ECON/HIST 3230 A. Selected Topics in Economic History: Political Economy of Late Development: Case of the Modern Indian Economy

Similar documents
Politics 378 Politics in India Fall 2006

CARLETON UNIVERSITY Department of Economics. ECON 5603 Topics in International Economics (Winter 2018)

Politics 377. Rise of Asia: Political Economy of Development. Spring 2015

EC 591. INTERNATIONAL ECONOMICS Professor R Lucas: Fall 2018 Monday and Wednesday ROOM CAS 227

National Seminar On POLITICS OF DEVELOPMENT IN INDIA Dated on February, 2016

Selected Problems in Global Politics Seminar: Wednesday 11:35-2:25 Room: SP 415

PSCI 4801B Selected Problems in Global Politics Seminar: Friday 8:35-11:25 Room: Loeb C665

Carleton University Winter 10 Political Science

EC 591. INTERNATIONAL ECONOMICS Professor R Lucas: Fall 2012 Monday & Wednesday SSW 315

PSCI 4809 A POLITICAL CHANGE IN SOUTH ASIA Monday Please confirm location on Carleton Central.

Two 1 20 sessions per week (Tuesdays & Thursdays, 2:20-3:35 p.m.)

MARKET REFORM AND ECONOMIC GOVERNANCE IN ASIA (PP- 267)

Carleton University Fall 2009 Department of Political Science

PSCI 3700 A GOVERNMENT AND POLITICS OF SOUTH ASIA Thursday Please confirm location on Carleton Central.

NOTE: This FYS counts towards an Economics major, but students must still take ECON 001 to qualify for further work in the Economics Department.

ECON WORLD POVERTY AND INEQUALITY ACROSS NATIONS

Politics of Economic Development in the World

University of California, Berkeley Spring Semester Phone: office: 625 Evans office hours: Tuesdays 10-11:30AM

Migration, Citizenship, and the City

The political economy of African development Syllabus

Political Science Courses-1. American Politics

ECONOMIC REFORMS: IMPACTS AND CHALLENGES

American University in Cairo Department of Economics ECON : The Economic Setting for Development-Fall 2011

POL 328Y1Y Politics and Government in South Asia

Economics 172: Issues in African Economic Development. Professor Ted Miguel Department of Economics University of California, Berkeley

NOTE: This course counts towards an Economics major, but students must still take ECON 001 to qualify for further work in the Economics Department.

CPO 2001 Introduction to Comparative Politics (Honors)

published as Weeks, John (1996) "The NEM and the manufacturing sector in Latin America", in Victor Bulmer-Thomas (ed.), The New Economic Model in

Curriculum Vitae SOURABH SINGH

History of American Immigration. History 21:512:230, Professor Michael Pekarofski. Tuesdays, 2:30 5:20 p.m., LSC 103

POLS 260: INTRODUCTION TO COMPARATIVE POLITICS Department of Political Science Northern Illinois University Tuesday & Thursday 11-12:15 pm DU 461

PSCI 3004 (Section A) Political Parties and Elections in Canada Mondays 2:35 p.m. 5:25 p.m. Please confirm location on Carleotn Central

Syllabus for 260A: Comparative economics. ( ). Instructor : Gérard Roland

Introduction to International Development

CONTEMPORARY SOCIETIES AND CULTURES: FOUNDATIONS OF THE STATE AND SOCIETY

Introduction to Comparative Politics

CPO 2001 Introduction to Comparative Politics

Course Schedule Spring 2009

Carleton University Winter 2011 Department of Political Science

The Politics of Socio-Economic Development

SAULT COLLEGE OF APPLIED ARTS & TECHNOLOGY SAULT STE MARIE, ON COURSE OUTLINE. Course Title: CANADIAN CRIMINAL JUSTICE SYSTEM

SYLLABUS. Departmental Syllabus. Modern Asia HIST Departmental Syllabus. Departmental Syllabus. Departmental Syllabus. None

LSE-UCT July School 2018 LCS-DV202: Poverty and Development

LSE-PKU Summer School 2018 A Complex Society: Social Issues and Social Policy in China

PSCI 2003 Canadian Political Institutions Lecture: Fridays, 11:35am - 1:25 pm Mackenzie 3275 Please confirm location on Carleton Central

International Political Economy

SUMMER NOTE: Repeated class absences will affect your participation grade. Please let me know if you are missing class for a valid reason.

