
transition from the highly interventionist regime to a liberalised open
economic system and also some international issues which had a bearing on
the Indian economy. The first part of the book focuses on the variegated
dimensions of the Indian economic landscape in its current phase when his
articles were published and in prospect. This imparts to his writings
certain freshness, individuality and timeless relevance. The second part
addresses the international repercussions of economic development with
emphasis on capital flows, international monetary issues and globalisation
which all radicalised the approach to economic policy as distinct from the
autarky which characterised the period up to 1980s.
The IDSA
Working Group on Security Implications of Climate Change for India felt
that while it would be proper to oppose the securitisation of climate
change, it would be prudent not to ignore its likely security dimensions.
The Working Group Report identifies India's key vulnerabilities. Future
projections of surface warming over India indicate that the annual mean
area averaged surface warming is likely to be between 2 degrees and 3
degrees celcius and 3.5 and 5.5 degrees celcius by the middle and end of
21st century respectively. Trends in sea level rise indicate a possible
rise between 1.06 to 2.75 mm per year. Every 1.0 degree rise in
temperature would reduce wheat production by 4 to 5 million tonnes. Water
scarcity will threaten food supplies in India. A quarter of our
biodiversity could be lost.
The Working
Group felt that climate change cannot be delinked from the overall energy
security and economic growth. The National Action Plan on Climate Change
is a good beginning but its time-bound implementation needs to be ensured.
India needs to improve energy efficiency in the industrial, household and
transport sectors. The Working Group also looked at the possible adverse
impact on the strategy and tactics of Indian armed forces. India should
use climate change as an opportunity to make socio-economic development
more sustainable.
As the world witnesses a flux in the nuclear world
order—in terms of civilian nuclear energy as well as non-proliferation
regime and legitimacy of nuclear weapons, India has a cautious path to
tread to achieve its energy security, nuclear security and make its
disarmament calls more plausible and practical. The challenges before the
global nuclear order have vindicated India’s position and bestowed it with
an opportunity to play a more confident and active role in reshaping the
world—towards a more reliable, democratic and universal non-proliferation
regime, preventing nuclear terrorism, forming a better architecture for
civilian nuclear trade, and finally to evolve practical and universal
steps towards comprehensive disarmament. This insightful book, with
contributions by leading experts on the nuclear issue in India, covers all
such important aspects and provides robust analysis of the global nuclear
order in terms of its implications for India and global disarmament.
Report of the IDSA-Indian Pugwash Society Working Group on
Space Security
The existing space regime is
facing new challenges as a result of the recent advances in space
techno-logy and the emergence of space security is a critical dimension in
national security calculus. This necessitates a proactive approach and a
comprehensive space policy.
This volume is an attempt in
this direction to sensitise experts, policy makers and interested general
audiences about the developments and debates in this area and their
implications for India. The objective of this report, prepared by a
Working Group comprising leading experts in the field is to provide a
multi-disciplinary analysis including the technological, legal, political,
diplomatic, and security dimensions.
Peter Bauer was an unlikely revolutionary, yet he inspired a revolution in
development economics. In an environment dominated by a poverty of clear
economic thought, Bauer built his theories of economic prosperity. He
fought to free the poor from the tyranny of poverty. With the recent
spread of anti-market, anti-trade, and anti-migration movements in many
parts of the world, it is important that we take a fresh look at the way
Bauer exposed the fallacies behind these protest movements. He showed them
to be anti-poor and anti-people, and to be exacerbating global poverty.
This volume is an attempt towards helping in introducing the ideas of
Peter Bauer to a new generation of readers.
The Indian Government took the historic step of
launching the Jawaharlal Nehru National Urban Renewal Mission (JNNURM) in
December 2005 with a view to give fillip to urban infrastructure
development in 65 major cities by mobilising Rs.50,000 crore from the
Central budget and by getting a matching Rs.50,000 crore from the State
governments and the Urban Local Bodies (ULBs). The response to JNNURM has
been very good. As a consequence, projects costing Rs.95,385 crore have
already been sanctioned and are under various stages of implementation.
This book reveals the nuances and thinking behind the JNNURM, its
implementation and status on the ground and suggests the way forward. The
current urban reform process undoubtedly offers tremendous opportunities
to rethink economic and development priorities. This book is timely given
the re-affirmed commitment of the government to urban development. It is
an essential read for all interested in policy, planning, urban develop-ment
and renewal issues.
India runs the world's oldest and one of the most
comprehensive affirmative action policies in the form of reservations or
quotas for its disadvantaged sections. Ever since its adaptation, this
critical public policy remains the most controversial and polarising
public policy that the Independent India has adopted as yet. While much of
the national preoccupation over reservation have been devoted to debate
its necessity and relevance in addressing exclusion and inequality, the
country still seems to lack a data-based understanding of its enforcement
across different domains. How earnestly state and its agencies have
enforced the reservation policies? We know less about the trends of
implementation in different domains and how or what percentage of
population among these social groups have benefited from it. Fact is there
are very few credible research studies on the issue of affirmative
policies in India. This publication is an attempt to fill some of the void
by compiling data on key domains of reservation policy apart from flagging
crucial issues relating to linkages among the three key domains of
reservations, namely, higher education, employment, and political
representation. A comparison of all three domains in terms of
implementation of reservation policies, across different time periods
(e.g., pre- and post-Mandal phases) and among different regions, provides
useful insights about these linkages. In doing so, the work throws some
critical insights on the processes at work, and identifies areas for
further research.
This book
begins with an in-depth reappraisal of Keynes, the prime architect of
modern economics and many-sided genius who towered as a preceptor,
economic statesman, institutional architect and progenitor of the IMF and
the World Bank. It addresses the core question: In what sense was there a
Keynesian Revolution? It also reviews the least known aspects of Keynes as
a civil servant, as a social philosopher, and pro bono activist in causes
of conscience.
The second part
comprises assorted essays that analyse significant themes of finance,
development and central banking as well as the defining aspects of
colonial Indian economic history. It evaluates the mainsprings of economic
growth, taking account of the contribution of Arthur Lewis, the Nobel
Laureate and evaluates the political economy of aid. It argues the case
for a constitutionally independent Federal Reserve Bank of India. It has
an archival essay on an American economist, Ralph Whitenack, who figures
as modern India’s pioneer economic adviser. It surveys the interface
between economics and philosophy, including the economic philoso-phy of
Joan Robinson, the eminent British economist and presents an agenda for
inter-disciplinary collaboration.
THE volume
covers a wide spectrum of topics ranging from monetary policy and
financial stability to globalisation and economic growth and social
development. The essay on "Financial Stability" though written much before
the current crisis, had anticipated many of the issues that are being
debated today. The essay on "Monetary Policy" argues that maintaining
price stability should be the dominant objective of monetary policy. The
essay on "Globalisation" points out that India should seek to wrest
maximum advantages from globalisation by identifying the comparative
advantages that India possesses. In the essay “Economic Growth and Social
Development”, the author pleads for an approach that weaves equity and
efficiency into a coherent pattern of growth. Economic growth and social
development are the two legs on which a nation should walk. Ignoring any
one leg will only mean that the nation will limp along.
The book is
divided into four sections: Monetary Policy and Fiscal Issues; Growth and
Development; Sectoral Issues – Industry, Power, Banking and Agriculture;
and External Sector and Globalisation. The book contains in all 25 essays
and should interest a wide cross section of audience.
Least Developed Countries, Landlocked Developing Countries
and Small States in the Global Economic System
T N Srinivasan
Why have the
least developed countries, and other poorer countries, failed to grow as
fast as other economies during recent period of globalisation?
Professor
Srinivasan explores the broad links between growth in income,
globalisation, and poverty reduction. He argues that past domestic and
international policies have failed to serve the interests of the poorest
countries, and suggests that the current array of international
institution, in their unreformed state, are ill-suited to bring about the
change required.
Finally he
makes recommendations on needed reforms to the institutions that manage
the global economic system.
This is the
final report of the National Commission for Enterprises in the Unorganised
Sector, which was set up by the Government of India on 20th September 2004
under the chairmanship of Dr. Arjun K. Sengupta to "review the status of
unorganized/informal sector in India including the nature of enterprises,
their size, spread and scope, and magnitude of employment." This was the
first step taken towards fulfilling the commitment of the new UPA
government to ensure "the welfare and well-being of all workers,
particularly those in the unorganised sector, who constitute more than 93%
of our workforce" (likely to be around 502 million by 2012 as the
Commission estimates).
During the four
and a half year of its existence, the Commission examined in detail all
the literature and statistical evidence that exists on this sector, held
numerous consultations with different stakeholders, such as government
officials and policy makers at the Centre and in the States, trade unions
and associations of workers representatives, civil society organisations,
academics and experts. This final report on 'The Challenge of Employment
in India: An Informal Economy Perspective' is now presented as an
overarching report based on all the earlier work of the Commission, to
provide a perspective and strategy for expanding employment in India. The
report takes an aggregative perspective of what the Commission calls the
central problem of the challenge of employment namely, deficit in its
quantity and quality. The comprehensive report also examines the issue of
labour market reforms in India.
Indian
agriculture has been facing one of the worst crises since Independence.
The contribution of agriculture to national income is declining at a
faster pace compared to the percentage of population depending on it. The
trends in profitability are not consistent across the years, which is a
typical character of agriculture. A number of studies have tried to
examine and understand the reasons; important ones include technological,
environmental, and policy related. The poor performance and the declining
profitability of agriculture due to one or more reasons have resulted in
widespread household indebtedness, which is often identified as the main
reason for the farmer suicides.
This volume is
a collection of papers in honour of Padma Bhushan Prof. Vijay Shankar Vyas
who is amongst the first and leading policy economists in India. He has
had significant policy contributions at the national and international
levels. This collection is a reflection of his research interests and
contribution to agricultural policy research. In total, 16 eminent
scholars have contributed to the volume. These papers have been put
together in a thematic format and deal mainly with five important aspects
of Indian agriculture: i) Indian Agriculture: Policies and Performance,
ii) Resource Policies and Agriculture, iii) Employment and Decent Work,
iv) New Trends in Agriculture and Challenges, and v) Experiences from
Other Countries. It also includes a paper on China which deals with
poverty and inequality in the context of reforms. Most of the papers
provide an all India perspective. Though some of the papers are specific
to the themes and locations, they provide valuable insights in to the
broader array of issues and problems afflicting the agricultural sector in
India. The authors through their contributions have touched upon issues
that are dear to Prof. Vyas and also provide futuristic scenario of Asian
agriculture of which Indian agriculture is a vital cog.
Poverty and ill health are intertwined; therefore,
social responses need to address the links between the two. There has been
increasing attention paid towards the role of microcredit as a poverty
alleviation strategy (that especially targets women), yet little scrutiny
of how microcredit may influence population health in general and women's
health in particular. In this book, we ask: can microcredit be considered
a “pro-health” poverty alleviation strategy for women? Using a
multi-disciplinary approach, the linkages between poverty alleviation and
women's health are investigated from both a theoretical and empirical
perspective. The theoretical perspective draws upon Amartya Sen's
capability approach and population health models and theories. The
empirical perspective is based on a study examining female participation
in self help groups (a form of microcredit) and their health in the South
Indian state of Kerala.
How bad is the
Global Crisis? Will the Indian economy be hit hard? What can we do to
protect ourselves from global turmoil? Is a growth recession inevitable?
How well did we cope with the massive foreign capital inflows in the last
five years? Did we follow a good exchange rate policy? What explains the
surge in national savings and investment? Can we revive the economic boom
of 2003-08? Do we have good roadmaps for reform of banking and finance? Do
oil bonds make sense? How long can we sustain massive subsidies? Are
economic disparities in India rising? Where are the new jobs? How good (or
bad) is the UPA Government’s economic legacy?
In these short
essays Shankar Acharya provides crisp answers to these and many other
questions about India’s economic policies and performance.
