India's Economic Reforms, 1991-2001Clarendon Press, 26/09/1996 - 298 من الصفحات India is the world's largest democracy, and second-largest developing country. For forty years it has also been one of the most dirigiste and autarkic. The 1980s saw most developing and erstwhile communist countries opt for market economic systems. India belatedly initiated similar reforms in 1991. This book evaluates the progress of those reforms, covering all of the major areas of policy; stabilization, taxation and trade, domestic and external finance, agriculture, industry, the social sectors, and poverty alleviation. Will India realize its great potential by freeing itself from the self-imposed constraints that have hindered its development? This is the important and fascinating question considered by this book. |
من داخل الكتاب
النتائج 6-10 من 96
الصفحة xiii
... India Tax Reforms Committee Urban Land (Ceiling and Regulation) Act Unit Trust of India value added tax wholesale price index Note on Lakhs and Crores We have used the Indian terms lakh, meaning hundred thousand (105), and crore ...
... India Tax Reforms Committee Urban Land (Ceiling and Regulation) Act Unit Trust of India value added tax wholesale price index Note on Lakhs and Crores We have used the Indian terms lakh, meaning hundred thousand (105), and crore ...
الصفحة 2
... India by July 1991. The change of mind-set, to use a fashionable cliché, during the previous five years had been remarkable, although it was also remarkably slow to come. For ... India now has adequate 2 INDIA'S ECONOMIC REFORMS 1991l2001.
... India by July 1991. The change of mind-set, to use a fashionable cliché, during the previous five years had been remarkable, although it was also remarkably slow to come. For ... India now has adequate 2 INDIA'S ECONOMIC REFORMS 1991l2001.
الصفحة 3
... India cannot 1 See Bardhan (1984) , ch. 8, and Joshi and Little (1994) , ch. 3, for an earlier denunciation of these subsidies and political explanation of their provenance. make a great leap forward with her feet tied by INTRODUCTION 3.
... India cannot 1 See Bardhan (1984) , ch. 8, and Joshi and Little (1994) , ch. 3, for an earlier denunciation of these subsidies and political explanation of their provenance. make a great leap forward with her feet tied by INTRODUCTION 3.
الصفحة 8
... India than has yet been accepted by the government. We turn next to the question of protection. We believe in and advocate an absence of import and export controls, and a low uniform tariff. Having regard to strong arguments in favour ...
... India than has yet been accepted by the government. We turn next to the question of protection. We believe in and advocate an absence of import and export controls, and a low uniform tariff. Having regard to strong arguments in favour ...
الصفحة 10
... India should be explicitly, indeed vociferously, aiming is the same as that which is also the aim, now largely achieved, of all the Western industrialized countries (including Japan) and by now many developing countries. It is a market ...
... India should be explicitly, indeed vociferously, aiming is the same as that which is also the aim, now largely achieved, of all the Western industrialized countries (including Japan) and by now many developing countries. It is a market ...
المحتوى
1 | |
13 | |
3Fiscal Policy and Trade Policy | 63 |
4Financial Sector Reform | 109 |
5Industrial Policy and Factor Markets | 171 |
6The Social Sectors Poverty and Reform | 219 |
7Summary and Afterthoughts | 247 |
Bibliography | 267 |
Index | 277 |
طبعات أخرى - عرض جميع المقتطفات
عبارات ومصطلحات مألوفة
achieved agricultural allowed assets banks borrowing budget capital cent of GDP central Centre Chapter companies competition consider corporate cost countries crores current account deficit debt deposit direct discussed domestic economic effective efficiency employment enterprises estimates excise expenditure exports favour firms fiscal fiscal deficit foreign funds further given growth higher important improvement income increase India industry inflation inflows institutions interest interest rates investment issue labour lending less liberalization limit loans losses major measures Note operation output payments political poor poverty present primary problem production profitability programme promoters protection public sector raised reasons reduced reform regulation relative remain reserves restrictions result rise rural savings schemes securities share social structure subsidies suggested tariff taxation trade wages