A Journal of Current Economic and Political Affairs Index

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

A Journal of Current Economic and Political Affairs Index A JOURNAL OF CURRENT ECONOMIC AND POLITICAL AFFAIRS INDEX SUBJECT INDEX Administrative Reorganisation (Ed) 1281 ANDHRA "Factory Workers in India"; ADVERTISING Nagarjunasagar Project ; Whose Arthur Nieoff 1809 Creative Advertising (Ed) 1676 Baby? (L C) 1375 "Growth of Labour Legislation in Maharaja Slips Up (Kd) 1645 Opposition to Land Revenue India Since 1939 and Its Im­ African Trade, Trends in (S) 1069 Bill (L C) 1043 pact on Economic Develop­ Afro-Asia, Emerging (Ed) 1073 Asian Economic Cooperation; ment"; R D Vtdyarthi 1655 AGRICULTURAL CREDIT D T Lakdawala (S A) 1231 "India's Urban Future": Agricultural Refinance Coropora- Asian Games Fiasco (Ed) 1428 Roy Turner (Ed) 1409 tion (Ed) 1866 ASSAM "Industrial Jurisprudence"; S R Cooperative Credit (WN) 1866 Fools' Paradise (Evacuation of Samant 1655 More on Agriculture Refinance Tezpur) (L C) 1872 "Law of Industrial Disputes in (Ed) 1898 No Finance for Assam (W N) 1868 India"; R F Rustomji 1655 Rural Credit: Whither Now? Oil Royalty Dispute (L C) 1041 'Macro-Economics"; F S Broo- (Ed) 1835 ATOMIC POWER man 1689 AGRICULTURE Control over Tarapur (W N) 1529 "Rise and Fall of Third Agricultural Underemployment Wan for Nuclear Power (W N) 1530 Reich : A History of Nazi in Uttar Pradesh; A Qaynm Tarapur Project (Ed) 1285 Germany": William L Shirer 1945 (SA) 1961 AUSTERITY "Sonic Aspects of Industrial Fin- Crop Estimates. 1961-62 (S) 1453 'Auks' of Indian Economy (Ed) 1249 ance in India"; George Rosen 1845 Need for Subsidy to Agriculture; AUTOMOBILES ''Techno-Economic Surveys" of L Merzer (SA) 1889 Automobile Blind Alley (W N) 1398 Tripura. Orissa and Punjab: Optimum Firm and Optimum Automobile Break-through (WN) 1458 National Council of Applied Farm; Raj Krishna (SA) 1577 1629 Automobile Tyres in the Third Economic Research 1573 Comment; C H ; Hanumantha Plan; B C Dim (S A) 1817 'What Is History ?": E H Carr 1719 Rao (L E) 1733 BURMA Comment; D U Sastry (L E) 1819 B E S T in the Red (W N) 1399 Indians in Burma: Problems Patil on Food (W N) 1800 BACKWARD CLASSES and Prospects: K Krishna Strange Tax (Maharashtra Agri­ Defining Backwardness (Ed) 1560 Moorthy (S A) 1691 cultural Income Tax) (W N) 1836 BANKING Comment; Mahesh Bhati —Trends (O P) 1335 CALCUTTA (L E) 1871 Bank Credit to Small Units Bidhan Roys Baby (Calcutta Two Worlds of Food and Agri­ (W N) 1933 City Plan) (Ed) 1248 culture; M L Dantwalu (OP) 1687 New Banking legislation (Ed) 1395 City Corporation and Government AIR-INDIA INTERNATIONAL No Finance for Assam (W N) 1868 (W N) 1286 Air-India's Resilience (W N) 1679 Bertrand Russell Speaks His CAMPAIGN FOR NUCLEAR Maharaja .Slips Up (Ed) 1645 Mind; Parthasarathi Dasgupta DISARMAMENT AIR TRANSPORT (B R) 1440 Bertrand Russell Speaks His Air-India's Resilience (W N) 1679 BOMBAY Mind; Parthasarathi Dasgupta Coordination in Air (Ed) 1032 Civic Bombay : Its Lapses (Ed) 1363 (B R) 1440 Aircraft Industry Boom Over Bonus, Concept of (W N) 1751 Unilateralists Fall Out (W N) 1398 (L C) 1435 BOOKS REVIEWED CANADA ALGERIA "Bertrand Russell Speaks His Research for Peace (Canadian Ben Bella Takes Over (W N) 1287 Mind" 1440 Peace Research Institute) Independent Algeria (W N) 1035 ''Development of the Indian (W N) 1902 Alloy Steels Plant (Ed) 1324 Economy"; W B Reddaway 1763 Cement, S P Jain on (W N) 1608 Index July —December 1962 THE ECONOMIC WEEKLY CHAIRMEN'S STATEMENTS Peace or War; Romesh Thapar Imperial Tobacco 1525 Aluminium Industries 1634 (C V) 1841 India Cement 1319 Associated Cement Companies 1967 Political Economy of Defence; Indian Hume Pipe 1793 Bombay Gas Company 1354 Pragmatist (Ed) 1751 Indian Iron and Steel 1827 Delhi Cloth and General Mills 1773 Nino-Indian Crisis and the United Industrial Finance Corporation 1668 Imperial Tobacco Company of Nations; Basanti Mitra (S A) 1767 Investment Corporation 1890 India 1571 COAL Jaipur Udyog 1608 Indian Iron and Steel Com­ —Looks Up (L C) 1432 Jay Engineering Works 1468 pany 1777 Transport 1901 (W N) 1941 (L C) Kamani Metals 1972 India Steamship 1550 Modernising Small Mines Khatau Makanji 1638 Indian Sugar Mills Association 1351 (W N) 1326 Kirloskar Electric 1743 Industrial Finance Corporation 1585 New Look in Coal (L C) 1047 Kothari Sugar 1884 Jaipur Udyog 1593 Neyveli Lignite (W N) 1286 Machinery Manufacturing Corpo­ Jay Engineering Works 1589 Production and Despatches (S) 1068 ration 1607 Life Insurance Corporation of WM, 1424, 1672, 1974 Madras Rubber Factory 1924 India 1418 States Right to Mine Coal (Ed) 1396 Mandya National Paper Mills 1287 Machinery Manufacturing Corpo­ COFFEE Modi Mills 1638 ration 1557 India and the International Morarji Mills 1744 National Newsprint and Paper Cofee Agreement: J B Monteiro Mukand Iron 1066 Mills 1670 (S A) 1957 Mysore Paper Mills 1555 New Central Jute Mills 1775 World Coffee Production (S) 1280 Nepa Mills 1669 South Madras Electric Supply COMMONWEALTH PRIME MINIS New Central Jute 1669 Corporation 1449 TERS' CONFERENCE Nirlon Synthetic Fibres 1891 Tata Engineering and Loco­ After the Conference (Ed) 1496 Premier Automobiles 1890 motive Company 1311 Commonwealth Case (L C) 1541 Romas Industries 1638 Tata Iron and Steel Company 1821 Commonwealth Speaks Out (Ed) 1456 Scindia Steam 1925, 1971 CHINESE AGGRESSION (see also India- Commonwealth versus Common Sen Raleigh 1744 China Relations) Market (L C) 1463 Standard Batteries 1925 Acceptance and Expectance Communism as an Economic Ideal; Stanes Amalgamated 1794 (W N) 1800 Paul M Sweezy (S A) 1127 Structural Engineering 1925 Ape of Politic- (South India's- COMMUNITY DEVELOPMENT Tata Chemicals 1703 Reaction) (L C) 1874 PROGRAMME Tata Engineering and locomotive Break the Lull (South India's Uneven Impact of C D Prog­ Company 1319, 1966 Reaction) (L C) 1939 ramme: M N K (O P) 1387 Tata Iron and Steel 1860 Chinese tive K V W Dharan COMPANY LAW Tata Oil Mills 1066 (S A) 1722 No Further Curbs (Report of the Tractors India 1919 Chinese Strategy (S Al 1804 Jenkins Committee. U K) Tube Investments of India 1317. 1793 Crisis Comes to a Head; Romesh U K ) 1049 West Coast Paper Mills 1971 Thapar (C V) 1805 COMPANY NOTES Defence and Development (Ed) 1707 ACC.Vickers- Babcock 1423 CONGO Economic Mobilisation (Ed) 1865 Ahmedabad Electricity 1423 Another Effort in Congo (W N) 1367 Facts are Stubborn; Romesh Aluminium Industries 1555, 1595 Federal Set-Up for Congo Thapar (C V) 1758 Ashok Cement 1555 (W N) 1250 Fools Paradise (Evacuation of Assam Sillimanite 1861 Wests Choice in Congo (W N) 1932 Tezpur) (L C) 1872 Associated Clement Companies 