Though the country witnessed high growth in the past
two decades, the problems of slackening pace in poverty reduction and
employment creation, widening regional disparities, ever increasing
rural-urban divide and agrarian distress manifested in the form of
suicides of farmers are disturbing to say the least. These developments in
contemporary India have once again led to the realisation of the need for
'inclusive growth' being articulated by policy makers, intelligentsia and
the civil society. In this context, the Centre for Economic and Social
Studies, Hyderabad organised an international conference on the
“Perspectives on Equitable Development” as a part of its Silver Jubilee
celebrations. This book is a collection of the research papers presented
in the conference by eminent scholars across the country and focus on
different aspects of equitable development. These are presented in six
interrelated themesmacroeconomic performance and policies; employment,
food security and poverty; physical and social infrastructure; agriculture
and rural industrialisation; foreign direct investment in manufacturing
and services; and socio-political issues in the reform process.
The Delhi
Development Report reviews the experience of NCT Delhi and highlights
issues critical for the State's development in the years ahead. The Report
is expected to be an important value document and will impart value for
development practitioners interested in the State and act as a roadmap for
accelerated growth in the future.
NATIONAL KNOWLEDGE COMMISSION, GOVERNMENT OF
INDIA.
The Planning
Commission during the Eleventh Plan made a significant departure from the
past practice. Instead of relying on a single in-house model it was
decided to request some of the reputed institutes in the field of economic
model building to carry out modelling exercises that could be used not
only for the purpose of plan formulation but also could answer some of the
questions that arise from time to time such as the impact of rising oil
prices on the performance of Indian economy, the impact of global
meltdown, etc.
This volume contains essays by
the relevant model builders reporting on the various models used in the
course of formulating the Eleventh Plan and an overview paper by Dr. Kirit
S. Parikh.
In recent
times, there has been debate over the entry of large corporate houses into
the retail sector in India. This study finds that both traditional and
organised retail can not only coexist but also achieve rapid and sustained
growth in the coming years.
The findings of
this study are based on the largest ever survey of various stakeholders
and an extensive review of international experience, particularly emerging
countries of relevance to India.
There has been
competitive response from traditional retailers through improved business
practices and technology upgradation. Consumers and farmers gain
considerably from the entry of organised retail.
The organised
retail sector is capable of taking care of itself, but public policy needs
to help create a level playing field for traditional retailers.
Based on the
results of the surveys, the authors have made a number of specific policy
recommendations for regulating the interaction of large retailers with
small suppliers and for strengthening the competitive response of the
traditional retailers.
N.S. Sisodia, V. Krishnappa and Priyanka Singh (EDS.)
This book provides some important perspectives on the
emerging nuclear order. The contributors discuss most burning questions of
the day: What are the challenges to the global nuclear regime? What are
the consequences of a nuclear Iran for West Asian peace and stability?
Will it give rise to a nuclear quest among the important West Asian
states? How would the West respond in such an eventuality? What would be
the response of major Asian powers to nuclear Iran? What are the
consequences of changes in the East Asian nuclear order for stability and
peace in the region and beyond? How would major regional players respond?
What are the implications of non-state actors acquiring nuclear weapon
technology and capabilities? What did the international community learn
from the discovery of the A.Q. Khan network? What are the possibilities
for international cooperation against nuclear proliferation?
V Krishnappa, Shanthie Mariet D'Souza, Priyanka Singh
(Eds.)
This book is about the future of Afghanistan which
seems to be rapidly slipping into chaos. It contains perspectives on
counter-insurgency and nation-building in Afghanistan. The expert
contributors in this book focus on some key issues like, the character of
the conflict in Afghanistan; the role of regional actors; the nature of
engagement of the US and its allies; the assessment of the future course
of action by major actors and the role played by INGOs and the
international community at large. More significantly, the experts sought
to answer the crucial question: what can be done to stabilise Afghanistan?
This volume is a collection of their insightful papers.
In current debates on the geopolitics of energy
security, the spotlight has fallen on Africa as a key source of oil and
gas outside the volatile West Asia. The American, European and Asian oil
companies are rushing to acquire a stake in Africa’s oil wealth. This book
represents an effort to go beyond state-centred views of energy security,
bridging local perspectives on energy resources and global framing of
energy as a security concern. It brings together contributions from an
international team of experts and eminent persons in African affairs to
provide an analytically rich assessment of Africa’s role in the global
search for oil, the multiple consequences of energy production across the
African continent and India’s multifarious approach to Africa. The
analysis is enriched by Indian and African perspectives and anchored in
detailed country case studies.
The Haryana State Development Report reviews the State's
development experience and highlights issues critical for its future
growth. Haryana's potential in horticulture, livestock, tourism,
pharmaceuticals, IT and its rapid structural change is well documented in
the report. The report is expected to serve as a useful reference and
stimulate informed debate on the policy issues facing the state.
NATIONAL KNOWLEDGE COMMISSION, GOVERNMENT OF
INDIA.
Knowledge has been recognised as the key driving force in the 21st century
and India’s ability to emerge as a globally competitive player will
substantially depend on its knowledge resources. To foster generational
change, a systemic transformation is required that seeks to address the
concerns of the entire knowledge spectrum. The National Knowledge
Commission (NKC) was constituted in June 2005 by the Prime Minister of
India, Dr. Manmohan Singh, under the Chairmanship of Mr. Sam Pitroda, to
prepare a blueprint of reform of India’s knowledge related institutions
and infrastructure.
International Food
Policy Research Institute (IFPRI)
High-value crops and
marketing…. studies the case of high-value agriculture in the state of
Uttarakhand in the context of rapid changes in marketing at the national
and international level. Uttarakhand is characterized by a significant
number of opportunities in high-value agriculture. They include the
presence of a high number of endemic crops, diversity in agro-climatic
conditions, possibilities to produce for 'off-season' markets, organic
production practices, the relative high education of producers, a strong
agricultural research capacity, an active civil society, a competitive
production environment and a location relatively close to terminal
consumer markets, at least for part of the state. On the other hand,
agriculture in Uttarakhand also faces significant challenges that limit
the competitiveness of its farmers with farmers in other Indian states and
outside India. These include the high number of small scattered farms
creating problems of aggregation and transport costs, migration and land
conversion, increasing water and climatic change problems, environmental
vulnerability, wildlife attacks, and a problematic regulatory environment.
This book looks at these problems in a holistic manner and suggest ways on
how Uttarakhand can prepare itself better to take advantage of the
changing agricultural marketing environment.
There is
witnessed an emergence of a new paradigm of governance alongside the
process of globalisation. Pluralisation of state is the major feature of
the new governance. The state is expected to shed its pre-eminence over
development and resources. The three actors of development, state, market
and civil society have to work together for arriving at a synergetic
solution to developmental problems. The harmony is to be attained, guided
by the principles of good governance like participation, accountability
and transparency. As the contours of the new paradigm and its impact
unfold rapidly, there is a growing debate over its relevance in developing
countries like India. While the proponents see it as a newer mantra of
development complementing the process of globalisation, serious concerns
have been raised by the critics over the ramifications of adopting the
neo-liberal path of development as advocated by the new paradigm. The
critics believe that, if adopted whole hog, there could be many
detrimental effects of the new paradigm for attaining a more inclusive
development. Moreover, the harmonisation expected among the three actors
of development in terms of their goals and actions may prove to be elusive
given many interest conflicts.
Role of
Information and Communication Technologies (ICT) in rural development in
India is quite appreciated. ICT has gained the status of infrastructure,
and numerous approaches have been taken to exploit opportunities that ICT
provides. Despite phenomenal changes in the policy level improvements in
rural ICT infrastructure, digital divide has still remained a challenge
for national policy makers, state agencies and service providers. Various
agencies have piloted many projects showcasing usability of ICT at its
core to extend services in the rural sector and address issues related to
digital divide. Many of the pilot projects are being considered for scale
up at the national level under National e-Governance Plan (NeGP). However,
most of the projects have remained to be “supply-driven” leaving much
scope to transform them as “citizen-centric”. Therefore, this limitation
is an important dimension of the digital divide which needs attention of
policy makers and implementers.
This book is a collection of essays on main issues of
money and monetary policies, national and international aspects of
financial policies in less developed countries, political economy of
development in all its facets and reshaping of the international monetary
system which were debated over the last few decades by economic theorists
and the policy makers. They reveal the author's grasp of the analytics,
the nuanced reasoning underlying them, prescience on several issues such
as brain-drain and profile of leadership in developing societies and deep
understanding of the context in which the policies based on them have
evolved over the years. Author's discussion of some of India's economic
development within the overall perspective of development economics is
both fascinating and original.
THE contemporary strategic context is increasingly
defined by the rapid growth of major Asian economies and the rapidly
increasing interest the major powers are evincing in the region. It has
also resulted in a perceptible shift in power to the Asian continent. An
assessment of how each of the major Asian powers and important external
actors are responding to these developments is necessary for understanding
the underlying concerns about peace and security in Asia in the 21st
Century. What is the character of the emerging strategic context in Asia?
How are the processes of globalisation, economic interdependence and
diffusion of technologies shaping the Asian strategic context? What does
the ‘Rise of Asia’ mean for global peace? How do regional perspectives
inform the debate? What are the common threats and challenges? What are
the prospects of fostering cooperative state behaviour in confronting the
transnational threats? These are some of the issues that expert
contributors discuss in this volume.
The authors,
after carefully analysing the foundations of democracy at national and
global levels, the conditions for sustainability of democracy, and its
interconnections with capitalism—be this national or global—propose a
complete redesign of the UN system and its economic agencies...
The 73rd and
the 74th Constitutional Amendments became law more than a decade ago but
their implementation in different states of India has been tardy and
uneven. The course of implementation has also been marked by numerous
disputes, both political and legal. It is estimated there are more than
500 cases which have been adjudicated during the period in the various
High Courts and the Supreme Court.
This book is
the outcome of a comprehensive study which seeks to bring out the genesis,
the points of jurisprudence and what can be regarded as settled law common
to both the panchayats and the municipalities pertaining to issues like
elections, delimitation, reservation, planning and functional domain etc.
The book is of
interest and use to policy makers, scholars and researchers interested in
decentralisation as well as the legal fraternity.
Political Economy and the Implementation of Competition Law
and Economic Regulation in Developing Countries
Pradeep S Mehta, Simon J. Evenett (EDS.)
The last two
decades have been marked by a sea change in the world of
regulation—regulatory laws which facilitate the creation of independent
regulators have been passed in many countries, both developed and
developing. However, it has been observed that mere adoption of regulatory
laws is a necessary but not a sufficient condition for changes in
regulatory/economic outcomes. Implementation often constitutes the crucial
difference between success and failure and this is particularly true in
developing countries.
The mentioned
premise constitutes the starting point of this volume compiled by CUTS as
a part of a project entitled the Competition Regulation and Development
Research Forum (CDRF), which is a compendium of studies devoted to
characterising the state of the world in regulation in developing
countries and identifying the political economy and governance constraints
that often frustrate the successful implementation of regulatory laws in
the developing world. Such detailed identification of constraints is
necessary if we are to solve the puzzle of how regulatory
objectives/provisions that look so good on paper end up being so
ineffective in practice.
The study will
be of interest to almost the entire spectrum of professionals connected to
regulation or its use: academicians, researchers, practitioners, policy
makers, members of competition authorities or sector regulatory agencies
etc. It is hoped that through this volume the study of regulation in
developing countries emerges as a distinct field, as it should, given that
these countries have regulatory needs and constraints that differ markedly
from those developed countries.
For the last
five decades artificial satellites are being used to perform diverse roles
in astronomy, atmospheric studies and education. They have been found
useful for reconnaissance, meteorology, navigation, communication and
search & rescue.
Space
technologies are offering benefits to space faring nations and space
derived products are available at a price. Space is also been seen as the
ultimate high ground and gives armies and space faring nations tremendous
advantage on the battlefield. After the Chinese ASAT test in January 2007,
the global community has now become more concerned about the likely
weaponisation of space.
