Hastening slowly : India's industrial growth in the era of economic reforms / M. Suresh Babu
Material type: TextPublication details: India Orient BlackSwan 2018Description: 237 pISBN:- 9789352870783
- 9352870786
- 338.954 BAB-M
- HC435.3 .S857 2017
Item type | Current library | Collection | Shelving location | Call number | Status | Date due | Barcode | Item holds | |
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Books | BITS Pilani Hyderabad | 330 | General Stack (For lending) | 338.954 BAB-M (Browse shelf(Opens below)) | Available | 36801 |
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338.954 AGG-A Social and economic impact of SEZs in India / | 338.954 AGR-P Sustaining high growth in India / | 338.954 AHL-I India's economic reforms and development : | 338.954 BAB-M Hastening slowly : | 338.954 BAL-P Economic reforms and growth in India : essays from economic and political weekly | 338.954 BAL-P Economic growth and its distribution in India / | 338.954 BAL-P India's economy from Nehru to Modi : a brief history / |
Post-Independence India’s diverse economy witnessed major changes in the 1990s, most of which were aimed at changing the industrial landscape. As the control and command of the state were diluted, competitive market conditions were expected to take their place and enhance output growth in the manufacturing sector.
Hastening Slowly is a comprehensive analysis of the changes in the market structure and performance of Indian manufacturing industries since the onset of these policy changes. With in-depth analyses of market structure, market power and performance, competition and entry barriers, regional industrial growth patterns and econometric substantiation, the author argues that market power does exist. The author also identifies and quantifies the major entry barriers—the biggest hindrance to the competitive process—strategically erected by firms in the Indian context.
Finally, the book briefly studies the productivity of major industries and regional inequality in the manufacturing sector. The author shows that there has been no substantial improvement in productivity and that inequality across regions is widening. He also shows that unorganised manufacturing has performed better than organised manufacturing.
This meticulously-researched work, applicable not only to India but to any late industrialising country, is a pertinent contribution to the literature on economic policy and thought. Students and scholars of economics, management studies and development studies will find the book interesting.
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