Carleton University Department of Political Science Winter 2006

231 INTRODUCTION TO COMPARATIVE POLITICS Fall 2008 Department of Political Science Muskingum College POLS MWF: 3:00 3:50 pm 15 Cambridge Hall

BROWN UNIVERSITY SPRING 2010 BROWN UNIVERSITY POLS 1821O POLITICS AND ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT IN ASIA. Wilson pm

POL 131 Introduction to International Relations Fall

Carleton University Fall 2006 Department of Political Science

PSCI 2602A INTERNATIONAL RELATIONS: GLOBAL POLITICAL ECONOMY Friday, 11:35 a.m. 13:25 Please confirm location on Carleton Central. Course description

The College of William and Mary Labor Market Analysis Syllabus

DATE: 1/27/2017. KNW 3399 Democracy, Institutions and Development: Economic and Political Issues

RPOS 334 American Political Parties and Groups. Location: SS 256

Social Studies 10-4: Course Outline

RELATIONSHIP OF THE COURSE TO OTHER INTERNATIONAL ECONOMICS COURSES

PSCI 1100A Introduction to Political Science I: Democracy in Theory and Practice Tuesday, 9:35 11:25 Please confirm location on Carleton Central

POL SCI 468 THE WEALTH AND POVERTY OF NATIONS: PROSPERITY AND DISTRIBUTION IN THE LONG RUN Fall 2016

PSCI 3105A IMPERIALISM F 11:35-2:25 (SA 417)

Carleton University Winter 2014 Department of Political Science

SAULT COLLEGE SAULT STE. MARIE, ONTARIO COURSE OUTLINE

Jan 19 April 13 (No Class on March 2) Evaluation is based on class participation (30%), midterm and final exams (30% and 40% respectively).

ATUL KOHLI. Curriculum Vitae. Ph.D. University of California, Berkeley, (Political Science), 1981.

Carleton University Winter 2010 Department of Political Science

THE RISE OF ASIA AND THE WORLD ECONOMY

HOLIDAYS HOMEWORK CLASS- XII SUBJECT POLITICAL SCIENCE BOOK : POLITICS IN INDIA- SINCE INDEPENDENCE

City University of Hong Kong

The Rise of China Boston University. Fall 2016 IR 365/PO352 Tuesdays & Thursdays: 9:30 11:00 am Location: KCB Room 107 (Version: 9/4)

Introduction to Comparative Government

Fodei J. Batty. Department of Political Science Kalamazoo, MI Office: 3458 Friedmann Hall

WWS 300 DEMOCRACY. Spring Robertson Hall 428 Robertson Hall Ph: Ph:

POLI 144 Fall 2015 International Political Economy

Yonsei International Summer School POL 2106: Introduction to Comparative Politics

POLITICAL SCIENCE (POLS)

South Portland, Maine Title: World History Since 1500 Catalog Number: HIST 125

POLI 144 Spring 2013 International Political Economy

HISTORY 450: THE HISTORY OF MODERN SOUTH ASIA (OFFICIALLY LISTED AS MODERN INDIA : THE AGE OF GANDHI)

POL201Y1: Politics of Development

INTL 313 / ECIR 313. Introduction to Global Political Economy Spring 2017

The History of the United States to 1877

ECN 110B: World Economic History II Spring 2012 University of California, Davis 1

Robust Political Economy. Classical Liberalism and the Future of Public Policy

Carleton University Summer 2015 Department of Political Science

AAAS 380L. DEMOCRACY IN EAST ASIA Binghamton University, Fall 2010

Department of International Relations Tel:

