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My purpose in creating this
web page is to give access to readers to my writings on the
Indian political system, its economy, and the
interconnections between the two. These are subjects I have
studied for the past 38 years. However, only articles since
1999 are readily available in electronic form.
After studying Philosophy,
Politics and Economics at Oxford, I joined the United
Nations in 1961, and spent the next nearly five years in the
UN Special Fund/ UNDP. Two of these years were spent in New
York as a Special assistant to Paul G. Hoffman , the
managing director of the Special Fund, and later first
administrator of the UNDP. The remaining three were spent
in Damascus Syria.
I returned to India in 1966
and entered journalism as an Assistant Editor, ( Leader
writer) in the Hindustan Times, Delhi's main English daily.
In 1969, I shifted to the Times of India, then regarded as
the newspaper of record for India, all over the world.
Between 1979 and 1981 I was first the Deputy editor of the
Economic Times and then Editor of the Financial Express, two
of India's three main economic dailies. In 1981 I returned
to the Times of India as its economic editor and in 1986
became editor of the Hindustan Times.
In 1990 I spent just under a
year as the Information Adviser to the prime minister, V. P.
Singh, in his short-lived government. In that year I
witnessed the calculated stoking of communal ( anti-Muslim)
passions by the right wing Bharatiya Janata party from the
Prime minister's office , and wrote a book on that
experience.
Since 1991, I have been a
columnist in several publications. These include the Hindu,
The Hindustan times, The Business Standard, and Outlook (
India's premier weekly newsmagazine). Between 1986 and
1990, I was the India correspondent of The Economist.
I have also written for the op-ed page of the New York
Times.
In 1995 I was a visiting
fellow at the Centre for International Affairs, Harvard
University. That experience sowed the seeds of a book on the
impact of globalisation on the International order that will
be completed in 2004.From 1997 till 2000, I taught one
semester a year at the Universities of Virginia and
Richmond.
Over the years I have written
several books. The first, published in 1980 was "India: A
PoliticalEconomy of Stagnation". This summed up and fused
my writing on India's politics and economics in the Times
of India. Its main thesis was that India's slow growth was
not the result of faulty but well meaning economic policies
but the rise of an 'intermediate' class of petty
entrepreneurs and well-to-do farmers which created a regime
of permanent shortages to extract 'quasi-rent' from it to
fuel its growth. Slowing down growth by not allowing
efficient producers to grow freely was a consequence of this
political class struggle.
A list of
my books is given below.
1. India : A Political Economy of Stagnation:
Oxford University Press 1980.
2. Management of Public Enterprises in
Developing Asian Countries: The UN Asian and Pacific
Development Administration Centre. Kuala Lumpur, 1980.
3. In the Eye of the Cyclone: The crisis in
Indian Democracy. Viking , New Delhi. 1993.
4. Kashmir 1947: Rival versions of History:
Oxford University Press. 1996.
5. A Jobless Future: Political causes of
Economic crisis
(in India). Rupa books, New Delhi. Feb. 2002.
6.The Perilous Road to the Market: The
Political economy of reform in Russia, China and India.
Pluto Press U.K. August 2002 .
7. Kashmir 1947: the Origins of a dispute
(much enlarged second edition of the 1996 book) OUP 2003.
8. The End of Saddam Hussein's Iraq -- History through the
Eyes of the Victim. Coming out in India on November 15,
2003. Rupa books.
I am currently finishing the
eight -year study of globalisation and its impact upon
society mentioned above. It is tentatively titled:
"The Fifth horseman--Globalisation, Chaos and War".
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