Download presentation
Presentation is loading. Please wait.
Published byJillian Slatter Modified over 10 years ago
1
Political Economy Part 1: Economic Development Gov 1255 Politics of India Prof Prerna Singh
2
Political Economy of Economic Development in India 1950 to 1964 The Nehru era 1965 to the early 1980s The Indira Gandhi era 1980s onwards
3
Political Economy of Economic Development in India 1950 to 1964 The Nehru era 1965 to the early 1980s The Indira Gandhi era 1980s onwards Statist model of Development: Import Substitution-led Industrialization
4
Political Economy of Economic Development in India 1950 to 1964 The Nehru era 1965 to the early 1980s The Indira Gandhi era 1980s onwards Mid-1980s – 1991 1991 onwards Statist model of Development: Import Substitution-led Industrialization Pro-Business turn Neo-liberal Reforms
5
In this Lecture 1950 to 1964 The Nehru era 1965 to the early 1980s The Indira Gandhi era Statist model of Development: Import Substitution-led Industrialization
6
Statist model of Development What was this model of development? Why was it adopted? What was its impact? How did it vary under Nehru vs. Indira Gandhi?
7
The Statist Model of Development Import Substitution-led Industrialization The Leading Role of the State Emphasis on self-sufficiency Substituting imports to minimize foreign dependence Priority to heavy industry Neglect of agriculture Focus on higher education
8
Why was this model adopted? External factors Theory of Keynesian economics Experience of other countries Internal factors Values of Indian nationalist movement Nehru’s nationalist and socialist leanings
9
The Statist Model of Development Nehru’s nationalist and socialist leanings Suspicion of an open economy
10
The Statist Model of Development Nehru’s nationalist and socialist leanings Suspicion of an open economy Resistance to foreign investors Protectionism Preference for heavy industry
11
The Statist Model of Development Nehru’s nationalist and socialist leanings Suspicion of an open economy Resistance to foreign investors Protectionism Preference for heavy industry Serving the interests of Nation-building
12
Ideological proclivities + Interests
13
Economic elitePolitical elite
14
What was the Impact of the Statist Model of Development? Mixed Results
15
On the negative side Overall rates of economic growth were sluggish Inefficient economy Neglect of Agriculture Neglect of Social Development
16
On the positive side Industrial growth was respectable Retained Goal of Self-Sufficiency
17
Indira Gandhi Years India's democracy became more populist and deinstitutionalised, economic rhetoric moved far to the left, the gap between the state’s developmental capacities and economic goals widened even further, to the detriment of industrial development
18
Indira Gandhi Years Nehru’s statist model of economic development essentially continued without any major changes. Two main changes: a major shift in agricultural policy that had a benign long term impact on food production and a variety of left-leaning changes that reflected Mrs Gandhi's political calculus that helped neither economic growth nor redistribution.
19
A major shift in agricultural policy Green Revolution Left-leaning changes Symbolic = Politically Consequential Economically Consequential Modifications to Statist Model of Economic Development under Indira Gandhi
20
Economically consequential policy developments with an adverse impact on economic growth: Largess to interest groups Radical political rhetoric & policies + New level of labour activism = Alienation of domestic & foreign private investors Distancing from world economy
21
Indira Gandhi Nehruvian Statist Model of Economic Development Populism State Ambitions Deinstitutionalization State Capacities
22
Indira Gandhi = Developmental State became less developmental Nehruvian Statist Model of Economic Development Populism State Ambitions Deinstitutionalization State Capacities
23
Political Economy under Indira Gandhi Time of Missed Opportunities in global context “Politics” over Economy
Similar presentations
© 2025 SlidePlayer.com. Inc.
All rights reserved.