1971 CONGRESS PARTY Funds for Defence (W N) 1802 Barium Chemicals 1859 Missing Deputy Leader; Romesh Getting Earnest; Romesh Tha­ Rhurat Minings 1743 Thapar (C V) 1565 par (C V) 1905 Bombay Burmah Trading Corpo­ CONSTITUTION Gospel We Preached (L C) 1802 ration 1829 Affront to the Constitution (Ed) 1495 How Nor to Do It (Defence Pre- Central India Spinning 1893 Lawyer on Right to Legal parations) (Ed) 1929 Cotton Agents' Sugar Mills 1972 Image of India (South India's Delhi Cloth Mills 1793 Defence (W N) 1563 Reaction) (L C) 1717 Dharamsi Morarji Chemicals 1861 CONSUMER PROTECTION Magnificent Response (Ed) 1749 Export Risks Insurance Corpo­ Protecting the Consumer; Sree- Mao Tse-Tung's Thoughts on War ration 1251 lekha Basu (O P) 1909 and Peace (S A) 1765 Fertilisers and Chemicals Travan- COOPERATION Moment of Truth; Romesh Tha­ core 1920 Consumers' Cooperatives par (C V) 1713 Gammon India 1972 (W N) 1933 More Funds for Defence. (W N) 1753 Greaves Cotton 1423 Progress of the Cooperative New Dimensions to the Crisis: Hicks Thermometres 1791 Movement: R Ramaswami Romesh Thapar (C V) 1873 Hindustan Lever 1744 (O P) 1537 New Phase is Opening; Romesh Hindustan Motors 1280 Progress of Cooperative Move- Thapar (C V) 1937 Hindustan Oxygen 1743 ment 1960-61 (S) 1975 Non-Aligned Move (Ed) 1897 Hindustan-Pilkington GIass Works 1744 CUBA Not New Proposals (Ed) 1797 Humphreys and Glasgow 1891 Brinkmanship over Cuba (W N) 1675 THE ECONOMIC WEEKLY Index July — December 1962 D M K ELECTIONS (see also General FOREIGN POLICY For Whom Does D M K Speak? Election) Clouds — and No Silver Lining; (L C) 1295 By-elections in the South (WN) 1367 Romesh Thapar (C V) 1087 Defence and Development (Ed) 1707 Meaning of Chittoor (L C) 1489 Groping in the Dark; Romesh DEFENCE MINISTRY ELECTRICITY Thapar (C V) 1256 New Masters, New —Generation and Distribution (S) Isolationists; Romesh Thapar Servants (L C) 1839 1320, 1704, 1894 (C V) 1465 Democratic Decentralisation, Some Expansion of Trombay (W N) 1648 Time for Rethinking; Romesh Political Consequences; W H Power Programme (W N) 1754 Thapar (C V) 1533 Morris-Jones (SA) 1103 EMPLOYMENT FOREIGN PRIVATE CAPITAL Exchanges (S) 1320, 3705, 1974 DEVALUATION Trends in Foreign Investment Agricultural Underemployment in Case for Devaluation; Jagdish (W N) 1800 Bhagwati (S A) 1263 Uttar Pradesh; A Qayum FOREIGN TRADE (S A) 1961 Comment; Rajiv (L E) 1431 — Seminar (L C) 1683 Secular Trend in the Indian Eco­ Comment; A K Dasgupta Balance of Payments, 1961-62 (S) 1491 nomy 1881-1951; Alice Thorner (S A) 1446 Case for Devaluation; Jagdish (S A) 1156 Comment; Pranab Kumar Bhagwati (S A) 1263 EUROPE Bardhan (S A) 1448 Comment: Rajiv (L E) 1431 Growth and Economic Planning More on Devaluation; Jagdish Comment; A K Dasgupta (S A) 1446 in Western Europe; Michael Bhagwati (S A) 1581 Comment; Pranab Kumar Nicholson (S A) 1139 Comment; A K Dasgupta Bardhan (S A) 1448 (LE) 1681 EUROPEAN COMMON MARKET Development and External Bal­ Reply: Jagdish Bhagwati After the (Commonwealth Prune ance; Contributed (S A) 1213 (L E) 1839 Ministers')
Recommended publications
  • Complete List of Books in Library Acc No Author Title of Book Subject Publisher Year R.No
