Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Friedrich Naumann Stiftung für die Freiheit
- Foreword
- Preface
- 1 The Evolution of the Liberal Idea
- 2 The Fundamentals of Liberalism
- 3 Historical Roots of South Asian Liberalism
- 4 Liberalism and Constitutionalism: Parliament and the Judiciary
- 5 The Market Economy and Welfare: An Introductory Note
- 6 Grassroots Capitalism: A Glimpse of the Unrecognised India
- 7 Empowering the Poor: A Liberal Approach to Education Reforms
- 8 Not by Religion Alone: Aspects of Pakistani Society
- 9 An Appraisal of Economic Liberalisation in Pakistan
- 10 Religion and Culture in the Liberal State
- 11 Social Freedom in the Liberal State
- 12 The Future of Liberalism in South Asia
- Select Bibliography
- Notes on Contributors
6 - Grassroots Capitalism: A Glimpse of the Unrecognised India
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 05 November 2011
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Friedrich Naumann Stiftung für die Freiheit
- Foreword
- Preface
- 1 The Evolution of the Liberal Idea
- 2 The Fundamentals of Liberalism
- 3 Historical Roots of South Asian Liberalism
- 4 Liberalism and Constitutionalism: Parliament and the Judiciary
- 5 The Market Economy and Welfare: An Introductory Note
- 6 Grassroots Capitalism: A Glimpse of the Unrecognised India
- 7 Empowering the Poor: A Liberal Approach to Education Reforms
- 8 Not by Religion Alone: Aspects of Pakistani Society
- 9 An Appraisal of Economic Liberalisation in Pakistan
- 10 Religion and Culture in the Liberal State
- 11 Social Freedom in the Liberal State
- 12 The Future of Liberalism in South Asia
- Select Bibliography
- Notes on Contributors
Summary
Editor's Note
India, unlike Sri Lanka, has never had a liberal party, but there has been no dearth of liberal thinking in India since the days of Ranade, discussed in an earlier chapter. Most prominent in the period around the achievement of Indian independence was Minoo Masani, who was a pillar of the Swatantra Party, which conceptualised intellectual opposition to the socialist consensus that dominated the ruling Congress Party. Unfortunately opposition to government took on sectarian tendencies, and even when the monolithic hold of the Congress Party was broken in the 1977 elections, ideology seemed less important than other considerations.
Though, in common with world trends, the role of the state began to decline through a general consensus from the eighties onward, India did not really have think-tanks that adequately advanced a liberal perspective. This has changed however in the last decade, and Indian liberal thinkers and social activists are in the forefront of the movement for change.
One area in which, despite official dogma, India continued to provide space for private sector activity, was through the popular response to imaginative entrepreneurship. In this chapter Barun Mitra, who heads the Liberty Institute, examines the enduring strength of this sector, and its potential to strengthen current efforts at political reform that will enable society to work at its full potential.
For more than a decade, India has been among the fastest growing economies in the world. India's rise in the arena of information technology has had such an impact that outsourcing, in particular India taking over jobs from other countries, has become a significant factor in the world economy.
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- Liberal Perspectives for South Asia , pp. 70 - 90Publisher: Foundation BooksPrint publication year: 2009