Economist and policymaker Arvind Panagariya, Chairman of the 16th Finance Commission, has documented the economic history of independent India's first Prime Minister Jawaharlal Nehru's era and its impact on subsequent policymaking. The book, The Nehru Development Model, states that Nehru's policies stunted India's economic potential, creating a socialist mindset that persisted long after the era and hampered growth until the liberalisation of the 1990s. Panagariya spoke with Business Today's Siddharth Zarabi on what lessons are left to be learnt for India's future economic journey. Edited excerpts:
Q: What remains to be dismantled of the Nehruvian era when it comes to economic policymaking in India?
A: A lot of what PM Nehru did has been dismantled...investment licensing, import licensing, and foreign exchange control... Those three have been largely dismantled, but there are things... [such as] the Industrial Disputes Act, which still needs to be replaced by the Code on Industrial Labour... But when I use the term Nehru era, one has to also include, at least for the purpose of this specific question, what followed Nehru? Because Nehru's era did not end with Nehru.....[it] was followed by yet more socialism, what I call hard socialism, under his daughter Indira Gandhi. And a number of things that were done under Indira Gandhi still remain to be undone. These include the nationalisation of banks that was done in 1969. Coal mines were nationalised... oil industry was nationalised... And of course the influence of the Nehru era has even extended into the post-reform era whereby, during the UPA years, particularly UPA 2, 2009 to 2014, we saw a return of some of the Nehru-like measures, which included the very restrictive Land Acquisition Act and the Right to Education Act. There's also retrospective taxation, which has not been undone...
Esta historia es de la edición January 19, 2025 de Business Today India.
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Esta historia es de la edición January 19, 2025 de Business Today India.
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