With these
aspects as a backdrop, this book Space Security and Global Cooperation is
a collection of papers that were presented at the Space Security
Conference organised by the Institute for Defence Studies and Analyses,
New Delhi and the Centre for Defence and International Security Studies,
London. The book covers a wide spectrum of issues related to the field of
space security, emerging technologies, regional perspectives, space
tourism, space law and global cooperation. It is an attempt to
contextualise the debates in a more cogent form.
Sameer Kochhar,
R. Chandrashekhar,
K.C. Chakrabarty,
Deepak B. Phatak (EDS.)
This compilation is the result of action research and
field visits across India spread over last 10-years that have been
punctuated with seminars and workshops providing multi-stakeholder
consultations. These were conducted by Skoch Consultancy Services with
recently added support from Skoch Development Foundation. The compilation
focuses on various facets of financial inclusion ranging from opening up
of no-frills accounts to micro-credit to financial literacy, while
emphasising the role of process changes, technology enablement, capacity
building and outreach mechanism. It looks at examples of local bodies,
post offices and tele-centres having been used effectively. It also
proposes a model of inclusive development, emphasising that inclusive
economics leads to inclusive governance and vice-versa. The book provides
a holistic view based on practitioners’ perspective and grassroots
learning. A must read for all involved in inclusive development of India.
The United
States' mercurial foreign policies toward the Muslim world—including
actions taken against Islamic countries who have attempted to challenge
the United States' regional dominance; and alliances with Pakistan, the
United Arab Emirates, and Saudi Arabia—are expertly examined in this
incisive treatise. Islamic revivalism, the emergence of a highly political
Islamic population, the rise of terrorism, and other recent
socio-political changes are also thoroughly discussed.
How the US has
reconfigured its policy towards the radical and the conservative group of
Muslim countries and how its new mission against terrorism has affected
international relations, particularly US-Indian relations, is the central
focus of the study.
Governance in
current debates demands pluralism of actors in the societal spheres of
state, civil society and business. There is an inherent assumption of
harmony among these spheres, which appears to optimise complimentary
outcomes in ‘good governance’. In the real world, however, conflict is the
norm rather than the exception.
Conflicts over
the access and control of natural resources have amplified over time with
large-scale resource transformation, especially through technological
innovation. Today, the key challenge before natural resource governance is
the need to balance economic growth with the demands and aspirations of
the differentiated social structure, the future generations and the
environment. Studies in this volume examine the competing, and diverging,
interests that generate certain forms of natural resource conflicts. The
studies bring into focus the changing role of the State and the social and
environmental impact of State interventions in triggering conflict and
mobilising resistance.
Recent years have witnessed major paradigm shifts in
many faces of economics; its philosophical foundations, empirical
methodologies and policy issues. The papers put together in this volume
give us in one place rigorous and refreshing insight into the unresolved
problems in search for appropriate models of economic behaviour,
methodologies for policy analysis and a number of issues which have become
vital for sustainability of the current pace of economic development.
While the Indian Economy provides the backdrop to the discussion of
poverty alleviation for shared prosperity, costs of environmental
degradation, regulation of public utilities, promotion of financial
efficiency, articulation of monetary management under a new paradigm of
economic policy and macroeconomic policies in the emerging market economy,
they do indeed have a universal relevance today. That the various
contributions deal with these issues of today even though many of these
were put forth some years back is indeed remarkable. Given the scholastic
credentials of the distinguished authors and their long experience of
dealing with economic policy, teachers, researchers, and students of
economics could not have asked for more.
Recent years have witnessed major paradigm shifts in
many faces of economics; its philosophical foundations, empirical
methodologies and policy issues. The papers put together in this volume
give us in one place rigorous and refreshing insight into the unresolved
problems in search for appropriate models of economic behaviour,
methodologies for policy analysis and a number of issues which have become
vital for sustainability of the current pace of economic development.
While the Indian Economy provides the backdrop to the discussion of
poverty alleviation for shared prosperity, costs of environmental
degradation, regulation of public utilities, promotion of financial
efficiency, articulation of monetary management under a new paradigm of
economic policy and macroeconomic policies in the emerging market economy,
they do indeed have a universal relevance today. That the various
contributions deal with these issues of today even though many of these
were put forth some years back is indeed remarkable. Given the scholastic
credentials of the distinguished authors and their long experience of
dealing with economic policy, teachers, researchers, and students of
economics could not have asked for more.
Economic freedom provides a right of property
ownership, realised freedoms of movement for labour, capital, and goods,
and absence of coercion or constraint of economic liberty beyond the
extent necessary for citizens to protect and maintain liberty. This book
attempts to showcase the degree to which the policies and institutions are
supportive of economic freedom in the States of India. Most states have
shown a marked improvement in terms of legal structure and security of
property rights, but continue to remain heavily regulated. It is the third
successive edition, which tracks the performance of Indian states over a
three year period. Some states have bettered their performance in certain
areas, but few states have slipped down for slow pace of reforms. The
point to be noted is that all states have scope for improvement in
providing an economically free environment for their citizens; however,
the individual areas requiring attention differ from one state to the
other. In other words, the analysis points out specific areas which
require government action for economic freedom. This book should be of
interest to all, especially entrepreneurs, industry, and policy makers,
alike.
Minimum wages and collective bargaining Towards policy
coherence
International Labour Office, Geneva.
The first in a
new series of ILO reports focusing on wage developments, this volume
reviews major trends in the level and distribution of wages around the
world since 1995. It considers the effects of economic growth and
globalization on wage trends, looking closely at the role of minimum wages
and collective bargaining, and suggests ways to improve wage levels and to
enable more equal distribution.
Wages are a
major component of decent work, yet there is a serious knowledge gap in
this increasingly important area which this report begins to address. Part
one summarizes the main trends in average wages and distribution of wages,
providing a statistical analysis of the links between wages and economic
growth, along with wage forecasts for 2008 and 2009. Part two examines the
relationship between minimum wage policies and collective bargaining,
highlighting the effects of institutions on wage outcomes and the
importance of coherent policy articulation. Part three concludes with
concrete policy recommendations and identifies key issues for further
research. The report includes full technical and statistical annexes.
The contents of
this volume add useful dimensions to the ongoing debate on various issues
relating to India's transition to the new economic policy regime. The
papers in this volume were written specifically for the National
Conference on Industrial Development and Economic Policy Issues, organised
by the Institute for Studies in Industrial Development during June 27-28,
2008. The Conference was held in honour of Professor S.K. Goyal and was
anchored on his research interests. While some of the contributions deal
specifically with the Indian scenario, others provide an overall context
for the debate. They are thus an interesting mixture of specifics and the
general.
Section I deals
with the issue of industrialisation and employment especially in the
context of increasing importance of the services sector and deceleration
of the agricultural sector. Section II examines the historical context of
the development of corporate sector in India as well as the present
ownership pattern of the sector which has direct implications for
industrialisation and distributional aspects respectively. This section
also deals with the developments in the banking sector. Section III
focuses on the role of foreign direct investment in development and
innovation, the performance of different constituents of the corporate
sector in terms of exports and India's preparedness for a free trade
agreement with China. Section IV is about globalisation issues in general
and India's experience in this context in particular. Section V focuses on
issues relating to poverty and inequality. Section VI covers a different
set of issues namely, political and cultural dimensions of the new era.
A path-breaking
book which examines India’s highly controversial yet most successful
state: Gujarat.
It is difficult
to argue with Gujarat’s success— a consistently growing state income,
massive contribution to India’s coffers, and high marks in industry,
agriculture, and higher education.
How did Gujarat
come to be India’s second most industrialised state, a toast among experts
on economic development? And what lies ahead? In 11 well-researched,
well-thought-out essays, some of the country’s leading experts on Gujarat
give you the answers.
Convincingly
woven by editor, R. Swaminathan, Gujarat: Perspectives of the Future takes
more than a cursory look at the industrial development that has swiftly
taken place in the state. The volume goes deep into the phenomenon,
providing analyses for various issues such as the macroeconomic framework
for Gujarat’s industrialisation and the dynamics of its corollary urban
development. More importantly, the book examines the way forward: what
challenges await Gujarat?
This book makes
a compelling argument for a blueprint that will address the state’s
serious problems including environmental degradation, discrimination
against women, poor health care and nutrition, and lack of quality basic
education. A blueprint which will then, make Gujarat’s remarkable
development truly sustainable.
How Active Citizens and Effective States Can Change the World
Duncan Green
The
twenty-first century will be defined by the fight against the scourges of
poverty, inequality, and the threat of environmental collapse—as the fight
against slavery or for universal suffrage defined earlier eras.
From Poverty to
Power argues that it requires a radical redistribution of power,
opportunities, and assets to break the cycle to poverty and inequality and
to give poor people power over their own destinies. The forces driving
this transformation are active citizens and effective states.
Why active
citizens? Because people living in poverty must have a voice in deciding
their own destiny, fighting for rights and justice in their own society,
and holding the state and the private sector to account.
Why effective
states? Because history shows that no country has prospered without a
state structure than can actively manage the development process.
There is now an
added urgency beyond the moral case for tackling poverty and inequality:
we need to build a secure, fair, and sustainable world before climate
change makes it impossible. This book argues that leaders, organisations,
and individuals need to act together, while th ere is still time.
IDSA Asian
Strategic Review 2008, the second volume in the series of Annual Surveys
revived by the Institute in the previous year, is divided into six
sections. The first section, on international security, discusses some
significant developments in the Asian security landscape, while taking
stock of the persisting, unresolved concerns. The issues covered include
space security in the aftermath of China’s anti-satellite test of 11
January 2007, energy security in the face of galloping oil prices, the
growing concern regarding climate change, an evaluation of the current
state of the global war on terror, and the evolving situation in Iraq, the
safety of Pakistan’s strategic assets, and an assessment of the Sixth
Biological and Toxic Weapons Convention.
The next
section focuses on the theme related directly to India’s security
concerns. Accordingly, India’s strengthened partnerships with the United
States and Russia, its ocean security in the backdrop of capacity
additions to its Navy, India’s Look East policy with imperatives for
Northeast security and India’s acknowledged most pressing internal
security challenge, the Maoist insurgency, are analysed in depth.
Special Focus on Distributed Power
Generation
Potential for applications to rural sectors in India
PROF. Amitav Mallik, Dr. Nitant Mate, Devayani Bhave
This volume on “Renewable Energy Technologies” has a
special focus on distributed power generation (DPG) to highlight the easy
applicability of the alternative energy technology, particularly for rural
sector in India. In times of rising oil prices and focus on clean
technologies, the renewable technologies have an important role to play in
future and the book relates the technology to Indian conditions and for
ready usability independent of power supply grids and their associated
problems.
Directorate of
Economics & Statistics
Department of Agriculture & Cooperation
Ministry of Agriculture
Government of India
The significance of database for agriculture and allied
activities lies in the value addition it makes to research and policy
formulation. The "Agricultural Statistics at a Glance" is a much awaited
publication since it provides authentic information in a comprehensive
manner. It provides wide range of data on crop production and productivity
across States/regions, markets and prices, terms of trade, price support
and procurement, domestic and international trade, credit, insurance, etc.
The book will be greatly useful for economists, policy makers,
researchers, agricultural scientists, students, different government and
non-governmental organisations working in the agricultural sector and the
public at large.
This is an unusual book of
memoirs of both a distinguished economist and a successful public servant.
His contributions qua economist could surpass those of many others who
devoted their life-time only to teaching and research in India. He has
figured conspicuously in the top international journals in economics with
articles on different aspects of the subject.
