Author: Barbara Harriss-White
Publisher: Three Essays
Year: 2005
Language: English
Pages: 251
ISBN/UPC (if available): 8188789208
Description
Barbara Harriss-White’s work breaks new ground in showing how non-market and non-state institutions shape India’s market society. She focuses on markets for land, labour and essential commodities in small town economies to show the vitality of caste and religious pluralism (among other factors) in their functioning.
Far from being vestiges of an earlier era, she argues that both caste and religion are being reworked in the contemporary era to ensure the subservience of small town economies to the interests of big capital and imperialist globalization.
The linkages between small town economies and the workings of Capital come alive in her analysis. She examines the ground realities of the markets which form the building blocks of Indian capitalism and the attendant crisis of democracy and the deprivations of the people.
Contents
PREAMBLE
Market Romanticism and India’s Regulative Order
Caste-Corporatist Capitalism: Civil Society and Accumulation (with Elisabetta Basile)
India’s Religions and the Economy