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Inclusive growth and social change : formal-informal-agrarian relations in India / Saumya Chakrabarti with contributions by Anirban Kundu and Kasturi Sadhu.

By: Contributor(s): Material type: TextTextPublisher: New Delhi, India : Oxford University Press, 2016Description: lxv, 587 pages : maps ; 23 cmContent type:
  • text
Media type:
  • unmediated
Carrier type:
  • volume
ISBN:
  • 9780199466061 (hbk.)
  • 0199466068
Subject(s): DDC classification:
  • 23 338.954 CHA 011826
Contents:
Part I: Agriculture Industry Relations; Part II: Formal informal Agriculture Relations in India; Part III: Models of Formal informal agriculture Relations; Part IV: Perspectives
Summary: The current discourses on Indias economy indicate an ongoing process of structural transformation coupled with inclusive growth. This book presents a critique of this proposition from the perspective of the non-agricultural informal sectora component of the Indian economy that exists and expands without reaping any of the benefits of the high growth rate driven by the formal capital-rich sector. Questioning the idea of a formalinformal duality, the book explicates both the conflicts and complementarities between these two segments of the economy. It argues that, because of these conflicts and complementarities, the formality has to negotiate constantly with the informality, with or without the intervention of the State, thereby giving rise to a fractured/distorted structure of capitalism. The book engages with both orthodox and heterodox discourses of development.0Through macro-models of interaction between formal, informal, and agriculture sectors along with detailed empirical analysis using state-, industry- and firm-level data on India, the book interrogates the paradigm of growth being inclusive, arguing that to incorporate the informal sector in the circuits of capital, a progressive structural change is needed within this sector.
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Holdings
Item type Current library Call number Status Date due Barcode
Book Book Indian Institute for Human Settlements, Bangalore 338.954 CHA 011826 (Browse shelf(Opens below)) Available 011826

Includes statistical tables;

Includes bibliographical references (pages 552-571).

Part I: Agriculture Industry Relations; Part II: Formal informal Agriculture Relations in India; Part III: Models of Formal informal agriculture Relations; Part IV: Perspectives


The current discourses on Indias economy indicate an ongoing process of structural transformation coupled with inclusive growth. This book presents a critique of this proposition from the perspective of the non-agricultural informal sectora component of the Indian economy that exists and expands without reaping any of the benefits of the high growth rate driven by the formal capital-rich sector. Questioning the idea of a formalinformal duality, the book explicates both the conflicts and complementarities between these two segments of the economy. It argues that, because of these conflicts and complementarities, the formality has to negotiate constantly with the informality, with or without the intervention of the State, thereby giving rise to a fractured/distorted structure of capitalism. The book engages with both orthodox and heterodox discourses of development.0Through macro-models of interaction between formal, informal, and agriculture sectors along with detailed empirical analysis using state-, industry- and firm-level data on India, the book interrogates the paradigm of growth being inclusive, arguing that to incorporate the informal sector in the circuits of capital, a progressive structural change is needed within this sector.

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