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Development after Statism

Industrial Firms and the Political Economy of South Asia. South Asia in the Social Sciences

By (author) Adnan Naseemullah
Format: Hardback
Publisher: Cambridge University Press, Cambridge, United Kingdom
Published: 15th Dec 2016
Dimensions: w 152mm h 229mm d 21mm
Weight: 637g
ISBN-10: 110715863X
ISBN-13: 9781107158634
Barcode No: 9781107158634
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Synopsis
How can industrial production be managed without the guidance of the state? Adnan Naseemullah discusses industrial development in a new era of drastically constricted state capacity, from the perspective of the manufacturing firm. India's manufacturing economy has been growing after state promotion has receded. How, then, does Indian manufacturing develop in this context? Naseemullah argues that Indian firms must create production structures themselves, investing in networks of capital and labor without signals from above. Depending on manufacturers' backgrounds, these relationships are based either on formal rules or through personal ties, creating a patchwork of institutions that crosscut region and sector. As a result, many firms have been able to regain some certainty for investment, but at the cost of national coherence and the possibility of broader transformation. As a mirror case, this book also explores Pakistan's industrial trajectories, in which similar dynamics suggest the broader applicability of this framework.

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'In a political economy framework, no one has probed firm-level manufacturing data in India and Pakistan more meticulously than Adnan Naseemullah. For that reason alone, let alone others, this book stands out and is worth reading.' Ashutosh Varshney, Brown University, Rhode Island 'Deftly combining statistical with ethnographic sources, Adnan Naseemullah has given us a rare comparative view of the merging relations between government and business in India and Pakistan. Should be of interest to scholars, policymakers and commentators.' Partha Chatterjee, Columbia University, New York 'What is the institutional architecture of industrial development in the aftermath of the decline of the state-led industrial development model? Based on a careful analysis of industrialization in India and Pakistan, Adnan Naseemullah provides an original and compelling analysis that puts firms and industrialists as key governance actors shaping the institutional politics of the industrial economy in South Asia and beyond.' Devesh Kapur, University of Pennsylvania