Bhatt as a memorialist has
scrupulously avoided being on a self-adulatory ego-trip; he has focused
mainly on contextualising his personality in the economic profession of
his time in India. He imbibed his apparatus of thought from his great
teachers at Harvard like professors, J. Schumpeter, W. Leontief, A. Hansan
and A. Gerschenkron, which he harnessed with great success for his
creativity in economics. His memoirs are a unique narrative of how
economics as a rigorous social discipline evolved in India, superseding
most of the arid descriptive economics of his predecessors in pre-war
India. He meticulously but without being self-referential describes how
the research department of the Reserve Bank of India created a niche for
itself in economic research, even overtaking the leading and older central
banks in the US and the European continent.
In conducting monetary policy,
a Central Bank primarily tries to influence behaviour of the commercial
banks. The response of commercial banks to monetary policy actions is,
thus, a key element of monetary policy. In view of the resurgence of the
credit channel of monetary policy and episodes of credit crunch,
world-over the issue has gained currency.
Against the backdrop of
financial sector reforms in India, this book looks into the theory,
stylised facts and empirical evidence on the relationship between
commercial banks’ behaviour and monetary policy. The book presents an
analytical account of the credit channel of monetary transmission and
looks into the modified IS-LM model with an independent banking sector.
Econometric evidence of the book is pointer to the fact that not all the
banks respond uniformly to monetary policy. Attributes like ownership,
size, liquidity, or capitalisation play important roles in determining the
nature of response. The book also examines futuristic issues like
consolidation of the banking sector in light of the evidence.
Privatisation of State owned
enterprises has raised a lot of passion, heat and dust around the world,
especially after the huge successes this policy had in the United Kingdom
and Germany, Latin American countries, Asia and Africa. But very soon, it
came to be recognised that privatisation did create many problems, such as
lack of transparency, pseudo capitalism and many other associated evils.
The welfare aspects of privatisation also tended to be given inadequate
attention in the privatisation process.
In the rush to privatise, many
countries ignored the welfare role of the State. In particular, the
negative aspects of privatisation relating to labour came to be recognised
and initiatives began to be taken to lessen these negative social aspects.
These were, however, not adequate and resulted in impoverishment and
considerable hardship to labour and led to questions on the wisdom of
pursuing privatisation policies.
In this book, the author
examines the privatisation processes in Sri Lanka and India and the
implications that it has for various sections of society. The book also
examines the measures that need to be adopted to minimise the negative
societal implications of labour restructuring on account of privatisation,
in the light of international experience.
This book is the first detailed
analysis of the subject of societal implications of labour restructuring
in Asia and will serve as a useful reference book for researchers and
scholars of privatisation, besides policy makers and practitioners.
India and West Asia represent a confluence of civilisations which is a
paradigm for our times. Over the millennia, the religious, ethnic,
political, commercial, cultural, literary and linguistic ties that bind
the peoples of the two regions have endured. Today these ties are marked
by a mutuality of interest and benefit with India's emergence as a global
player. Never has the need for maintaining security, peace and prosperity
in our region been greater with the retrograde developments witnessed in
recent years. The conjunction of these events has inevitably led to calls
for India to play a helpful role in the search for solutions to the
festering conflicts in the region. This compendium explores the
possibilities, challenges and parameters of such an engagement. While the
jury is still out, the papers presented here highlight its
multi-dimensional character.
Essays in Memory of Professor V.K.R.V. Rao
commemorating his birth centenary
Editors: N. Jayaram and R.S. Deshpande
This volume endeavours to present the terrain of development thinking in
various fields of specialisation. The authors include Prof. V.K.R.V. Rao
Chair Professors and winners of V.K.R.V. Rao Prizes instituted by the
Indian Council of Social Science Research, New Delhi. The subjects covered
are as varied as economic theory, macro models, differing approaches to
explaining development, concerns of inequality and poverty, changes in
community life, India’s foreign policy questions, empowering vulnerable
sections, etc. The most important feature of this volume is its in-depth
analysis of these develop-mental issues and the challenges to the Indian
academia.
Institute for Social and Economic Change, Bangalore
This volume contains 31 reminiscences by colleagues, friends and kin who
were associated with the late V.K.R.V. Rao during his life-time,
particularly in his life-long mission to nurture social science in the
country and build centres of excellence in social science research. It is
a tribute to his memory on the occasion of his centenary and focuses
mainly on the third and final Institution, Institute for Social and
Economic Change, Bangalore that Prof. Rao founded. The incidents covered
and personalities referred to in the contributions give a good idea about
the man who rode as a colossus in the academic and intellectual arena of
the country for over 50 years, the personal and professional challenges he
faced in his relentless quest and always emerged victorious. It is hoped
that the collection would provide for us and the posterity a glimpse of
the exemplary zeal with which Prof. Rao went about fulfilling his mission
and inspired scores of young academics to participate in it.
Over the past several decades
Asia’s maize economy has expanded significantly, and in recent years
Asia’s share of maize production has risen more rapidly. It is poised to
grow even further, owing to direct and indirect demand generated from the
region’s burgeoning animal feed and industrial sectors. This study covers
seven Asian countries, namely China, India, Indonesia, Nepal, the
Philippines, Thailand, and Vietnam. Together, these countries generate
over 90 per cent of Asia’s maize production, and a quarter of the world’s
maize supply. The basic objectives of the study were to:
• review the
production, consumption and trade in maize in Asia;
• highlight
the policy environment in each country;
• analyse the
incentives available for maize producers; and
• forecast the
nature of the maize economy in Asia in 2025.
The publication provides
a summary overview of population policies and dynamics for each of
the United Nations Member and non-member States for which data are
available at mid-decade for the 1970s, 1980s, 1990s and for 2007.
This publication shows,
on a country-by-country basis, the evolution of Government views and
policies from 1976 to 2007 with respect to population size and
growth, population age structure, fertility and family planning,
health and mortality, spatial distribution and international
migration. Within the context of demographic, social and economic
change. The material is presented in the form of two-page data
sheets: the first page contains population policy data for each
country for 1976, 1986, 1996 and 2007, and the second page provides
population indicators for the corresponding years.
India and the European Union have stepped up efforts to improve relations,
especially since the first EU India Summit of 2000. However, there seems
to be a growing gap between their expectations from each other in most
areas and their perceptions of the world order. What are the reasons for
this state of affairs? Do they have the capacity to become ‘strategic
partners’ in the near future? Will India prefer the US to the EU after the
implementation of the India-US nuclear deal? Would the EU and India be
able to settle their differences on human rights issues? ... Read inside
what distinguished scholars and experts have to say.
Editors:
Ramesh Bhatia, Rita Cestti, Monica Scatasta,
R.P.S Malik
Dam assessment, by its very nature, is a complex undertaking. Many of the
benefits and costs associated with dam development have quite different
time streams. These benefits and costs are faced by different sectors and
there are inter-relationships between sectors. The effects of dams are
distributed across different spatial scales, from local to basin, to
regional to national, and in some cases, to trans-national. To add to the
complexity, while some of the impacts of the dam projects are ‘direct’,
the others are ‘indirect’ with the definition of what constitutes ‘direct’
versus ‘indirect’ impacts also varying.
The aim of the present study has been to evaluate some of the above
interactions, in particular the ‘direct’ and ‘indirect’ economic impacts
of dams. The study ex-post evaluates the magnitude of multipliers, a
measure of the total benefits (direct plus indirect) of the project in
relation to its direct benefits, and assesses the distributional and
poverty reduction impacts of dam projects. The four cases studied in the
present book include three large projects—Bhakra Dam System (India), Aswan
High Dam (Egypt) and Sobradinho Dam (and the set of cascading reservoirs)
(Brazil)— and one small check dam—Bunga (India).
Editors:
Sameer Kochhar, Deepak B Phatak, H Krishnamurthy,
Gursharan Dhanjal
This compilation has emerged
from a recent National Consultation on Infrastructure and Governance
called India @ Work Summit, organised by Skoch Consultancy Services,
providing critical insights into the subject of infrastructure and
governance, all pointing to a common goal of inclusive growth.
The book opens with a chapter
entitled: Participatory Democracy, Infrastructure and Empowerment.
Offering the concerned reader the collective wisdom of eminent policy
makers and distinguished experts, the content in this volume is organised
under seven sections, namely:
The Kerala Development Report reviews the course of
development of the State and the aspects in which the State holds a unique
position among the States and Union Territories in India, such as
universalisation of school education, reduction in fertility and mortality
rates, development of health- care sector, growth of infrastructural
facilities and expansion of financial institutions, It has also
highlighted the pitfalls on its road to progress such as declining
agriculture, stagnating industry, mounting unemployment and growing
consumerism. The great strength of conviction that the State has acquired
through incessant social reform struggles, progressive political
movements, and land reform legislations is lending support to its pace of
progress along egalitarian lines. The merging conflicts in the matters of
private partnership in educational development, reservations to depressed
communities in educational institutions and in government services, and
participation of foreign investors in Kerala's development endeavours have
added new dimensions to the path and pace of progress that the State may
choose to tread. New problems that have arisen due to its spectacular
success in bringing out a demographic transition such as the mounting
proportions of the elderly and the aged in the State's population have
also been highlighted in the report. The SDR of Kerala has also furnished
a roadmap to development that the State may like to pursue in important
economic sectors such as agriculture, traditional and small-scale
industries and modern manufacturing industries.
The Sikkim Development Report attempts to assess the main
strengths and weaknesses of the state in achieving a high level of
development. Based on the analysis of the economy's fundamentals, it
recommends a development strategy that takes into account the state's
potential and builds on its strengths: a peaceful environment, diverse
agro-climatic topography, supply of cheap labour and vast potential in
tourism, hydro-power, and horticulture. The sustainable developmental
strategy recommended will seek to (i) empower people by strengthening the
social infrastructure, in the form of education and skill formation and
easy access to good health systems, and physical infrastructure, such as a
good connectivity and communications network, quality energy supply, and
(ii) vastly changed role for the government as an enabler rather than a
direct participant in the production-distribution processes.
This book
reviews the history of labour relations in Nepal and considers criticisms
of the existing industrial relations system. It reports on the
re-emergence of the militant Maoist trade union and the recent upsurge in
strikes and demonstrations in Nepal. A reduction in workplace tension is
needed to cement in place the recent peace agreement, facilitate political
stability and promote economic growth.
Focusing on
broad economic developments since 1990, it sheds light on how labour
legislation and labour institutions have influenced investment, growth and
jobs over the long term. The views of those most directly affected by the
labour legislation, institutions and attitudes that govern industrial
relations in Nepal have been collected through surveys and interviews with
managing directors and entrepreneurs, trade union leaders and hundreds of
ordinary workers from a range of locations, industries and occupations.
These views have heavily influenced the conclusions presented in this
volume.
The world faces a huge challenge of creating productive
jobs for its expanding labour force. Unlike the challenge of sustaining
global economic growth or that of correcting global trade imbalances, this
global employment challenge is barely recognized and its nature and
magnitude are certainly not well understood. Indeed, there is a widespread
(though rarely stated) belief that even in an era of globalization
employment remains a national concern, so that there can be no such thing
as a global employment challenge. Yet the employment challenge today is
global in several important respects. Inadequate availability of
productive jobs is now a worldwide phenomenon. Global forces –
cross-border flows of trade, capital and labour – have significant con -
sequences for employment in individual countries. Also, international
policies are now as important as national policies for expanding
opportunities for productive employment in less developed countries, which
is where most of the world’s workers live and where almost all of the
world’s new workers will live.
The relatively faster growth of
tertiary sector vis-a-vis other broad sectors of the economics, as
they experience a higher growth rate, has become almost a universal
phenomenon. This has given rise to contemporary issues related to this
form of economic development. The topicality of this issue is the broad
theme of this book.
Numerous studies have been
devoted to the growth of the agricultural and manufacturing sectors of the
developing countries, but the services sector has received far too
inadequate attention of the researchers. An attempt has been made in this
book to fill this gap.
A unique feature of the book is
that it attempts to answer the following set of questions in a systematic
manner.
With contributions from India's most distinguished economists, this
collection of papers—commissioned for the Silver Jubilee conference of the
Indian Council for Research on International Economic Relations—addresses
important policy challenges facing India as it becomes increasingly
integrated in global economy.
