1.

Record Nr.

UNINA9910824770103321

Autore

Agarwala Ramgopal

Titolo

Bharat 2050 : Sthayi Samriddhi ki Yojana / / Rāmagopāla Agravāla

Pubbl/distr/stampa

Los Angeles ; ; London ; ; New Delhi, India : , : Sage Bhasha, , 2017

ISBN

93-86042-83-5

93-5280-363-9

Descrizione fisica

1 online resource (xxxviii, 384 pages)

Disciplina

338.954

Soggetti

Economic development - India

Economic development

Economic history

Political science

Social policy

India Economic conditions 21st century

India Social policy

India Politics and government 21st century

India

Lingua di pubblicazione

Hindi

Formato

Materiale a stampa

Livello bibliografico

Monografia

Note generali

An attempt to understand India's future and development by 2050!

Nota di bibliografia

Includes bibliographical references and index.

Nota di contenuto

Foreword Ambassador Shyam SaranPrefaceAcknowledgmentsIntroductionEnding International Income Apartheid in the 21st CenturyIndia's Growth Story: A Basis for Confidence but in Need of Course CorrectionA New Paradigm for Sustainable ProsperityGrowth Prospects: Downside Scenario and Preferred ScenarioExport-oriented Knowledge Economy for Sustainable Economic ProsperityEnsuring Social Sustainability of ProsperityFinancially Sustainable Resource MobilizationMaking Prosperity Ecologically SustainableToward Decentralized Knowledge-Centric Cities in Prosperous India 2050Getting the Government do Its Duty of Providing Public GoodsSome Overarching ThemesIndia at CrossroadsBibliographyIndex.

Sommario/riassunto

Can India achieve a high-income status by 2050 when it celebrates the centenary of its Republic?  Will the nation eliminate absolute poverty



and improve its human development record?  This book emphasizes the centrality of a trade-oriented services sector led by communication, business services, health, education, research, and innovations for achieving these growth targets. It also argues that inclusiveness, financial prudence, and low-carbon lifestyles are preconditions to long-term growth.  India can achieve such prosperity neither through the socialistic policies of 1950-80 nor through the neo-liberalistic policies since 1980. It needs to, instead, follow a middle-path approach closer to the systems adopted by Germany and the Nordic countries. It is within this framework that India will devise its independent development paradigm rooted in its own traditions and realities.