Uneven Development in the Third World: A Study of China and India
Intro -- Contents -- List of Figures -- List of Tables -- List of Abbreviations -- Foreword -- Preface to the Second Edition -- Acknowledgements -- PART I: DEVELOPMENT STRATEGIES AND CONCEPTS -- 1 Strategies and Outcomes -- I. Strategies: economic and social outcomes -- II. Why a China-India comparison? -- III. Outline of the study -- 2 Concepts and Measurement of Uneven Development -- I. Unbalanced growth -- II. Urban bias -- III. Unequal exchange -- IV. Measurement of uneven development -- V. Conclusion -- 3 Uneven Development in China and India -- I. Measurement of uneven development -- II. Alternative development strategies -- III. Conclusion -- 4 Stabilisation and Economic Reforms -- I. Recent economic reforms in China and India -- II. Reform of state enterprises -- IIlI. A China-India comparison -- IV. Conclusion -- 5 Linkages and Imbalances -- I. Sectoral output and employment linkages -- II. An aggregate analysis: China and India -- III. Comparison with other developing countries -- IV. Linkages, growth and imbalance -- V. Conclusion -- Appendix 5.1: Methodology used for estimating backward and forward linkages -- Appendix 5.2: Estimation of employment for China and India -- PART II: DEVELOPMENT OUTCOMES -- 6 Development Outcomes: Growth -- I. Output growth -- II. Growth of agricultural and industrial productivity -- III. Sectoral investment and efficiency -- IV. Conclusion -- 7 Development Outcomes: Inequalities -- I. Rural-urban inequalities -- II. Regional inequalities -- III. Class inequalities -- IV. Conclusion -- Appendix 7.1: Mathematical proof of unbiased estimation of variance -- 8 Classes, Technology and Access -- I. Technology policies and approaches -- II. Access to technology and inputs -- III. Class and commodity bias in agricultural research -- IV. Regional disparities -- V. Conclusion -- 9 Access to Health Services.