Description

Book Synopsis

A regular feature in almost publication has been a comparison of India’s slow economic growth and, until recently, China’s rapid progress. Yet, in 1988, both countries had similar living standards. As things stand, it is undoubtedly a tale of two countries and two systems. Supporters of India can point to the democratic nature of the country’s development while ignoring the slow pace of change. China’s supporters point to exceptional poverty reduction, urbanization, and infrastructure developments while ignoring the social, religious, and environmental costs these efforts have created.

However, popular media has ignored the fact the individual starting points of the two nations, a gap which this book fills. This study examines how China’s economic reforms was initiated with Deng Xiaoping’s fang-shou (‘letting go’ and ‘tightening up’) efforts between 1978 and 1989. However, until 1989 China had nothing much to demonstrate compare with India. Both countries had similar per head national income but India was technologically much superior to China. The reforms in China then accelerated in a sustained manner—be it the Family Responsibility System that transformed agriculture, the opening up of the industrial sector for the growth of local enterprises and foreign investments, or the substantial effort to make state-owned enterprises more efficient.



Table of Contents

Chapter 1: Arrival of the Muslims

Chapter 2: India under the Muslim Rule

Chapter 3: East India Сompany’s rule and the Muslims

Chapter 4: The Twentieth Century and the Economic Condition of Muslims

Chapter 5: Jinnah and the Creation of Pakistan

Chapter 6: Gandhi and Creation of Pakistan

Chapter 7: Creation of a Separate State

Chapter 8: Cultural Explanations for the Partition

Chapter 9: A plan to reunite countries in South Asia

India and China: Retrospective Views on

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    Order before 4pm today for delivery by Sat 20 Jun 2026.

    A Hardback by Dipak Basu, Victoria W. Miroshnik

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      View other formats and editions of India and China: Retrospective Views on by Dipak Basu

      Publisher: Lexington Books
      Publication Date: 15/02/2023
      ISBN13: 9781666921922, 978-1666921922
      ISBN10: 1666921920

      Description

      Book Synopsis

      A regular feature in almost publication has been a comparison of India’s slow economic growth and, until recently, China’s rapid progress. Yet, in 1988, both countries had similar living standards. As things stand, it is undoubtedly a tale of two countries and two systems. Supporters of India can point to the democratic nature of the country’s development while ignoring the slow pace of change. China’s supporters point to exceptional poverty reduction, urbanization, and infrastructure developments while ignoring the social, religious, and environmental costs these efforts have created.

      However, popular media has ignored the fact the individual starting points of the two nations, a gap which this book fills. This study examines how China’s economic reforms was initiated with Deng Xiaoping’s fang-shou (‘letting go’ and ‘tightening up’) efforts between 1978 and 1989. However, until 1989 China had nothing much to demonstrate compare with India. Both countries had similar per head national income but India was technologically much superior to China. The reforms in China then accelerated in a sustained manner—be it the Family Responsibility System that transformed agriculture, the opening up of the industrial sector for the growth of local enterprises and foreign investments, or the substantial effort to make state-owned enterprises more efficient.



      Table of Contents

      Chapter 1: Arrival of the Muslims

      Chapter 2: India under the Muslim Rule

      Chapter 3: East India Сompany’s rule and the Muslims

      Chapter 4: The Twentieth Century and the Economic Condition of Muslims

      Chapter 5: Jinnah and the Creation of Pakistan

      Chapter 6: Gandhi and Creation of Pakistan

      Chapter 7: Creation of a Separate State

      Chapter 8: Cultural Explanations for the Partition

      Chapter 9: A plan to reunite countries in South Asia

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