    Complete List of Books in Library Acc No Author Title of book Subject Publisher Year R.No. 1 Satkari Mookerjee The Jaina Philosophy of PHIL Bharat Jaina Parisat 8/A1 Non-Absolutism 3 Swami Nikilananda Ramakrishna PER/BIO Rider & Co. 17/B2 4 Selwyn Gurney Champion Readings From World ECO `Watts & Co., London 14/B2 & Dorothy Short Religion 6 Bhupendra Datta Swami Vivekananda PER/BIO Nababharat Pub., 17/A3 Calcutta 7 H.D. Lewis The Principal Upanisads PHIL George Allen & Unwin 8/A1 14 Jawaherlal Nehru Buddhist Texts PHIL Bruno Cassirer 8/A1 15 Bhagwat Saran Women In Rgveda PHIL Nada Kishore & Bros., 8/A1 Benares. 15 Bhagwat Saran Upadhya Women in Rgveda LIT 9/B1 16 A.P. Karmarkar The Religions of India PHIL Mira Publishing Lonavla 8/A1 House 17 Shri Krishna Menon Atma-Darshan PHIL Sri Vidya Samiti 8/A1 Atmananda 20 Henri de Lubac S.J. Aspects of Budhism PHIL sheed & ward 8/A1 21 J.M. Sanyal The Shrimad Bhagabatam PHIL Dhirendra Nath Bose 8/A2 22 J.M. Sanyal The Shrimad PHIL Oriental Pub. 8/A2 Bhagabatam VolI 23 J.M. Sanyal The Shrimad PHIL Oriental Pub. 8/A2 Bhagabatam Vo.l III 24 J.M. Sanyal The Shrimad Bhagabatam PHIL Oriental Pub. 8/A2 25 J.M. Sanyal The Shrimad PHIL Oriental Pub. 8/A2 Bhagabatam Vol.V 26 Mahadev Desai The Gospel of Selfless G/REL Navijvan Press 14/B2 Action 28 Shankar Shankar's Children Art FIC/NOV Yamuna Shankar 2/A2 Number Volume 28 29 Nil The Adyar Library Bulletin LIT The Adyar Library and 9/B2 Research Centre 30 Fraser & Edwards Life And Teaching of PER/BIO Christian Literature 17/A3 Tukaram Society for India 40 Monier Williams Hinduism PHIL Susil Gupta (India) Ltd.
    [Show full text]
  • Subject Index
    Economic and Political Weekly INDEX Vol .VIII, Nos. 1-52 January-December 1973 Ed = Editorials MMR = Money Market Review F = Feature RA= Review Article CL = Civil Liberties SA = Special Article C = Commentary D = Discussion P = Perspectives SS = Special Statistics BR = Book Review LE = Letters to Editor SUBJECT INDEX ACCIDENTS AGRARIAN RELATIONS Distribution of Commisseration (Ed) Gentlemen Killers of Kilvenmani (C) Issue no: 23, Jun 09-15, p.1006 Issue no: 21, May 26-Jun 01, p.926 ACCOUNTANTS Sharpening Conflict (Ed) Watch-Dogs Grown Fat and Slow ; R S Issue no: 46, Nov 17-23, p.2034 Ganapathy (C) Issue no: 48, Dec 01-07, p.2125 When Thieves Fall Out (C) Issue no: 28, Jul 14-20, p.1222 ACCOUNTING Watch-Dogs Grown Fat and Slow ; R S AGRICULTURAL ADMINISTRATION Ganapathy (C) Wot, No Records-of-Rights! (Ed) Issue no: 48, Dec 01-07, p.2125 Issue no: 11, Mar 17-23, p.531 ADMINISTRATIVE REFORMS AGRICULTURAL CREDIT So Sane, So Rational (OP) One Way Flow of Funds (Ed) Issue no: 17, Apr 28-May 04, p.791 Issue no: 40, Oct 06-12, p.1796 ADVERTISING AGRICULTURAL EDUCATION A Rational System of Recruitment and Gilt of New Technology Wearing Off (C) Promotion for Scientific Personnel; K R Issue no: 18, May 05-11, p.823 Bhattacharya (SA) Issue no: 01, Jan 06-12, p.31 Government May Propose, but... (C) Issue no: 23, Jun 09-15, p.1016 AFGHANISTAN More than a Palace Coup? (Ed) AGRICULTURAL GROWTH AND DEVELOPMENT Issue no: 29, Jul 21-27, p.1262 Calcutta Diary (F) Issue no: 07, Feb 17-23, p.372 Pakhtunistan: A Ghost Resurrected; Mohammed Ayoob (C) Developing
    [Show full text]
  • Free Trade: What Now? by Jagdish Bhagwati This Is the Text Of
