INDIAN ECONOMY II
Course Description
This course examines sector-specific polices and their impact in shaping trends in key economic indicators in India. It highlights major policy debates and evaluates the Indian empirical evidence. Given the rapid changes taking place in the country, the reading list will have to be updated annually.
Course Outline
1. Macroeconomic Policies and Their Impact
Fiscal Policy; trade and investment policy; financial and monetary policies; labour
regulation.
2. Policies and Performance in Agriculture
Growth; productivity; agrarian structure and technology; capital formation; trade; pricing
and procurement.
3. Policies and Performance in Industry
Growth; productivity; diversification; small scale industries; public sector; competition
policy; foreign investment.
4. Trends and Performance in Services
THIS SECTION COMPRISES STUDY MATERIAL OF INDIAN ECONOMY.
Readings:
1. Shankar Acharya, 2010, ―Macroeconomic Performance and Policies 2000-8,‖ in Shankar Acharya and Rakesh Mohan, editors, India’s Economy: Performances and Challenges: Development and Participation, Oxford University Press.
2. Rakesh Mohan, 2010, ―India‘s Financial Sector and Monetary Policy Reforms,‖ in Shankar Acharya and Rakesh Mohan, editors, India’s Economy: Performances and Challenges: Development and Participation, Oxford University Press.
3. Pulapre Balakrishnan, Ramesh Golait and Pankaj Kumar, 2008, ―Agricultural
Growth in India Since 1991, RBI DEAP Study no. 27.
4. B.N. Goldar and S.C. Aggarwal, 2005, ―Trade Liberalisation and Price-Cost
Margin in Indian Industries, The Developing Economics, September.
5. P. Goldberg, A. Khandelwal, N. Pavcnik and P. Topalova, 2009, ―Trade Liberalisation and New Imported Inputs, American Economic Review, Papers and Proceedings, May.
6. Kunal Sen, 2010, ―Trade, Foreign Direct Investment and Industrial Transformation in India, ïn Premachandra Athukorala, editor, The Rise of Asia, Routledge.
7. A. Ahsan, C. Pages and T. Roy, 2008, ―Legislation, Enforcement and Adjudication in Indian Labour Markets: Origins, Consequences and the Way Forward, in D. Mazumdar and S. Sarkar, editors, Globalization, Labour Markets and Inequality in India, Routledge.
8. Dipak Mazumdar and Sandeep Sarkar, 2009, ―The Employment Problem in India and the Phenomenon of the ‗Missing Middle‖, Indian Journal of Labour Economics.
9. J. Dennis Rajakumar, 2011, ―Size and Growth of Private Corporate Sector in
Indian Manufacturing, Economic and Political Weekly, April.
10. Ramesh Chand, 2010, ―Understanding the Nature and Causes of Food Inflation,‖
Economic and Political Weekly, February.
11. Bishwanath Goldar, 2011, ―Organised Manufacturing Employment: Continuing the Debate‖, Economic and Political Weekly, April.
12. Kaushik Basu and A. Maertens, eds, 2013, The New Oxford Companion to Economics in India, Oxford University Press.
Was the 2020 paper an exact replica of the 2019 paper?
ReplyDeleteyes
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ReplyDeletePlease update this syllabus. This is old. 92% syllabus was changed this year in 2022. So the resources here provide is not useful for Semester 6, Delhi University Exams.
ReplyDeleteNice information sir/ madam, thanks for sharing, guys you can also read August 2023 Financial Awareness for preparation of Banking exams.
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