06215oam 22015854 450 991095611550332120250426110520.0978661382271097814623387191462338712978145272190314527219049781282606944128260694897814519081831451908180(CKB)3360000000443305(EBL)3014453(SSID)ssj0001477481(PQKBManifestationID)11811190(PQKBTitleCode)TC0001477481(PQKBWorkID)11453599(PQKB)11514537(OCoLC)694141116(IMF)WPIEE2006022(MiAaPQ)EBC3014453(IMF)WPIEA2006022WPIEA2006022(EXLCZ)99336000000044330520020129d2006 uf 0engurcnu||||||||txtccrIndia's Pattern of Development : What Happened, What Follows? /Arvind Subramanian, Raghuram Rajan, Ioannis Tokatlidis, Kalpana Kochhar, Utsav Kumar1st ed.Washington, D.C. :International Monetary Fund,2006.1 online resource (70 p.)IMF Working Papers"January 2006."9781451862829 1451862822 Includes bibliographical references.""Contents""; ""I. INTRODUCTION""; ""II. INDIA CIRCA 1980""; ""III. HOW HAS INDIA CHANGED SINCE THE EARLY 1980's? ""; ""IV. THE STATES STORY""; ""V. UNDERSTANDING POST-1980 PERFORMANCE""; ""VI. LOOKING AHEAD""; ""Appendix: Data Sources and Description""; ""REFERENCES""India has followed an idiosyncratic pattern of development, certainly compared with other fast-growing Asian economies. While the importance of services rather than manufacturing is widely noted, within manufacturing India has emphasized skill-intensive rather than laborintensive manufacturing, and industries with higher-than-average scale. Some of these distinctive patterns existed prior to the beginning of economic reforms in the 1980s, and stem from the idiosyncratic policies adopted after India's independence. Using the growth of fastmoving Indian states as a guide, we conclude that India may not revert to the pattern followed by other countries, despite reforms that have removed some policy impediments that contributed to India's distinctive path.IMF Working Papers; Working Paper ;No. 2006/022Economic developmentAggregate Factor Income DistributionimfAggregate Human CapitalimfAggregate Labor ProductivityimfAggregate ProductivityimfChoice of TechnologyimfCivil service & public sectorimfCross-Country Output ConvergenceimfEconomic Growth and Aggregate Productivity: GeneralimfEconomic sectorsimfEconomic theoryimfEmploymentimfFinance, PublicimfIncome economicsimfIncomeimfIndustrializationimfIndustries: ManufacturingimfIndustry Studies: Manufacturing: GeneralimfIndustry Studies: Services: GeneralimfIntergenerational Income DistributionimfLabor economicsimfLabor Economics: GeneralimfLaborimfLabourimfMacroeconomic Analyses of Economic DevelopmentimfMacroeconomicsimfMacroeconomics: ProductionimfManufacturing and Service IndustriesimfManufacturing industriesimfManufacturingimfMeasurement of Economic GrowthimfNational accountsimfPublic EnterprisesimfPublic sectorimfPublic-Private EnterprisesimfUnemploymentimfWagesimfIndiaEconomic conditions1947-IndiaEconomic policyIndiaimfEconomic development.Aggregate Factor Income DistributionAggregate Human CapitalAggregate Labor ProductivityAggregate ProductivityChoice of TechnologyCivil service & public sectorCross-Country Output ConvergenceEconomic Growth and Aggregate Productivity: GeneralEconomic sectorsEconomic theoryEmploymentFinance, PublicIncome economicsIncomeIndustrializationIndustries: ManufacturingIndustry Studies: Manufacturing: GeneralIndustry Studies: Services: GeneralIntergenerational Income DistributionLabor economicsLabor Economics: GeneralLaborLabourMacroeconomic Analyses of Economic DevelopmentMacroeconomicsMacroeconomics: ProductionManufacturing and Service IndustriesManufacturing industriesManufacturingMeasurement of Economic GrowthNational accountsPublic EnterprisesPublic sectorPublic-Private EnterprisesUnemploymentWagesSubramanian Arvind1816393Kochhar Kalpana1604024Kumar Utsav1816394Rajan Raghuram1331365Tokatlidis Ioannis1816395International Monetary Fund.Research Dept.DcWaIMFBOOK9910956115503321India's Pattern of Development4372443UNINA