Téléphone: x1426 Office Hours: Wednesday 12: Thursday 9:30-13:00

SEMESTER AT SEA COURSE SYLLABUS University of Virginia, Academic Sponsor

INTERNATIONAL POLITICAL ECONOMY

POLITICAL ATTITUDES AND PUBLIC OPINION POLI 4030 M-W-F 1:30-2:30

Political Science 103 Spring, 2018 Dr. Edward S. Cohen INTRODUCTION TO POLITICAL PHILOSOPHY

The World Bank s Twin Goals

Centro de Estudos Indianos (CEI)

Jury Trials in America: Understanding and Practicing Before a Pure Form Democracy

JUFN32, Migration Law: Thematic Approaches, 7.5 credits Migration Law: Thematic Approaches, 7,5 högskolepoäng Second Cycle / Avancerad nivå

POL 305 Introduction to Global/Comparative Politics Course Description Course Goals and Objectives Course Requirements

Public Choice. Instructor: Zachary Gochenour. ECON 410 Summer 2013 (Session C)

May 22 June 23, st 5-Week Session Sections 00-29

POLI 144 Fall 2014 International Political Economy

Transcription:

ECON/HIST 3230 A Selected Topics in Economic History: Political Economy of Late Development: Case of the Modern Indian Economy 2016 Early Summer (May-June) Course Instructor: Deepanshu Mohan Course Duration: 9 May 14 June Lecture Hours: Tuesdays & Thursdays (18:05 to 20:55) Location: B-849 Loeb Office Hours: TBA E-mail: deepanshu.mohan@carleton.ca Prerequisites: Prerequisite(s): ECON 1000 or FYSM 1003, or permission of the Department please see the Department of Economics Undergraduate administrator, Amanda Wright, about obtaining such permission. Brief Course Description: Institutions that provide dependable property rights, manage conflict, maintain law and order, and align economic incentives with social costs and benefits are the foundation of long-term growth...state institutions are not the only ones that matter. Social arrangements can have equally important and lasting consequences...modest changes in institutional arrangements...can produce large growth payoffs...[but]the required changes can be highly specific to the context This yields some general lessons for policy-makers in LDCs and transition economies who are contemplating market-oriented reforms and privatizations, and for their economic advisers from Western countries and international organizations. They must recognize that markets will not succeed unless they are supported by adequate governance institutions. -Dani Rodrik (In Search of Prosperity, 2000) The Indian independence in 1947 culminated after a long struggle between the British government and the Indian independence movement, led by Mohandas Gandhi, but one of his most important lieutenant then, Jawaharlal Nehru later went on to become the first Prime Minister of independent India. The economy s rise since the dawn of its independence (1947) has been one of the most important economic developments in the South Asian region and for the modern global economic system. In a more globalized world today, lessons on a nation like India s contemporary economic history will demonstrate the kind of political and economic problems, India and other developing countries face in the current times. This course will provide a comprehensive background of the Modern Indian Economy with deeper insights on its politico-economic trajectory that shaped the rough rise of this 1