    View metadata, citation and similar papers at core.ac.uk brought to you by CORE provided by Columbia University Academic Commons Free Trade: What Now? By Jagdish Bhagwati This is the text of the Keynote Address delivered at the University of St. Gallen, Switzerland, on 25th May 1998, on the occasion of the International Management Symposium at which the 1998 Freedom Prize of the Max Schmidheiny Foundation was awarded. Ever since Adam Smith invented the case for free trade over two centuries ago in The Wealth of Nations, and founded in the same great work the science of Economics as we know it today, international economists have been kept busy defending free trade. A popular children’s story in the United States, by Dr. Seuss, has the refrain “And the cat came back”. The opponents of free trade, ranging from hostile protectionists to the mere skeptics, have kept coming back with ever new objections. The critiques we have had to confront have often come from those who fail to understand the essential insight of Adam Smith: that it pays me to specialize on what I do best compared to you, even though I can do everything better than you do. Economists call this the Law of Comparative Advantage: each nation would profit from noncoercive free trade that would lead to such specialization. When asked by the famous mathematician Ulam: “What is the most counterintuitive result in Economics?”, the Nobel laureate Paul Samuelson chose this Law as his candidate.1 Skeptics within Economics But the most compelling skeptics have come repeatedly from within the discipline of Economics itself.
    [Show full text]
  • HLA MYINT 105 Neoclassical Development Analysis: Its Strengths and Limitations 107 Comment Sir Alec Cairn Cross 137 Comment Gustav Ranis 144
    Public Disclosure Authorized pi9neers In Devero ment Public Disclosure Authorized Second Theodore W. Schultz Gottfried Haberler HlaMyint Arnold C. Harberger Ceiso Furtado Public Disclosure Authorized Gerald M. Meier, editor PUBLISHED FOR THE WORLD BANK OXFORD UNIVERSITY PRESS Public Disclosure Authorized Oxford University Press NEW YORK OXFORD LONDON GLASGOW TORONTO MELBOURNE WELLINGTON HONG KONG TOKYO KUALA LUMPUR SINGAPORE JAKARTA DELHI BOMBAY CALCUTTA MADRAS KARACHI NAIROBI DAR ES SALAAM CAPE TOWN © 1987 The International Bank for Reconstruction and Development / The World Bank 1818 H Street, N.W., Washington, D.C. 20433, U.S.A. All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording, or otherwise, without the prior permission of Oxford University Press. Manufactured in the United States of America. First printing January 1987 The World Bank does not accept responsibility for the views expressed herein, which are those of the authors and should not be attributed to the World Bank or to its affiliated organizations. Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data Pioneers in development. Second series. Includes index. 1. Economic development. I. Schultz, Theodore William, 1902­ II. Meier, Gerald M. HD74.P56 1987 338.9 86-23511 ISBN 0-19-520542-1 Contents Preface vii Introduction On Getting Policies Right Gerald M. Meier 3 Pioneers THEODORE W. SCHULTZ 15 Tensions between Economics and Politics in Dealing with Agriculture 17 Comment Nurul Islam 39 GOTTFRIED HABERLER 49 Liberal and Illiberal Development Policy 51 Comment Max Corden 84 Comment Ronald Findlay 92 HLA MYINT 105 Neoclassical Development Analysis: Its Strengths and Limitations 107 Comment Sir Alec Cairn cross 137 Comment Gustav Ranis 144 ARNOLD C.