The Indian Economic Journal is the main Journal of the
Indian Economic Association. It is published quarterly and it is a fully
refereed Journal. Its main objective is to provide a forum for
dissemination of the research findings of scholars from all over the
world, on Issues of analytical, methodological and practical value to the
professional community. The IEJ is now in its 55th year of publication.
Exploring Interdependence and Outlook for Collaboration
Samir Ranjan Pradhan
Growth-induced structural changes have precipitated a phenomenal increase
in energy consumption in the economies of the Asian region. Importantly,
Asia’s burgeoning demand for oil and gas is a crucial factor in the
current world energy market and has occupied centre stage in the
contemporary discourse on global energy security. This book explores one
aspect of such transition, envisaging the emerging pattern of energy
interdependence between India as a major energy consuming and importing
country and the prominence of the Gulf Cooperation Council (GCC) countries
as the major source of energy supplies for India and the Asian region as a
whole. The book argues that the evolving pattern of energy related links
and tendencies will act as a stimulant to boost bilateral economic
relations between India and the GCC to an elevated trajectory.
In this book the author
explores the relevance of communitarian institutional approach for
sustainable management of renewable natural resources in Rajasthan. The
book is interdisciplinary and closely verifies institutional development
within the power theoretic framework. Moving from case to case, it
searches for a conceivable strategy for equitable management of renewable
natural resources in the public domain. While having followed proven
methodologies, it has examined several aspects of institutional
interventions and ecological changes that have serious implications for
livelihood generation.
Despite the fact that the rural
society is socially and economically heterogeneous, the book reveals that
institutional sustainability against the backdrop of unequal power
relations may succeed in restoring degraded eco-system by means of
expanding bio-diversity. And, by doing so, it could ensure livelihood of
the poor and the disadvantaged in a drought that prevailed for more than
three years. All these bring missing links between poverty reduction and
ecological restoration to the centre of the development discourse. Prof.
Ray has systematically drawn some insightful lessons from the scenario
analysis of the institutions and explores complementarity between market
and community institutions. While conflicts on command over renewable
resources in the state are inescapable, their resolution must be sought in
the public domain, suggests Prof. Ray. It may call for vertical
integration between the state, civil society organisations and community
institutions.
Authentic and
authoritative, this presentation in two volumes shares a comprehensive
overview of the extensive research undertaken by the Agro Economic
Research Centres (AERCs) and the concerns confronting Indian agriculture.
Established across the states in India to provide policy feedback to the
Ministry of Agriculture, the AERCs generated many important research
initiatives and debates over five decades.
The volume on
macro premise deals with the broader themes like macro policy changes, WTO,
tariff policy, institutional issues, minimum support prices etc., whereas,
the volume on micro issues addresses the problems confronted by each of
the participating states at the regional level.
Editors: Gopal K.
Kadekodi, Ravi Kanbur
and Vijayendra Rao
Karnataka was
founded 50 years ago and in those decades has embodied the challenges and
contradictions that are faced by the rest of India—spectacular
technology-led growth in Bangalore tempered with an abiding sense of the
city's ungovernability, enduring gender inequity and regional disparities,
and a visibly increasing gap between urban and rural areas. Yet, Karnataka
is also increasingly being seen as a model of development. Bangalore's
metamorphosis from a noun to a verb is the archetypical symbol of an India
"unbound", and Karnataka's pioneering experiment with Panchayati Raj
reform under the Hegde government in the 1980's sparked the 73rd amendment
to the Indian Constitution and the consequent and continuing wave of
devolutions in finance and power to panchayats. This emphasis on
technology-led growth coupled with local government reform is, at least in
theory, a singularly innovative strategy to address the challenge of
generating growth with equity and can be described as the "Karnataka
Model" of development.
Potential of India-Brazil-South Africa (IBSA) Partnership
Research and Information System for Developing Countries (RIS)
The coming together of India, Brazil and South Africa to strengthen the
economic partnership is a major development in the area of South-South
Cooperation. The three partners represent leading economies in their
respective continents and bring together an array of complementary
strengths and capabilities that could be exploited for mutual benefit.
They have shared political and economic history and development
experiences. There are significant synergies between these countries as
they have developed substantial capabilities in different sectors over the
years. But these synergies are yet to be fully utilised for their
collective benefit and development of the South in general. IBSA countries
can reinforce the economic strength of each other by synergising their
complementarities in areas of industry, services, trade and technology
which in turn could create a market of 1.3 billion people, US$2 trillion
of GDP and foreign trade of nearly US$ 540 billion in 2005. IBSA
partnership is also of immense strategic value for multilateral
negotiations and shaping their respective roles in the global governance.
According to
WESP 2008, the world economy is facing serious challenges in sustaining
the strong pace of economic growth seen over the past few years. While the
baseline forecast is for world economic growth to moderate somewhat in
2008, the risks associated with the bursting of the housing bubble in the
United States, the related unfolding credit crisis, the decline of the
dollar, large global imbalances and high oil prices are all pointing to
the downside. The report draws some lessons from the global financial
turmoil of 2007, which was triggered by the meltdown of sub-prime
mortgages in the United States, and points out that the various measures
adopted by central banks of the major economies did not address the root
causes of the turmoil: the huge global imbalances. In an alternative
scenario, which takes into account the possibility of a
sharper-than-expected decline in house prices in the United States and a
hard landing of the US dollar, the United States economy would fall into a
recession, while global growth would be significantly lower than the
baseline. In addition to trends in international trade and capital flows,
WESP 2008 also covers the latest progress and policy issues related to
international trade negotiations and reform of the international financial
system.
The Planning Commission has decided to prepare State Development Reports (SDRs)
for all States and Union Territories of India. The objective in bringing
out these reports is to provide a credible independent quality reference
document on the development profile, set out strategies for accelerating
the growth rate of States, lessen disparities and reduce poverty. The SDR
is meant to discuss the constraints and challenges faced by a State and
provide a vision, blueprint or a roadmap for its socioeconomic progress.
Each SDR is being prepared with the assistance of reputed
national-level agencies, under the supervision of a core committee, headed
by a Member of the Planning Commission, and including a senior
representative of the State Government. The publication of the Maharashtra
Development Report follows the recently published SDRs of Karnataka, Uttar
Pradesh, Rajasthan, Tamil Nadu and Himachal Pradesh, while SDRs of many
other States and Union Territories of India are under various stages of
preparation.
The
Andaman and Nicobar Islands Development Report highlights issues
related to the development priorities of the islands and the road ahead in
health, education, tribal development, environment, agriculture, ports,
shipping and air connectivity. The report suggests a long-term plan to
restore the livelihoods, adversity affected by the Tsunami in December
2004. It is expected to serve as a useful reference material and stimulate
informed debate on the policy issues faced by the Union Territory.
This authoritative compendium brings together the latest thinking of
leading academics, actuaries, and development professionals in the
microinsurance field. The result is a practical, wide-ranging resource
which provides the most thorough overview of the subject to date.
The book allows readers to benefit from the valuable lessons learned from
a project launched by the CGAP Working Group on Microinsurance analysing
operations around the world. Essential reading for insurance
professionals, practitioners and anyone involved with offering insurance
to low-income persons, this volume covers the many aspects of
microinsurance in detail, including product design, marketing, premium
collection and governance.
It also discusses the various institutional arrangements available for
delivery such as the community- based approach, insurance companies owned
by networks of savings and credit cooperatives and microfinance
institutions.
The roles of key stakeholders are also explored and the book offers
insightful strategies for achieving the right balance between coverage,
costs and price.
Founded in 1958 by the great academic visionary and institution-builder
Professor V.K.R.V. Rao, the Institute of Economic Growth, Delhi today
ranks amongst the premier research institutes of the country. It is always
the people belonging to an institution who are responsible for its
greatness. Commemorating the fiftieth year of the Institute, several
illustrious members of the ‘IEG family’, including present faculty, the
former faculty, visiting fellows and Ph.D. students, have come forward to
share their thoughts, memories and feelings for their institute—the IEG.
With 36 chapters in six parts, 17 boxes and 26 photographs, this
festschrift volume also reflects the evolution of research in social
sciences at the IEG during the period 1958-2007. These recollections and
reflections together provide an interesting insight into how the
institution was set up and how it has evolved and contributed to research,
training, teaching and policymaking. The small anecdotes throughout the
book—in the form of boxes, reflecting informal profiles of some
distinguished academics as also aspects of campus life—provide an
interesting read.
Promoted by Transparency International India, this book has been compiled
to create awareness about the current state of governance in India and
directions needed to improve governance in the country. The volume seeks
to analyse the efforts made in this direction and the various tools
available to the common man for availing hassle free public services one
is entitled to.
The book is divided into four parts.
— The first part deals with the perception about governance since time
immemorial.
— Part two covers the state of governance in four major monopolistic
services, namely, the police, judiciary, income tax and property
registration, and the efforts required to improve these services.
— Part three attempts at creating awareness amongst
readers about various tools of improving governance and means and ways to
use them. These tools include: Citizens' Charters, Right to Information,
e-Governance, Social Audits, Report Card and Integrity Pact.
— Part four contains some exemplary initiatives to
enable the concerned quarters to replicate them in order to improve the
public service delivery system in some of the major public services.
National Commission for Enterprises in the Unorganised Sector,
Government of India
Chairman: Arjun K.
Sengupta
This Report is focused on the informal or the unorganised sector of the
economy, which accounts for an overwhelming proportion of the poor and
vulnerable population in an otherwise shining India. It concentrates on a
detailed analysis of the conditions of work and lives of the unorganised
workers consisting of about 92 per cent of the total workforce of about
457 million.
One of the major highlights of this Report is the quantification of
unorganised or informal workers, defined as those who do not have
employment security, work security and social security. These workers are
engaged not only in the unorganised sector but in the organised sector as
well. The picture that the Report presents is based on the latest
available set of data from the Sixty-first Round of the National Sample
Survey in 2004-05. This has been supplemented with data from other
sources.
Transnational Corporations, Extractive Industries and
Development
UNITED NATIONS
World Investment Report 2007 (WIR07) is the seventeenth
in a series published by the United Nations Conference on Trade and
Development (UNCTAD). The Report analyses the latest trends in foreign
direct investment (FDI) and puts a special focus in 2007 on the role of
transnational corporations (TNCs) in the extraction of oil, gas, and metal
minerals.
Higher prices for many minerals have led to renewed
investor interest in the extractive industries. TNCs—including some of the
world´s largest corporations—play a key role in the mining of metals and
in the extraction of oil and gas. Privately owned TNCs dominate the
harvesting of metal minerals, while State-owned companies from developing
and transition economies are key players in oil and gas. Many such
State-owned firms are emerging as TNCs in their own right.
The Trade and Development Report 2007, subtitled "Regional cooperation for
development", recommends that developing countries should strengthen
regional cooperation with other developing countries, but proceed
carefully with regard to North-South bilateral or regional preferential
trade agreements. Such agreements may offer gains in terms of market
access and higher foreign direct investment, but they can also limit
national policy space, which can play an important role in the medium- and
long-term growth of competitive industries. By contrast, strengthened
regional cooperation among developing countries can help accelerate
industrialization and structural change and ease integration into the
global economy. However, to achieve this, trade liberalization is not
enough; active regional cooperation should also extend to areas of policy
that strengthen the potential for growth and structural change, including
monetary and financial arrangements, large infrastructure and
knowledge-generation projects, and industrial policies.
Rice has long
been one of the most protected commodities in world trade. Now the
probable significant liberalisation of trade in rice is likely to have
huge welfare implications for many countries dependent on its production
and trade, particularly those in South Asia.
This book
explores the poverty and welfare implications of this liberalisation for
India, Bangladesh, Pakistan and Sri Lanka, and identifies the effects on
different groups within poor rice-dependent developing countries.
This book will
be of great interest to researchers and policy makers, in South Asia and
elsewhere, looking at the distributional consequences of multilateral
trade agreements in terms of poverty and welfare within individual
countries.
