000 02045nam a2200193 4500
005 20251216105145.0
020 _a9789369891092
041 _aEnglish
082 _a320.954
_bKAP/S
084 _2Colon Classification
100 _aKapur, Devesh
_96360
245 _aSixth of Humanity : Independent India's Development Odyssey
250 _a1
260 _aHariyana:
_bHarpercollins,
_c2025.
500 _aIndia's journey has been distinctively 'precocious' in comparative terms. It opted for democracy before development and social change, promoted high-skilled services before and over low-skilled manufacturing and chose a globalization that favoured exports of talented people and short-changed the poor. The socialist state became an inefficiently capitalist one before providing the public goods of physical infrastructure and human capital. The outcomes have been surprising, with the country achieving success in creating and sustaining democracy, albeit flawed, and maintaining a modicum of order. Four decades of economic dynamism and the emergence of a somewhat more capable Indian state has meant that it is able to build infrastructure and deliver the essentials of life to its population at scale-still not without disappointments, but a massive improvement over the past. Just as India's aspiration has lifted to building 'world-class' statues, temples, bullet trains, airports and digital systems, the undermining of some of the real achievements of democracy, federalism and nation-building stand in the way. As the world gets radically upended, India's development odyssey is at a critical juncture. A Sixth of Humanity is an attempt to trace how one of the largest and most diverse countries in the world, uniquely and daringly, attempted four concurrent transformations-building a state, creating an economy, changing society and forging a sense of nationhood-under conditions of universal suffrage.
650 _apolitics, economics, and history.
_96361
700 _a Arvind Subramanian
_96362
942 _2ddc
_cBK
999 _c754243
_d754243