    [Show full text]
  • India Freedom Fighters' Organisation
    A Guide to the Microfiche Edition of Political Pamphlets from the Indian Subcontinent Part 5: Political Parties, Special Interest Groups, and Indian Internal Politics UNIVERSITY PUBLICATIONS OF AMERICA A Guide to the Microfiche Edition of POLITICAL PAMPHLETS FROM THE INDIAN SUBCONTINENT PART 5: POLITICAL PARTIES, SPECIAL INTEREST GROUPS, AND INDIAN INTERNAL POLITICS Editorial Adviser Granville Austin Guide compiled by Daniel Lewis A microfiche project of UNIVERSITY PUBLICATIONS OF AMERICA An Imprint of CIS 4520 East-West Highway • Bethesda, MD 20814-3389 Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data Indian political pamphlets [microform] microfiche Accompanied by printed guide. Includes bibliographical references. Content: pt. 1. Political Parties and Special Interest Groups—pt. 2. Indian Internal Politics—[etc.]—pt. 5. Political Parties, Special Interest Groups, and Indian Internal Politics ISBN 1-55655-829-5 (microfiche) 1. Political parties—India. I. UPA Academic Editions (Firm) JQ298.A1 I527 2000 <MicRR> 324.254—dc20 89-70560 CIP Copyright © 2000 by University Publications of America. All rights reserved. ISBN 1-55655-829-5. ii TABLE OF CONTENTS Introduction ............................................................................................................................. vii Source Note ............................................................................................................................. xi Reference Bibliography Series 1. Political Parties and Special Interest Groups Organization Accession #
    [Show full text]
  • The Morality of Capitalism What Your Professors Won’T Tell You
    The Morality of Capitalism What Your Professors Won’t Tell You Edited by Tom G. Palmer Students For Liberty Atlas Network Centre for Civil Society Liberal Youth Forum AtlasNetwork.org StudentsForLiberty.org LYFIndia.org CCS.in New Delhi, India Copyright © 2011 by Students for Liberty and Altas Economic Research Foundation Published by Centre for Civil Society in partnership with Students For Liberty & Atlas Network. General permission to reprint was granted by the Atlas Economic Research Foundation. “The Market Economy and the Distribution of Wealth,” by Ludwig Lachman reprinted by permission of the Institute for Human Studies. “Human Betterment through Globalization,” by Vernon Smith reprinted by permission of the Foundation for Economic Education. “Does the Free Market Corrode Moral Character? To the Contrary,” by Jagdish Bhagwati reprinted by permission of the John Templeton Foundation. All other essays published by permission of the authors. Edited by Tom G. Palmer Cover Design by Sadaf Hussain The editor gratefully acknowledges the assistance in preparing this book, not only of the authors and copyright holders, but of the members of Students For Liberty, most especially Clark Ruper, Brandon Wasicsko, and Ankur Chawla, who worked tirelessly to format and prepare the essays for publication. Their dedication and zeal for liberty is itself an inspiration. For information and other requests please write Centre for Civil Society A-69 Hauz Khas, New Delhi 110016 Voice: +91 11 2653 7456 email: [email protected] website: www.ccs.in Printed at: Mehra Impressions 102, Tihar, Opp. Subhash Nagar, New Delhi, India ISBN: 81-87984-02-3 Table of Contents Foreword The Dharma of Capitalism ..............................................................................................5 By Gurchuran Das Introduction The Morality of Capitalism .............................................................................................9 By Tom G.
    [Show full text]
  • Growth and Poverty
    GROWTH AND POVERTY GROWTH AND POVERTY The Great Debate Pradeep S Mehta Bipul Chatterjee GROWTH AND POVERTY The Great Debate Published by D-217, Bhaskar Marg, Bani Park Jaipur 302016, India Tel: +91.141.228 2821, Fax: +91.141.228 2485 Email: [email protected] Web site: www.cuts-international.org ©CUTS International, 2011 First published: June 2011 The material in this publication may be reproduced in whole or in part and in any form for education or non-profit uses, without special permission from the copyright holders, provided acknowledgment of the source is made. The publishers would appreciate receiving a copy of any publication, which uses this publication