late industrializing developing economy in decades since independence. Identifying distinctive phases in India's economic growth cycle, the course shall introduce most of the economic literature on post-independent India that points at a deep metamorphosis undergone in the nature of economic policies i.e. from a perceived "pro-state" Nehruvian regime (1950s onwards) into a "pro-market" liberalized economic regime (post the 1990s). The course will debunk some of the myths related with India's economic planning processes and introduce secondary and primary evidence in supporting such hypothesis from its political and economic history. Elucidating the key role of economic planning in India for times ahead, the lectures will focus more on key issues related with India s growth story and the main development challenges that continue to exacerbate problems such as economic inequality, underemployment, low manufacturing/industrial productivity etc. The topics covered thus, enquiring the nature of reforms through the lens of evidence on levels in economic development, distinctive phases in India's economic growth will also provide cross-country comparisons with other Asian economies like China, South Korea etc. Objectives of the course: Give a lucid background of the modern Indian economy and its progression in terms of economic growth & levels of development since the times of Independence. Introduce the transformation seen in the political economic landscape and policies implemented in the decades after Independence along with an organized discussion on the significant economic developments that have occurred in the last few decades. Develop an understanding of the kind of challenges developing economies like India face today surfacing from their progress to democratization and development as a post-colonial nation-state in the South Asian region, with the global diffusion of sub-continental Diasporas and culture. Introduce students to a brief history of other developing economies (South Korea, China and Botswana) in comparison to the India s economic history. Required Texts: Book- - India: The Emerging Giant by Arvind Panagriya - In search of Prosperity by Dani Roadrik et al. - State Directed Development: Political Power and Industrialization in the Global Periphery by Atul Kohli - India s Tryst with Destiny: Debunking Myths that undermine progress and addressing new challenges by Jagdish Bhagwati & A. Panagriya A detailed list of week-by-week references and topics will be provided in Course Manual (both the Course Manual along with a Detailed Week Wise Topics & References will be mailed to all interested students in Week I). In addition to the mentioned books here, other references (mostly in the form of research papers) will be specified for most of the topics covered. 2

Additional References (Background Reading on Indian Economy & History) Making Growth Happen in India by V. Kumaraswamy The Rediscovery of India by Lord Meghnad Desai. Saving Capitalism from the Capitalists by Raghuram Rajan & Luigi Zingales Indian Development: Regional Perspectives by Amartya Sen & Jean Dreze Rethinking Development Economics by Ha-Joon Chang List of Class Topics & References 1 Week I & II Reference Readings Focus Questions 2 Political Economy of Late Development - The Idea of Growth & Development - Growth vs./& Development: Who s job? - Role of the State in Economic Development Chapter 1: Introduction: What do we learn from Country Narratives? Market Failure and Government Failure by Mrinal Datta- Chaudhari Source: The Journal of Economic Perspectives, Vol. 4, No. 3 Link: https://www.aeaweb.org/ atypon.php?return_to=/doi/pdf plus/10.1257/jep.4.3.25 Additional Reference: Symposium on the State and Economic Development by Pranab Bardhan Source: The Journal of Economic Perspectives, Vol. 4, No. 3 How can we define growth and the process in accounting for it (relevant to the case of developing economies)? In what way can the process of increasing economic growth be linked to increasing economic development within an emerging economy? How do we define market failures and government failures? In what way can these failures be corrected? What lessons can be drawn on variations in state intervention necessary for emerging economies in the analysis offered by Mrinal Datta Chaudhari in her paper, Market Failure and Government Failure? 1 Please note that this list of topics is subject to change and the final list of Class Topics (Week Wise) will be provided in the Course Manual. 2 These would be updated every week. 3

Link: http://www.jstor.org/stab le/pdf/1942925.pdf?accepttc=t rue Week II & III Week IV The Economic History of Modern India - Origins of a Fragmented Multiclass State and a Sluggish Economy-Colonial India - Introduction to the Indian Economy (The Past) - The Nehru & Indira Years Role of Economic Planning in India - Evolution of Planning: The Planning Commission - India s Development Strategy: Post Independence Era - The Government, The State and The Market Chapter 6 & 7, State Directed Development: Political Power and Industrialization in the Global Periphery by Atul Kohli (pp 221-257; pp 257-288) Chapter 4: Planning in India, Indian Economy, by Uma Kapila India s Development Strategy: Accidents, Design and Replicability by Nirvikar Singh Define the colonial state construction in India under the British regime (1857-1947)? To what extent the origins of a fragmented multiclass state and nationalistic opposition failed to present a coherent economic vision for a post-independent India? In case you do not agree with this, offer a counter view with explanation? In terms of the political economy of policymaking in India (after independence), how can you compare The Indian under Nehru with India under Indira Gandhi? Explain with an economic lens (drawing relevance from India s Trade Policy, Foreign Investment Regime, Industrial Policy & outlook towards Agriculture) On what basis can you distinguish the phases of India s growth experience? Why India was able to shift its growth rate from less than 1% in the first half of the 20 th century to 4.1% in the first 14 years of the post-independence era? In explaining the sharp decline in the growth rate (during Phase II- 1965-80), to what extent both internal policy and external shocks were responsible as reasons for the same? In embracing socialism, to tackle poverty while ensuring equity for 4

