Unequal : why India lags behind its neighbours / Swati Narayan.
Material type: TextLanguage: English Publication details: Chennai : Context, 2023.ISBN:- 9789357769983
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FOBJGU Sonepat- Campus FOB Library | Faculty Publication | 330.954 NA-U (Browse shelf(Opens below)) | Not For Loan (Restricted Access) | 152264 | ||||
OPJGU Sonepat- Campus Main Library | General Books | 330.954 NA-U (Browse shelf(Opens below)) | Checked out | Replaced by 21090045 | 15/11/2024 | 024725 | ||
OPJGU Sonepat- Campus Main Library | General Books | 330.954 NA-U (Browse shelf(Opens below)) | Available | 151536 |
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330.954 MO-I India is broken : a people betrayed, 1947 to today / | 330.954 MO-I India is broken : a people betrayed, independence to today / | 330.954 MU-C Caste, class and capital the social and political origins of economic policy in India | 330.954 NA-U Unequal : why India lags behind its neighbours / | 330.954 NA-U Unequal : why India lags behind its neighbours / | 330.954 OM-E Economics a primer for India | 330.954 PA-E Evolution of the Indian economy since 1991 |
"A newborn girl can expect to live to eighty in Sri Lanka, seventy-four in Bangladesh and sixty-nine in India. This is but one of a range of Swati Narayan’s insights from a five-year study across four countries: India, Bangladesh, Nepal and Sri Lanka. She found that even poorer neighbours were doing better than India on a range of social indicators: health, nutrition, education, sanitation, with more women working outside the home. Narayan’s intensive, immersive research shows that India’s leapfrogging neighbours have worked hard to dilute social inequalities. Land reforms, investments in schools and hospitals, and socio-political reform movements aimed at diluting caste and gender discrimination - all of these have wrought change over the decades. Excellent networks of primary healthcare clinics, village schools and household toilets have transformed the lives of citizens in these countries. In economically booming India, on the other hand, social ills like sex-selective abortion, child stunting, illiteracy and preventable deaths are rampant. Inequalities are stark here—not only between the burgeoning billionaire class and the neglected masses, but also among the northern states and their southern counterparts. However, it is in fact the successes in states like Tamil Nadu and Kerala that offer grounds for optimism—India is capable of transformation if governments commit to social welfare investments and bridging social inequities. Packed with human stories as well as hard data, and shot through with empathy and hope, Swati Narayan’s Unequal is a necessary book for our times."--
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