This
comprehensive and accessible text fills the need for a political economy
view of global environmental politics, focusing on the ways key economic
processes affect environmental outcomes. It examines the main actors and
forces shaping global environmental management, particularly in the
developing world. Moving beyond the usual academic emphasis on
inter-national agreements and institutions, it strives to integrate
debates within the real world of global policy and the academic world of
theory.
The book maps
out an original typology of four contrasting worldviews of environmental
change—those of market liberals, institutionalists, bioenvironmentalists,
and social greens— and uses these as a framework to examine the links
between the global political economy and ecological change. This typology
not only helps students understand and participate in debates about these
worldviews but also provides a common language for students and
instructors to discuss the issues across the social sciences. The book
covers globalization and its consequences for the environment; the
evolution of global discourse and global environmental governance; wealth,
poverty, and consumption; the impact on the environment of global trade
and trade agreements; transnational corporations and differential
environmental standards; and the environmental effects of international
financing, including multilateral lending and aid and bilateral and
private finance. Brief, illustrative case studies appear throughout the
text.
From
Resource Scarcity to Ecological Security revisits the findings of
“The Global 2000 Report to the President” — commissioned by President
Jimmy Carter and released in 1980 — and presents an up-to-date over-view,
informed by the earlier projections, of such critical topics as
population, water, food, energy, climate change, deforestation, and
biodiversity. It examines current environmental trends in order to
consider the state of the global environment over the next thirty years
and discusses what can be done now to achieve ecological security.
The
contributors to From Resource Scarcity to Ecological Security find that
the world population will likely continue to level off, but the population
decline in many industrialized countries will create new socioeconomic and
political problems — including the "reverse demographic shock" of
disproportionately large aging populations. Although world food production
is likely to increase at a rate that keeps up with population growth,
greater demand in China as well as distributional issues will keep
significant numbers of people malnourished. In addition to these
continuing scarcity issues, ecological insecurity may increase because of
new threats that include global warming, loss of biodiversity, bioinvasion,
and the rapid worldwide spread of new diseases. Assessing Limits to Growth
not only analyzes the nature of these impending problems but also suggests
ways to solve them.
The book
carries contributions by eminent social scientists on some very important
topics relating to India's economic and social development.
The volume
begins with issues relating to human development, such as education,
health and governance. This is followed by comparison of India and China
development paths. In a diverse country like India, fiscal matters at
State level are important. These are discussed in the section on Indian
fiscal federalism. Another section covers issues on employment,
unemployment, safety nets for the poor and social dimensions of
globalisation. The volume concludes with an analysis of the recent issues
in agriculture.
The volume,
divided into four sections, deals with strategic developments pertaining
to Asia. Recognising the diverse 'push' and 'pull' factors impinging on a
country's strategic posture, the volume starts off by dealing with issues
which the Advisory Committee of Experts guiding this publication felt were
of immediate relevance. Accordingly, the first section, on “International
Security Issues” has articles analysing India's responses to the global
energy security challenges, the resurgent Russia, the emerging military
technologies and their security implications for India, the 'global war on
terror' and the issues concerning the nuclear non-proliferation regime.
The next
three parts contain in-depth analyses of major events in South, East and
the West and Central regions of Asia. These constitute India's immediate
and extended strategic neighbourhood. The wide range of issues dealt with
include the evolving partnership between India and the United States, the
changes in the contours of the Sino-Indian and the Sino-Japanese
relationship, an evaluation of the India-Pakistan peace process, the
challenges of institutionalising democracies in Bangladesh, Nepal, and
Afghanistan, the ethnic conflict in Sri Lanka, the East Asian 'economic
dynamism and political flux', Pyongyang's nuclear 'brinkmanship', Iran's
nuclear programme, developments in Israel-Palestinian relations, and the
role of major powers in Central Asia.
The volume
also presents a Statistical Appendix containing defence and
conflict-related data for important countries in Asia.
The report focuses on the Buildinge-Community Centres
for Rural Development Workshop co-organized by UNESCAP and ADBI, aimed at
examining the various issues related to CeCs in the Asia and the Pacific
region and share good practices that can be used as models for successful
development and operation of these centres.
Earlier versions of the papers in this volume were presented at the
“Regional Conference on Migration and Development in Asia”, held in
Lanzhou, China, 14-16 March 2005. The conference, hosted by China’s
Ministry of Foreign Affairs, was organised by IOM and funded by Britain’s
Department for International Development (DFID).
Though there
has been increasing attention paid to the potential role migration can
play in fostering development, most of that attention has tended to focus
on international migration. Internal migration has been somewhat neglected
but is also an extremely important policy area.
One of the key
aims of the Lanzhou conference was to identify more effective ways to
enhance the benefits of internal migration for poverty reduction and
development, and how this could be complemented by strategies to ensure
that migrants have decent working conditions and access to health and
social services.
ORGANISATION FOR
ECONOMIC CO-OPERATION AND DEVELOPMENT
OECD's first economic survey of the Indian economy. It
opens with a broad overview of economic developments over the past twenty
years, showing how India has grown to become the third largest economy in
the world. It then examines a series of specific policy areas including
the unbalanced growth across states, competition policy and reforming
India's product and service markets, improving the performance of labour
markets, improving the financial system, improving the fiscal system,
improving infrastructure, and upgrading the educational system. For each
policy area, a series of recommendations is made.
Authored by the distinguished economist N.A. Mujumdar,
the bunch of 19 papers brought together in this book seeks to argue that
in the present Indian context, inclusive growth has become both, a growth
and a development imperative: growth, because a high GDP growth like 8 or
9 per cent can be sustained only if other sectors or segments of the
economy, which have been sluggish because of number of factors including
policy neglect, can be activated; development, because this is perhaps the
best route by which the bulk of the poor can be provided with livelihood
and food security.
Facilitating inclusive growth is a far more complicated
process, involving micro planning, evolving area specific solutions and
participation of a number of actors panchayati raj institutions, central
and state Governments and NGOs, SHGs, etc. Inclusive growth also demands a
committed bureaucracy and more imaginative policymakers, from both of whom
a pro-active role is warranted. The exploratory work embodied in this
book, it is hoped, would provoke further studies on the subject.
Indian economic development is only five decades old.
Its future course seems to be bright but uncertain. There are lots of good
and impressive points about India’s emergence as a prominent economic
power and people in industrialized countries are taking note of these
changes. India’s huge middle class, that increasingly includes the rural
well to do, are all aspiring for a higher standard of life for themselves
and for their children. They are making their children seek better marks
and learn new skills; they are doing their best in all walks of life to
get ahead and catch up with global standards. It is this middle class that
is the driving force behind the great push forward that can make India
great in the future. In this thrust forward, this book discusses the role
of the government. But more importantly, the book aims at explaining the
workings of the Indian economy, not to the ‘initiated’, but to the
intelligent reader who is interested in knowing more about India’s
changing economic pattern. It aims at presenting the various intricacies
of the Indian economic system simply and clearly.
The key ingredients of
economic freedom are personal choice, voluntary exchange, freedom to
compete, and protection of the person and property. Economic freedom
liberates individuals and families from government dependence and
gives them control of their own future. Empirical research shows
this spurs economic growth by unleashing individual dynamism. It
also leads to democracy and other freedoms as people are unfettered
from government dependence.
The annual Economic
Freedom of the World Report ranks countries on their level of
economic freedom. This comprehensive index, constructed under the
leadership of The Fraser Institute and Nobel Laureate Milton
Friedman, is the most objective and accurate measure of economic
freedom published to date by any organization and the only one that
uses reproducible measures appropriate for peer-reviewed research.
An ancient
Chinese proverb tells us “Give a man a fish and you feed him for a day.
Teach a man to fish and you feed him for a lifetime.” The same can be said
for development assistance. Solutions provided by outside “experts” are
often rejected or politely shelved. However, solutions based on the
principle of “self-help” are far more likely to take root.
This book
explores the self-help, peer learning approach of the Organisation for
Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD), comparing it with that of
IDRC. It focuses on the importance of networks to development and growth,
and demonstrates that network management is fundamentally different from
the management of companies, organizations, or other bodies that fall
under a single authority.
The book will
be of interest to planners, policymakers, and researchers in the
industrialised and developing worlds, and particularly in the new and
emerging democracies of Eastern Europe.
World Economic and Social
Survey 2007: Development in an Ageing World
Greater longevity is an
indicator of human progress in general. At the same time, increased life
expectancy and lower fertility rates are changing the population structure
worldwide in a major way: the proportion of older persons is rapidly
increasing, a process known as population ageing. The process is
inevitable and is already advanced in developed countries and progressing
quite rapidly in developing ones.
The World Economic and Social
Survey has also come of age as it celebrates the sixtieth anniversary of
the publication, which first appeared in 1948 (then called the World
Economic Survey).
The Survey argues that the
challenges are not insurmountable, but that societies everywhere need to
put in place the policies required to confront those challenges
effectively and to ensure an adequate standard of living for each of their
members, while respecting and promoting the contribution and participation
of all.
The Planning Commission has decided to prepare State Development Reports (SDRs)
for all States and Union Territories of India. The objective in bringing
out these reports is to provide a credible independent quality reference
document on the development profile, set out strategies for accelerating
the growth rate of States, lessen disparities and reduce poverty. The SDR
is meant to discuss the constraints and challenges faced by a State and
provide a vision, blueprint or a roadmap for its socioeconomic progress.
The Lakshadweep Development Report highlights issues
related to the development of small islands and the road ahead for the
progress of the Union Territory. Lakshadweep's potential in tourism,
coconut development and its transformation in social sectors are well
documented in the report. Infrastructure, human development, biodiversity
and environment protection, governance and economic issues of Lakshadweep
are adequately addressed in the report. The report is expected to serve as
a useful reference material and stimulate informed debate on the policy
issues facing the Union Territory.
Editors: Vijay S.
Vyas, Sarthi Acharya, Surjit Singh
and Vidya Sagar
Rajasthan, the
largest state in India, started its quest for development with several
handicaps and a few advantages. Nearly two-third of its area is arid or
semi-arid, with low and irregular rainfall characterised with extremes of
climate. For a predominantly agrarian economy these conditions prove a
major handicap in ensuring sustainable growth.
If geography of
the state is proving a stumbling block, its history—especially, recent
history— makes the task of sustainable growth all the more daunting. The
feudal tendencies had a deep sway over social organisation, which was characterised by hierarchical outlook, paternalistic institutions, low
status of women and sharp social and economic discrimination against
certain sections of population.
DR. raja j chelliah, DR. Paul P Appasamy, Dr. U Sankar,
and Dr. Rita Pandey
Economic instruments have become increasingly popular
worldwide as s strategy to achieve environmental goals. The National
Environment Policy, 2006 recommends the use of economic instruments to
supplement regulation. Unlike emission taxes or tradable permits which
require legal and institutional capacity, ecotaxes on polluting inputs and
outputs can be easily implemented through the existing system of central
taxes. For dispersed non-point source pollution, a tax on input/output is
an ideal instrument for controlling pollution. This volume contains ecotax
proposals for coal, automobiles, detergents, paper and pulp, pesticides,
fertilisers, lead acid batteries and plastics.
After six
decades of Independence about half of rural households in the country do
not have access to electricity and the quality and quantity of electricity
provided to rural users are far from expectation. Large technical and
commercial loss makes the rural electricity system financially unviable.
The overall governance of rural electricity system has polluted the
existing socio-political and economic environment to an extent that
rational decision making has become far too difficult. The structural
reform in electricity sector that started since early nineties has not
resulted in improved services to the rural customers in spite of a
significant increase in electricity tariff. From the experiences in India
and around the world, the book provides directions for rural electricity
system development in the country considering the development concerns,
regulatory and policy issues, technology options and tariff, and
governance mechanism.
The book
will be useful for the policymakers, regulators, rural electricity service
providers, financial institutions, academicians, students and civil
society organisations interested in rural electricity.