as a source. No use of this publication may be made for resale or other commercial purposes without prior written permission of CUTS. The views expressed here are those of the commentators/authors and can therefore in no way be taken to reflect the positions of CUTS International and the institutions with which the commentators/authors are affiliated. ISBN: 978-81-8257-149-5 Printed in India by Jaipur Printers Private Limited, Jaipur #1106 Contents Acknowledgement ix Reflections xi Abbreviations xv Foreword xvii Simply not Debatable! xxi Part I: Professor Jagdish Bhagwatis Lecture to the Parliament of India Indian Reforms:Yesterday and Today 3 Part II: The Debate on Growth and Poverty Its a Myth that Reforms are not Helping the Poor 21 G Srinivasan Selected Reflections from the Debate 24 Abhijit Banerjee 24 Arvind Panagariya 25 R Vaidyanathan 27 Alok Ray 28 Basudeb Chaudhuri 29 Indira
    [Show full text]
  • Memorandum (Academic)
    Office of the Vice-Provost and Associate Vice-President memorandum (Academic) DATE: April 17, 2020 TO: Senate FROM: Dr. Dwight Deugo, Vice-Provost and Associate Vice-President (Academic), and Chair, Senate Quality Assurance and Planning Committee RE: Economic Policy master’s-level graduate diplomas (Type 2 & 3) New Program Approval _____________________________________________________________________________ SAPC Motion THAT SQAPC recommends to SENATE the approval of the proposed Graduate Diplomas in Economic Policy to commence Winter 2021. Senate Motion THAT Senate approve the master’s-level graduate diplomas in Economic Policy to commence with effect from Winter 2021. Background The program is a graduate diploma in Economic Policy in the Department of Economics. The principal goal is to expose anyone with an undergraduate degree and at least some formal training in undergraduate economics to a wide range of issues related to the formulation of economic policy. It will target non-economists working on economic policy in government, central banks and other organizations as well as people who already have an undergraduate degree in Economics wishing to take courses that are at the forefront of current economic policy debates. Attachments Self-Study with Appendices Courseleaf entries Faculty CVs (volume II) Quality Assurance Framework and Carleton’s Institutional Quality Assurance Process (IQAP) Upon the above motion being passed by Senate, the required documentation will be submitted to the Quality Council for its review and a decision
    [Show full text]
  • Scheduled Castes/Scheduled Tribes and Dalits: a Bibliography
    Women’s Studies Resources Series; 4 Scheduled Castes/Schedules Tribes and Dalits A Bibliography Complied by Madhu Shri & Deepa Singhal January 2015 CENTRE FOR WOMEN’S DEVELOPMENT STUDIES 25, Bhai Vir Singh Marg (Gole Market) New Delhi-110 001 Ph. 91-11-32226930, 322266931 E-mail: [email protected] Website: www.cwds.ac.in/library/library.htm 1 CONTENTS Preface ……………………………………………….………………….i-ii Part - I Books/Mimeo Papers/Conferences /Seminar/Workshops Papers and Reports/Analytics ……………………………………………1-163 Section-I: References on Women ……………………….. 1-51 Section-II: General References .………………………... 52-163 Part - II Journals/Periodicals/Newsletters Articles ………………………. 64-189 Part- III References in Hindi ………………………………………………190-222 Part- IV Indexes: Name Index ………………………………………………………223-247 Keywords Index …………………………………………………. 248-273 Area Index ……………………………………………………….. 274-279 Part- V Appendices: List of Journals/Periodicals/Newsletters indexed in the bibliography ………………………………………………………280-288 List of Organisations/Institutions ………………………………... 289-292 List of Journals/Newsletters ………………………………………293-294 2 Preface Caste is an institution of oppression and social discrimination specific to South Asia, more so to India. Caste is hostile to individual and collective freedom. In recent years, there have been new attempts to understand the socio-economic conditions of the life of SCs/STs and dalit peoples and household in India. The SCs/STs, and Dalits throughout the country occupy the lowest rank in the caste hierarchy. They are landless agricultural and casual labourers. They are mostly engaged in menial jobs which adds to lower their social and ritual status further and still being suppressed and oppressed in different forms of social, economic and political spheres in many parts of the country.
