Suchergebnisse
Filter
21 Ergebnisse
Sortierung:
India´s Development Strategy: Crisis and Conflict
India, at the time of attaining political independence in 1947, had a well-established capitalist class and a trained bureaucracy. Soon after independence the political leadership formulated a programme of rapid economic development, with a balanced growth of agriculture and industry providing full employment and equitable income distribution. Its basic objective was to achieve a self-reliant, growing economy that would provide all possible opportunities for advancement. In this paper, the author takes a close look at India's evolution - the achievements and the failures - and draws conclusions for the future. An attempt is made at (a) identifying the major components of India's development strategy (b) analysing the actual performance of this strategy, (c) assessing the current situation, and (d) discerning, to the extent feasible, the contours of the future trends.
BASE
Growth, Distribution, and Uneven Development. Amitava Krishna Dutt
In: Economic Development and Cultural Change, Band 41, Heft 3, S. 667-670
ISSN: 1539-2988
Surplus Profit and Class Relations in Two Stages of Capitalism
In: Science & society: a journal of Marxist thought and analysis, Band 54, Heft 2, S. 179
ISSN: 0036-8237
Class Struggles, Economic Laws and Historical Materialism
In: Social scientist: monthly journal of the Indian School of Social Sciences, Band 9, Heft 2/3, S. 3
On the Laws of Concentration and Centralization of Capital
In: Social scientist: monthly journal of the Indian School of Social Sciences, Band 8, Heft 3, S. 3
On Marxian Economics
In: Social scientist: monthly journal of the Indian School of Social Sciences, Band 7, Heft 5, S. 3
West Bengal: A Freak of History or the Yenan of India ?
In: Social scientist: monthly journal of the Indian School of Social Sciences, Band 6, Heft 6/7, S. 9