Week IV all where did Indira Gandhi fail/succeed in her vision? India s Economic Growth Story (1950-2013) - Periodization of India s Growth Experience - Performance of the Economy in Distinctive Phases - India s Growth Turnaround (1980s-90s; 2003-08) - End of the License Raj Chapter 1,2,3,4,5 (pp 3-110) India: The Emerging Giant by Arvind Panagriya Week V (Cross Country Narratives) A Tale of Two Countries (Analyzing the performance of the Republic of Korea in comparison to India s growth experience-post independence) Chapter 6: A Tale of Two Countries: India and the Republic of Korea India: The Emerging Giant by Arvind Panagriya Week VI An African Success Story: Case of Botswana Chapter 4: An African Success Story: Botswana by Acemoglu, Johnson & Robinson Week V How Reform worked in China Chapter 11: How Reform worked in China by Yingyi Qian Week VI 5

Political Economy of Growth without Development: Case of Pakistan Chapter 14: The Political Economy of Growth without Development: A Case Study of Pakistan by William Easterly Week VI Recalling Rodrik s advice on Institutions, Geography and Integration Chapter 1: Introduction: What do we learn from Country Narratives? Course Evaluation Each student s grade in the course will be calculated as a weighted average of scores for two Assignments 10% (each); Mid-term Exam 25% (in-class, Week III); Class Participation 10% (based on class response & attendance); Final End Term Take Home Exam 45% (TBA scheduled by the University). Assignments will be due during the time of specific lectures (TBA). Two Internal Class Assignments 20% Class Participation 10% Mid-term Exam 25% (in-class, Week III) Final End of Term Paper 45% (end of semester) One of the internal class assignments will include a Class Presentation exercise (further details to be given in Week I). In this Class Group Presentation (marked for 10%), students will form groups and select a topic to present on from a list. The list of topics shall be given in the first week of course itself and group presentations will start from Week II onwards. Each presentation can be in the form of a PowerPoint presentation, a video or an interactive discussion initiated by the respective group. Further Details on the exercise will be given explained in Week I of the course. The (three-hour) final examination will take place during the Early Summer examination period (June 17-23) at a time and place set by the University. Students who can document a compelling reason for missing the mid-term examination will be excused and their final grade will be based on their performance in the rest of the course i.e., the weight of each of the remaining evaluation instruments will rise by a factor of 1/.75 (e.g., the final examination weight will become 45% /.75 = 60%). Students must fulfil all of the preceding course requirements in order to achieve a passing grade (Dor higher). Failure to earn 50% or more of the available participation marks, or failure to do one or both assignments or failure to write the mid-term examination (without a documented compelling reason) will result in a grade of FND ( Failure with No Deferred final examination allowed ). Failure 6

to write the final examination when the student has achieved satisfactory performance during the term will result in a grade of ABS ( ABSent from a required final examination ). See Academic Regulation 2.3 for the official meanings of these grades, and note that it stipulates that no course grades are final until approved by the Faculty Dean. Note also that course grades may be scaled upwards or downwards in a rank-preserving manner to better fit the relevant departmental distributional norm. Application to write a deferred final examination must be made at the Registrar s Office. Plagiarism: Please be aware that plagiarism is serious offence at Carleton and should be recognized and avoided. For information on how to do so, please see Pammett on Plagiarism and Paraphrasing at www.carleton.ca/economics/courses/writing-preliminaries 7