The Indian
economy clearly seems to have followed a higher growth trajectory with
over 9 per cent growth in GDP for the fiscal year 2006-07. Despite some
improvements, the performance of agriculture sector, however, continues to
be the cause of concern. The dream of inclusive growth cannot be realised
without revival of sagging agriculture sector. A number of challenges are
being encountered in the sector. Some of these challenges are: (i)
increasing number of small and marginal farmers; (ii) increased
competition due to globalisation process; (iii) reduced capital formation;
(iv) poor infrastructure; and (v) decline of State support to agriculture.
Thus, in present context governance and strengthening of institutional
mechanisms to revive agriculture growth is of paramount need.
Contributors:
G. Jayanthi,
Janet Geddes,
Utpal Moitra and
Ashis Mondal
Participatory Monitoring and Learning (PM&L) is a process of collaborative
review and problem solving, through the generation and use of information
on a regular basis throughout the project cycle. It is a process that
leads to corrective action or improvement within the project, based on the
shared decision-making of a number of stakeholders.
Action for
Social Advancement (ASA) launched a pilot initiative that experimented
with the Participatory Monitoring and Learning (PM&L) approach, within
three World Bank assisted rural development projects in Madhya Pradesh,
India—the District Poverty Initiative Project (MP-DPIP), Rural Women’s
Empowerment Project (Swashakti) and MP Forestry Project.
Editors: V. L.
Chopra,
R. P. Sharma,
Dr. S.R. Bhat, and
Dr. B.M. Prasanna
Recent progress in molecular biology and biotechnology
is impacting the life sciences as well as the lives of people in
unprecedented ways. Plant genetic transformation and molecular marker
technologies have led to a paradigm shift in plant genetic resource
management and crop improvement. Granting patent protection to genes has
not only provided incentive for gene discovery and placed monetary value
on germplasm resources, but also raised concerns about ownership and
access to genetic resources. This book is an outcome of the presentations
made during Dr. B.P. Pal Birth Centenary Symposium organized by the
National Academy of Agricultural Sciences (NAAS), New Delhi, India, in
February 2006. It begins with the commemorative lectures, which trace the
evolution of approaches to the search for new genes in the last seven
decades, since the seminal article written by Dr. B.P. Pal on the ‘Search
for new genes’ in 1936. The book provides a comprehensive update of the
modern biotechnological options for biodiversity management, gene
prospecting, development of ‘designer crops’ and bioremediation. The power
of molecular genetics in dissection of complex biological processes, and
the potential utility of the knowledge that links genes to metabolic
pathways and phenotypes for plant improvement are highlighted. The book
covers strategies for harnessing the community and individual knowledge
for genetic resource management and gene discovery, and presents models
for benefit sharing and participatory plant breeding. Written by eminent
experts in the field, the book shall be of significant interest not only
to the academic and research community worldwide, but also to the policy
makers and science administrators.
Till recently the mention of traditional knowledge
would only elicit metaphors like the Vedas and Upanishads, Aryabhatta,
Panini and Charaka, or the invention of zero. The perspective is changing.
This book deals with the traditional and indigenous knowledge of common
men and women of India, that of its tribal and Dalit population, fisher
folk, craftsmen, artisans and leather workers, their agriculture, housing
and irrigation methods, medicinal knowledge, drinking water collection,
arts and culture. Different chapters establish that the economic
significance of such knowledge in the modern world is continuing, even
increasing, and is being utilised in a wide variety of ways. Globally,
there is an increased interest in traditional and indigenous knowledge. It
is now recognised as an underutilised resource that can help to reduce
poverty, and also as a dormant reserve with considerable commercial
potential.
National income statistics, which form the basis for
measuring and monitoring the performance of an economy, do not include
environmental resources adequately, with the result that they fail to
provide the required inputs for the formulation of sound economic
policies, particularly in the context of sustainable development. Coastal
resources are important in a country like India, which is surrounded by
sea from three sides, and mangroves, the salt tolerant forest ecosystem
that is one of the richest ecosystems in the world, provides a wide range
of ecological and economic products and services, including carbon
sequestration and protection to life and property under severe cyclones
and tsunamis. However, mangroves are neglected, as their value is not
incorporated in the national income data. The present study, which is a
methodological study, compiles economic value of mangroves in India and
shows that this rich ecosystem contributes significantly to the economy,
and it needs to be strengthened in order to promote sustainable
development of coastal regions and to protect coastal population from
cyclones and tsunamis.
Is the Asia-Pacific region becoming the locomotive of the global economy?
Is the region becoming more vulnerable to financial crises? What are the
major macro-economic policy challenges in 2007? Find the answers to these
questions in the Economic and Social Survey of Asia and the Pacific
2007.
No study of globalisation is possible, nor is it
thinkable, without referring to China, India, and Russia, that is to say,
without an analysis of their firms and including them in the global
network of firms. The three countries under study had socialist economies
and are now going through a process of transition towards a market economy
with various degrees of success and, more importantly, using different
methods as far as the relationship between the State and the firms is
concerned. Also, to a large extent, researchers in economics have until
now viewed these countries in a somewhat unbalanced manner and they have
seldom been the object of a comparative study from the perspective of the
globalisation of their firms. The evolution in policy issues has been
strongly backed by a similar evolution in economic theory, the effects
strongly felt in former socialist countries, namely Russia and China, as
well as in countries which had and still have a large 'public sector' like
India. Neither the markets nor the States are nowadays seen as perfect,
and this book deals at many places much more with their subtle
interactions or coordination, than opposition.
After a solid and broad-based growth for three
consecutive years, the world economy is expected to decelerate in 2007,
mainly dragged by a slowdown of the United States. Growth in Europe and
Japan, meanwhile, will not be sufficient for these economies to act as
locomotives of global growth. The outlook remains mostly positive for
developing countries, but a degree of moderation is also expected.
Sustained high growth in China, India and a few other major emerging
economies seems to have engendered synergy among developing countries so
that growth in this group is more endogenous. However, a large number of
developing countries remain highly vulnerable to the vicissitudes of
commodity prices and the volatility of international financial markets.
The report highlights the need for greater employment growth, which has
not kept pace with output growth. The global economic outlook also
encompasses a number of important downside risks: bursts in the housing
bubbles in a number of countries, uncertainties in oil prices and mounting
global imbalances. The report calls for international macroeconomic policy
coordination in order to facilitate an orderly adjustment of global
imbalances.
The Planning Commission has
decided to prepare State Development Reports (SDRs) for all States and
Union Territories of India. The objective in bringing out these reports is
to provide a credible independent quality reference document on the
development profile, set out strategies for accelerating the growth rate
of States, lessen disparities and reduce poverty. The SDR is meant to
discuss the constraints and challenges faced by a State and provide a
vision, blueprint or a roadmap for its socioeconomic progress.
Each SDR is being prepared with
the assistance of reputed national-level agencies, under the supervision
of a Core Committee, headed by a Member of the Planning Commission, and
including a senior representative of the State Government. The publication
of the Karnataka Development Report follows the recently published SDRs of
Maharashtra, Uttar Pradesh, Rajasthan, Tamil Nadu and Himachal Pradesh,
while SDRs of many other States and Union Territories of India are under
various stages of preparation.
The Maharashtra Development Report reviews the State's
development experience and highlights issues critical for its future
progress. The report is expected to serve as a useful reference and
stimulate informed debate on the policy issues facing the state.
After the Hong Kong meetings in
December 2005, what are the key trade and development issues that face
developing countries in the closing stages of the Doha Round? Leading
economic analysts, including Nobel laureate Joseph Stiglitz, examine the
detailed issues that developing country negotiators must understand. As
always, the devil lies in the detail, and it is at the detailed level that
the costs and benefits of trade agreements will be determined.
Essential reading for policy
makers, government officials, scholars and students interested in the
making and conduct of international trade negotiations and policy
Can India grow without Bharat?
Can we reap the “demographic dividend” of a young population? How should
we revive industrial employment? Is the National Rural Employment
Guarantee Act affordable? Why have reforms sputtered despite the “dream
team”? How is growth so strong though reforms have stalled? How can
populism be restrained? Can 8 % growth be sustained? Should we deploy
forex reserves to build infrastructure? What must we do to renew our
decaying cities? What is the solution to the coming water crisis? Who are
India’s tax reformers? Can bilateral trade agreements substitute for the
Doha Round? Should SAARC have a common currency? Is “fiscal
responsibility” working? Does monetary policy work? Can we really aspire
to China’s economic league---or is it all hype? How good is our foreign
policy?
The eminent economist Shankar
Acharya provides forthright and provocative answers to these key issues
about India’s development.
While scientists can develop
yield enhancing technologies, these will not make an impact on production
and productivity without appropriate support from public policy and
investment. National Academy of Agricultural Sciences (NAAS) has from time
to time assembled groups of eminent scientists to analyse public policy
issues in important areas related to agriculture and prepare papers
relevant to policy formulation. The present book includes 39 policy papers
issued by the Academy during the last 15 years covering a wide range of
issues like: Sustainable Livelihood and Nutrition Security, Water
Resources Management, Soil Health Enhancement and Fertiliser Use,
Agro-biodiversity and Biosafety, Agricultural Research and Education, and
Globalisation and Agri-Exports. Many of the suggestions and
recommendations contained in the book present a road map for rescuing the
fate of farmers and farming from the present agrarian crisis prevailing in
several parts of the country.
This book will be useful for
scholars in agricultural universities and research institutions and for
policy and investment decisions in the field of agriculture.
West Asia is in the throes of acute political turbulence today. Given West
Asia’s energy resources, developments in the region have profound
implications for the wider world. The international community has been
deeply concerned with the fragile conditions of the region in recent
years. This book tries to analyse the evolving security environment in
West Asia and its implication for global security. This edited volume
discusses critical issues of our times: religious extremism,
democratization, WMD proliferation, international terrorism, external
intervention in the region, and energy security. The articles in the book
analyse these issues critically and suggest possible alternatives for
securing peace and prosperity in West Asia.
Volume 1: A Millennial Perspective
Volume 2: Historical Statistics
Angus Maddison
The World Economy brings
together two major reference works by Angus Maddison:
The World Economy: A Millenial
Perspective, first published in 2001 and
The World Economy: Historical
Statistics, published in 2003.
This new edition contains
Statlinks, a service providing access to the underlying data in Excel®
format. The World Economy is a “must” for scholars and students of
economics and economic history as well as for statisticians, while the
casual reader will find much of fascinating interest.
Written by the distinguished
economic historian, Angus Maddison, together, the two volumes
(bound-in-one) comprising The World Economy, hold authoritative analysis
along with extensive supporting data on a global level for the growth and
performance of various economies across the world, over a very large span
of time. They undoubtedly provide answers to many a big question and
promise to offer clues to still unanswered paradoxes. This ‘only one of
its kind’ publication is made more attractive in the present format
(‘two-in-one edition’, hard cover) that is sure to be a valuable addition
to any library, personal or otherwise.
Community-Driven Development (CDD), in the World Bank parlance, refers to
an approach where communities have direct control over key project
decisions as well as management of investment funds. The CDD approach
treats poor people as assets and partners in the development process,
building on their institutions and resources. Monitoring and evaluation
(M&E) in the CDD context can potentially be much more than an
input-output-outcome monitoring and a reporting mechanism. This guidebook
(a World Bank co-publication) is all about improving the implementation of
CDD projects using M&E as a management tool. It is built on the contention
that a ‘learning-based’ M&E system, which involves different project
management levels and other stakeholders in a continuous process of
‘learning’, can help the project management make course corrections,
guiding project strategy on an ongoing basis, ultimately leading to better
project outcomes.
The Planning Commission has
decided to prepare State Development Reports (SDRs) for all States and
Union Territories of India. The objective in bringing out these reports is
to provide a credible independent quality reference document on the
development profile, set out strategies for accelerating the growth rate
of States, lessen disparities and reduce poverty. The SDR is meant to
discuss the constraints and challenges faced by a State and provide a
vision, blueprint or a roadmap for its socioeconomic progress.
