As India celebrates its 72nd birthday, THE WEEK takes a look at how far we have progressed as a nation, and the challenges that still need to be addressed
In 1949, Jawaharlal Nehru recruited a physics professor to fix India’s fledgling economy.
It was not a bad call at all. The professor, Prasanta Chandra Mahalanobis, had graduated with distinction in mathematics and physics from King’s College in Cambridge, was teaching at Kolkata’s Presidency College, and was a much-feted fixture in Bengal’s bhadralok circles. A connoisseur of literature and arts, Mahalanobis lived in a rambling mansion in Barrackpore, famous as Rabindranath Tagore’s favorite hideaway in Kolkata. The duo was apparently so close that the professor knew more about the poet’s canon than the poet himself did.
“Mahalanobis combined fluency in Sanskrit philosophy and Bengali literature with acrobatic ability in physics and statistics,” wrote the historian Sunil Khilnani in The Idea of India. “Intellectually, he was an awesome polyglot, the kind of man for whom Nehru was guaranteed to fall.”
Mahalanobis was also inquisitive, analytical and adventurous—qualities that prompted prime minister Nehru to summon him to Delhi and entrust with him with the task of planning India’s economic development. “I had only a very vague idea of planning when I first came to Delhi,” Mahalanobis said five years after he took the job. “From 1950, when I first started handling national income data, I began to learn.”
A quick learner, he started the world’s most audacious data-gathering exercise a year after he came to Delhi. For three years, he despatched thousands of government officials to the far corners of India to learn about how people lived, how they earned their livelihoods, the things they bought and traded, the money they saved, and so on. The National Sample Survey, which was thus completed in 1953, was the biggest household survey in history, and it rightly caught the attention of economists worldwide.
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Denne historien er fra August 25, 2019-utgaven av THE WEEK.
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