An Unkept Promise
What Derailed the Indian Economy
- Prasanna Mohanty - Independent Journalist and Researcher
Principles of Management
An Unkept Promise: What Derailed the Indian Economy looks at some of the pre-pandemic economic decisions and the string of reforms implemented during the pandemic crisis such as new farm laws, new labour codes, decisions to privatize profitable public sector units and de-nationalize banks, and the proposed move to allow corporations to run banks. With hard evidence and data, the book tries to diagnose what has gone wrong and why? It also examines the role of key democratic institutions of checks and balances in policymaking such as Parliament, Niti Aayog, Supreme Court, media and citizenry. As cronyism grows and stock market booms, millions have lost their jobs and incomes, the book warns against neo-liberal economic thinking and suggests corrective measures to get the economy back on track.
The book provides an excellent and comprehensive review of the economic landscape of India since 2014. It describes the symptoms of the economic malaise in detail, with evidence instead of rhetoric, and then provides an incisive analysis of the factors that contributed to it. This includes general systemic factors such as over-centralization of policymaking, arbitrary changes in the statistical system, specific policies, such as demonetization, GST reform and protectionism, as well as dealing with the pandemic. From symptoms to diagnostics to prescription, the book takes a clinical look at the state of the economy and the way forward.
India is at an inflexion point. From 1991 to 2015, India was seen as an emerging economy and a rising power. The economic slowdown since 2016, made worse by the COVID-19 pandemic, recent political and social trends and an increasingly adverse external environment, has brought into question this narrative. Prasanna Mohanty’s detailed analysis of recent economic developments and policies reinforces these concerns about India’s economic prospects. This book deserves a wide readership.
Prasanna Mohanty’s book provides a timely and detailed x-ray into the path taken by the Indian economy in the last decade. It lays out what’s gone wrong and what needs to be done by the way of course correction. In this turbulent period, the policy prescriptions underlined in this book offer a well-researched alternative view to getting the Indian economy back on a high growth trajectory.
Prasanna Mohanty tracks the Indian economic and political policy changes between 2014 and mid-2021, as well as the effects of those on the socio-economic structure of the country in this excellently researched book. He backs his arguments and assertions with data at each and every step. This is an excellent book for any reader interested in the Indian economy.
This is a well-argued book with lots of supporting data. It dispassionately analyses the current crisis and traces its roots in economic and political developments in the last three decades. It points to the shortcomings of the official data and presents an alternative picture. It takes into account the exogenous factors and highlights institutional failures and points to their long-term impact. All in all, an eminently readable tome.
Prasanna Mohanty’s book is grounded in a series of 70 exceptionally researched articles he wrote for Business Today.In on how to fire up the Indian economy after the prolonged downturn got accentuated by the unexpected intensity of Covid I & II. His eye for detail and the unique ability to deliver sound economic arguments via data are capabilities that make this book very special. In the annals of economic history, I hope that this book will be remembered for its plentiful solutions to the problems plaguing the economy.
With over a decade of experience covering the Indian economy, Prasanna brings out different processes and facets of reforms in India, especially in the last decade, in this book and argues strongly, without rhetoric, why some of those reforms have not worked well…what led to severe slowdown in recent times. While Prasanna’s conclusions appear to be implausible in some places, there is no doubt that they are clearly based on data and empirics. In a way, Prasanna’s book tries to provide an alternative explanation to the ongoing reforms push, which, some say, is imposed without much evidence, while others argue that it is through conviction.
This is a data-backed economic analysis of the Modi government’s performance. Data reveal the truth and conceal little. Prasanna Mohanty has carefully collated data from trustworthy sources and laid the record bare. It’s rich with data, and everything you want to know about what happened in India is here. It should be on the bookshelf of every policy analyst. The Modi record is bared, and its claims are dared.