    [Show full text]
  • Subject Index
    Economic and Political Weekly INDEX Vol. XIV, Nos. 1-52 January-December 1979 Ed = Editorials MMR = Money Market Review F = Feature RA= Review Article CL = Civil Liberties SA = Special Article C = Commentary D = Discussion P = Perspectives SS = Special Statistics BR = Book Review LE = Letters to Editor ACCIDENTAL DEATHS Explosion at Bargolia Colliery: Assam; AGRARIAN REFORMS Seema Guha (C) Evading Political Causes of Poverty: Issue no: 14, Apr 07-13, p.650 Preview of an FAO 'World Conference' (C) ACCOUNTING Issue no: 28, Jul 14-20, p.1147 Depreciation Practices and Dividend Decisions in Joint Stock Companies; N L AGRARIAN RELATIONS Dhameja (RA) Agrarian Relations and the Left Movement Issue no: 21, May 26-Jun 01, p.M47 in Kerala A Note on Recent Trends; N Krishnaji (SA) ADULT EDUCATION Issue no: 09, Mar 03-09, p.515 One Year of Adult Education: Education; A R Kamat (C) Agrarian Relations in a Khasi State; Bani Issue no: 51-52, Dec 22-Jan 04, p.2083 Prasanna Misra (SA) Issue no: 20, May 19-25, p.888 AFGHANISTAN Deeper Foreign Involvement: Afghanistan Bonded Labour Astir: Bihar (C) (Ed) Issue no: 11, Mar 17-23, p.577 Issue no: 38, Sep 22-28, p.1596 Caste, Class and Economic Opportunity in Mending of Fences: Afghanistan (Ed) Kerala: An Empirical Analysis; P Issue no: 45, Nov 10-16, p.1820 Sivanandan (SA) Issue no: 07-08, Feb 17-Mar 02, p.475 AFGHANISTHAN-SOVIET UNION RELATIONS Soviet Putsch in Kabul (Ed) Champaran in Historical Perspective; N Issue no: 51-52, Dec 22-Jan 04, p.2069 Benjamin (BR) Issue no: 01, Jan 06-12, p.27 AFRICA Another
    [Show full text]
  • Dreams of My Father, Prison for My Mother: the H-4 Nonimmigrant Visa Dilemma and the Need for an "Immigration- Status Spousal Support"
    Scholarly Commons @ UNLV Boyd Law Scholarly Works Faculty Scholarship 2014 Dreams of My Father, Prison for My Mother: The H-4 Nonimmigrant Visa Dilemma and the Need for an "Immigration- Status Spousal Support" Stewart Chang University of Nevada, Las Vegas -- William S. Boyd School of Law Follow this and additional works at: https://scholars.law.unlv.edu/facpub Part of the Family Law Commons, Immigration Law Commons, Law and Gender Commons, and the Law and Race Commons Recommended Citation Chang, Stewart, "Dreams of My Father, Prison for My Mother: The H-4 Nonimmigrant Visa Dilemma and the Need for an "Immigration-Status Spousal Support"" (2014). Scholarly Works. 1110. https://scholars.law.unlv.edu/facpub/1110 This Article is brought to you by the Scholarly Commons @ UNLV Boyd Law, an institutional repository administered by the Wiener-Rogers Law Library at the William S. Boyd School of Law. For more information, please contact [email protected]. Dreams of My Father, Prison for My Mother: The H-4 Nonimmigrant Visa Dilemma and the Need for an "Immigration-Status Spousal Support" Stewart Chang* For many years during my public interest practice, I conducted a le- gal clinic working with the Asian Indian immigrant community in Artesia, California. The advocacy organization that I worked with regularly referred Asian Indian clients having marital difficulties to me. Cases involving women who were admitted as derivative H-4 beneficiaries on their husbands' H-lB employment-based visas were particularly problematic. Some of these cases involved emotional and physical abuse, others neglect and infidelity, still oth- ers simply spouses no longer getting along.
    [Show full text]
  • IMPORTANT INDIAN ECONOMISTS K.N.RAJ(1924-2010)  Kakkadan Nandanath Raj Was Born in Thrissur District of Kerala on 13 May 1924
    IMPORTANT INDIAN ECONOMISTS K.N.RAJ(1924-2010) Kakkadan Nandanath Raj was born in Thrissur District of Kerala on 13 May 1924. He is popularly known as K. N. Raj, an Indian economist who played an important role in India's planned development. He drafted sections of India's first Five Year Plan, specifically the introductory chapter when he was only 26 years old. He took B.A. from the prestigious Madras Christian College. He was a disciple of a well-distinguished economist Malcom Adiseshiah at Madras Christian College. His teacher pressed for him to go for higher studies in London School of Economics. His thesis was on the monetary policy of India's central bank. Raj was a companion of distinguished economists like Manmohan Singh, Amartya Sen and Jagdish Bhagwati. He was a veteran economist in the Planning Commission and worked out a plan to raise India's rate of savings in the post- Second World War period when the country was in need of foreign aid. . He computed India's Balance of Payments for the first time for the Reserve Bank of India. Raj was an advisor to several prime ministers from Jawaharlal Nehru to P.V. Narasimha Rao. Dr. Raj was a Keynesian economist. He studied the application of Keynesian monetary theory in Indian context. Although he was a staunch leftist, he was a critical of Lenin's ideas of the State. Like all other Leftists, he opposed to the economic liberalisation in India. Raj joined Delhi University, where he was Professor of Economics and also Vice- Chancellor (from October 1969 to December 1970), spending a total of 18 years there.
    [Show full text]