Anbieter: Majestic Books, Hounslow, Vereinigtes Königreich
Zustand: New. pp. 422 Illus. Artikel-Nr. 7664641
Anzahl: 4 verfügbar
Anbieter: Vedams eBooks (P) Ltd, New Delhi, Indien
Hardbound. Zustand: As New. New. Contents Foreword. Preface. I. Economic reforms food security and public distribution 1. Economic reforms emerging scenario/K. Rajan. 2. Food security and food stock management under liberalisation/M. Mohandas. 3. Liberalisation public distribution and food security a case study/P. Ibrahim and Pramod E.K. II. Growth employment and poverty 4. Economic growth and structural change of India during the post reform period/B.A. Prakash. 5. Impact of economic reforms on employment in India/P. Arunachalam. 6. Employment trends in manufacturing sector with special reference to Kerala/Martin Patrick. 7. Economic reforms and poverty/K. Rajan. III. Agriculture 8. Globalization and Indian agriculture emerging issues/N. Radhakrishnan. 9. Agricultural inputs supply system in India trends and concerns/K.P. Mani. IV. Infrastructure 10. The power system of Kerala a post liberalization analysis/K.V. Pavithran. 11. Information technology and economic development of India/V.R. Sathish. V. Banking and financial sector 12. Financial sector liberalisation in India/A.C.K. Nambiar. 13. Banking sector reforms and performance/S. Harikumar. VI. Health education and women 14. Causal nexus between health expenditure and economic growth in Southern Indian states/K. Sham Bhat. 15. Expenditure on child birth in rural Kerala an inter community analysis/A. Ashokan. 16. Economic reform GATS and higher education/P.S. Mohankumar. 17. Women's development in globalised India opportunities and threats/M. Meera Bai. VII. External sector 18. Impact of economic reforms on external sector/A.M. Ravindran. 19. FDI in the post reform period/C. Krishnan. 20. Patent regime and WTO in India/S. Muraleedharan. VIII. Globalisation 21. Globalization and its socio economic impact/V. Mathew Kurian. 22. Global justice and W.T.O Frameworks for evaluation and alternatives for discussion/G. Visakh Varma. 23. Rhetoric in defence of Neoliberal ideology a critique of Bhagwati's In defense of globalisation /M.A. Oommen and John M. Itty. List of contributors. Index. The primary goal of Indian economic planning was to achieve rapid economic development an it was believed that the fruits of development would percolate to the poor and the under privileged through the trickle down effect. The most important strategy adopted for rapid economic development was to mobilize public investments in basic and heavy industries infrastructure and in major irrigation infrastructure. The public sector was assigned a dominant role in development and all the basic sectors and critical areas of investment were reserved to the public sector. At the same time the private investments were regulated by a Plethora of Controls such as Industrial Licensing Policy Foreign Exchange Regulation Act and monopolies and restrictive trade practices. However such a strategy of predominance of public sector and highly controlled private sector did not succeed in registering high rate of growth as expected. As a consequence it also failed to reduce the incidence and intensity of poverty and the government was forced to refocuses planned economic development with poverty alleviation as one of the principal goals since the Fifth Plan. But the predominance of public sector continued without modification. 422 pp. Artikel-Nr. 62035
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