Each SDR is being prepared with
the assistance of reputed national-level agencies, under the supervision
of a Core Committee, headed by a Member of the Planning Commission, and
including a senior representative of the State Government. The publication
of the Karnataka Development Report follows the recently published SDRs of
Maharashtra, Uttar Pradesh, Rajasthan, Tamil Nadu and Himachal Pradesh,
while SDRs of many other States and Union Territories of India are under
various stages of preparation.
The Karnataka Development
Report dwells upon the entire gamut of the State, across sections ranging
from real and financial sector, regional disparities, human and social
development, environmental sustainability, governance and service
delivery. Karnataka's strength lies in four major areas viz., good
governance (transparency and accountability), solid resources (i.e. a good
accumulation of human capital), near absence of communal conflicts and a
good track record of management. The State however needs to address the
stagnancy in agriculture, persisting regional disparity in respect of
industrial development, income inequality, and levels of living related
issues and social security. The report brings together exclusive chapters
dedicated to the statement of a vision for future development in all these
while also prescribing policy directions and ‘drivers'.
Essays on the Poverty
of Food Policy and the Wealth of the Social Landscape
Farhad Mazhar, Daniel
Buckles, P.V. Satheesh, and Farida Akhter
This publication explores
the meaning of agriculture and guides the reader into new territory,
where food, ecology, and culture converge. In the food systems of
South Asia, the margin between cultivated and uncultivated
biodiversity dissolves through women’s day-to-day practice of
collecting and cooking food, constituting a feminine landscape. The
authors bring this practice to light, and demonstrate the value of
food production and consumption systems that are localized rather
than globalized. Based on extensive field research in India and
Bangladesh, with and by farming communities, the book offers both
people-based and evidence-based perspectives on the value of
ecological farming, the survival strategies of the very poor, and
the ongoing contribution of biodiversity to livelihoods. It also
introduces new concepts such as “the social landscape” and “the
ethical relations underlying production systems” relevant to key
debates concerning the cultural politics of food sovereignty, land
tenure, and the economics of food systems. The authors are leading
activists and accomplished researchers with a long history of
engagement with farming communities and the peasant world in South
Asia and elsewhere.
The story of a rising
India has surprised the world but also captured its imagination. It
is said that no other democracy has ever achieved levels of
sustained economic growth comparable to India's over the last two
decades. Exploring India's growing global importance and its
domestic and external challenges, this unique volume examines the
complexities of India's political, economic, and social evolution in
the coming decade.
Combining lively
discussions with back-ground essays contributed by a galaxy of
prominent individuals from different spheres of life—distinguished
scholars, policymakers, economists, corporate leaders, journalists,
educationists and film-makers—the book offers compelling insights
into the democracy, economy, and society of an emerging power.
Vulnerability to poverty is clearly linked to
the Poor’s access to primary entitlements, which in turn depends on a functioning
‘public realm’. Justice and judicial reforms are central to this. Policy-making for an
efficient and citizen-oriented judiciary in India has always lacked a comprehensive
approach. The ‘piece meal’ initiatives hitherto initiated never became imbedded. The
essays in the book articulates for the very first time for India, a wide-ranging
judicial reform agenda that includes improvements in judicial governance, its linkages
to economic growth, alternate dispute resolution, human resource development in the
judicial branches, the use of IT, legal education, judicial and non-judicial training,
and funding civil society initiatives for legal empowerment. Every essay forms a vital
arm in the area of Judicial Reforms. However, the trajectory of suggested judicial
reforms echoes the classic law and development movement bypassing the legal profession,
which is less by design and more by default.
The increasing use of anti-dumping measures covering a wide range of
sectors, both by developed and developing countries in recent years, indicates a policy
substitution to protect domestic industries in the face of tariff reforms. While the
developing countries are demanding special and different treatment to protect their interest
against a possible misuse of this provision by their developed counterparts, many of them also
rank among the major violators. In this scenario, a systemic review and subsequent
modification/ scrapping of the anti-dumping agreement is the need of the hour. Responding to
this need the Hong Kong Ministerial declaration (December 2005) has noted that negotiations on
anti-dumping should, as appropriate, "clarify and improve the rules" in three major concern
areas (determination of dumping, procedures and the level, scope and duration of adopted
measures). The eight chapters in the current volume focus on the current scenario in select
developed and developing countries, use of this provision in intra-developing country trade
and analysis of anti-dumping cases lodged at the WTO dispute settlement body. The discussions
in the volume significantly contribute in the ongoing debate and serve as an important input
for current negotiations.
EDITORs: P.K. Joshi,
Ashok Gulati, Ralph Cummings Jr.
Pro-poor opportunities are rapidly unfolding in South Asia, spurred
by new lifestyles and tastes, stimulated by increasing incomes,
spreading urbanisation, and expanding globalisation. Dietary
patterns are changing of both the poor and the rich, as well as
rural and urban consumers, from staple foodgrains to
high-value-commodities such as fruits, vegetables, milk, meat, eggs,
and fish. The real challenge is how to grab these opportunities to
alleviate poverty and improve quality of life, particularly for
smallholders. This book, Comprising contributions by experts from
various countries, the book provides a range of information,
analysis, and the beginnings of pathways to accelerate agricultural
diversification and facilitate inclusiveness of small holders
through correcting incentives, evolving institutions, and developing
infrastructure.
The Planning Commission has
decided to prepare State Development Reports (SDRs) for all States and
Union Territories of India. The objective in bringing out these reports is
to provide a credible independent quality reference document on the
development profile, set out strategies for accelerating the growth rate
of States, lessen disparities and reduce poverty. The SDR is meant to
discuss the constraints and challenges faced by a State and provide a
vision, blueprint or a roadmap for its socio-economic progress
Each SDR is being prepared with
the assistance of reputed expert national-level agencies, under the
supervision of a Core Committee, headed by a Member of the Planning
Commission, and including a senior representative of the State Government.
The publication of the Uttar Pradesh Development Report follows the
recently published SDRs of Rajasthan, Tamil Nadu and Himachal Pradesh,
while SDRs of many other States and Union Territories of India are under
various stages of preparation.
The Uttar Pradesh
Development Report reviews the State's development experience and
highlights issues critical for its future progress. Uttar Pradesh's latent
potential in irrigation, power, transport, agriculture, and tourism is
well documented in the report. The report is expected to serve as a useful
reference and stimulate informed debate on the policy issues facing the
most populous state of the country.
For more than five
decades, United Nations has been giving development aid to
developing countries for their economic and social development. At
its birth, this was hailed as one of the greatest achievements of
the UN and for humanity. The UN operated three aid programmes from
its founding in 1945 until the creation of UNDP in 1996. But despite
the scale and scope of these programmes, they did not attract much
serious attention from scholars and institutions interested in
multilateral aid.
This book presents for
the first time a comprehensive survey and critical analysis of these
programmes. The author explains in detail the political struggles
and considerations underlying the birth of each of these programmes
and some inherent flaws in their conceptualisation. In analysing
their growth and changes in structures, the author discusses the
modalities and chronic problems encountered in implementation, in
coordination at all levels and in the evaluation of their impact on
economic development in the recipient countries.
World
Investment Report 2006 focuses on the rise of foreign direct
investment (FDI) by transnational corporations (TNCs) from
developing and transition economies.
New
sources of FDI are emerging among developing and transition
economies. This phenomenon has been particularly marked in the past
ten years, and a growing number of TNCs from these economies are
emerging as major regional - or sometimes even global - players. The
new links these TNCs are forging with the rest of the world will
have far-reaching repercussions in shaping the global economic
landscape of the coming decades.
Global Partnership and National
Policies for Development
UNITED NATIONS CONFERENCE ON TRADE AND
DEVELOPMENT
The Trade and Development
Report 2006 offers relevant ideas and general principles for designing
macroeconomic, sectoral and trade policies that can help developing
countries to succeed in today's global economic environment. Particular
attention is given to policies that support the creative forces of markets
and the entrepreneurial dimension of investment.
The Report also argues that a
global partnership for development will be incomplete without an effective
system of global economic governance. Such a system should take into
account the specific needs of developing countries. At the same time it
should ensure the right balance between sovereignty in national economic
policy-making on the one hand, and multilateral disciplines and collective
governance on the other.
JAMES GWARTNEY & ROBERT
LAWSON with WILLIAM EASTERLY
With an Introduction by PARTH J SHAH
The key
ingredients of economic freedom are personal choice, voluntary
exchange, freedom to compete, and protection of the person and
property. Economic freedom liberates individuals and families from
government dependence and gives them control of their own future.
Empirical research shows this spurs economic growth by unleashing
individual dynamism. It also leads to democracy and other freedoms
as people are unfettered from government dependence.
The
annual Economic Freedom of the World Report ranks countries on their
level of economic freedom. This comprehensive index, constructed
under the leadership of The Fraser Institute and Nobel Laureate
Milton Friedman, is the most objective and accurate measure of
economic freedom published to date by any organization and the only
one that uses reproducible measures appropriate for peer-reviewed
research.
This volume includes
contributions by some of the most distinguished economists/experts
and provides rare insights into India's development journey through
time and space—the successes and failures, and the new challenges
emerging from integration with the world economy. Opportunities
offered by the forces of globalisation offer India immense scope to
improve the quality of life of its people provided appropriate
policies are put in place.
India's Economy: A
Journey in Time and Space, is the hundredth volume of Economic
Developments in India. This is a selection of 20 articles from over
500 published in Economic Developments in India since its inception
in 1998 upto December 2005. This volume, in three sections, covers
the most vital issues relating to the journey: (i) Growth, Poverty
and Reforms (ii) Globalisation and (iii) Sectoral Developments:
Agriculture, Industry, Financial and External Sectors. The general
message which emerges is that India's future problems are no doubt
large but manageable. In this context, the book examines the
challenges ahead, outlines policies, and identifies lacunae in their
implementation, which lie at the root of most of the difficulties
facing the nation today. Covering a broad range of critical issues,
the book will be of interest to policy-makers, researchers, students
of Indian economy and India-watchers.
With progressive
liberalisation of quantitative restrictions and tariff barriers
following multilateral trade negotiations in WTO, environmental
standards have emerged as significant trade barriers for developing
countries’ exports. In this volume, leading experts examine the
incidence of environmental requirements in the North and their
impact on market access for Southern products especially those from
South Asia. The book deals with various dimensions of such
environmental and health related standards and their impact on South
Asian trade in terms of their prohibitive effect, discriminatory
impact and high compliance costs. The volume concludes with an
agenda of action points for governments, business houses and
international agencies to address the challenge.
According
to the 2006 World Economic and Social Survey, world inequality is
high and rising. The main reason is that in the industrialized world
the income level over the last five decades has grown steadily,
while it has failed to do so in many developing countries. Not more
than a few developing countries have been growing at sustained rates
in recent decades, but these include, most notably, the world’s two
most populous countries, China and India. Considering that these two
countries alone account for more than one third of world population,
inequality across the globe is beginning to decline. When these
countries are left out, however, international income inequality is
seen as having continued to rise strongly from already high levels.
Because more than 70 per cent of global inequality is explained by
the income divergence between countries, its causes and implications
are the focus of the 2006 Survey.
The new turn in India's
economic policies and performance in the last decade of the 20th
Century; the success of Indian enterprise in the post-WTO world; the
emergence of a confident professional middle-class; a demonstrated
nuclear capability; and, the resilience of an open society and an
open economy, in the face of multiple and complex challenges—these
have all shaped India's response to the tectonic shifts in the
global balance of power in the post-Cold War era. No economist has
paid a closer attention to the strategic consequences of India's
increasingly impressive economic performance than Sanjaya Baru.
In this collection of
academic essays and newspaper columns, that experts and lay readers
would find equally stimulating, Baru explores the busin