'India can learn from progress made by Japan, SKorea, Taiwan'

Press Trust of India  |  Singapore 

has much more to learn from the economic progress made by Japan, and who have achieved spectacular growth of more than nine per cent annually for over the last four decades each, an Indian- origin economist has said.

Prasenjit Kumar Basu, a Singapore-based writer and an economist, in his book 'Reborn' writes that agrarian reform combined with heavy in education, skills- development and infrastructure provided the underpinning for the success of the institutions of an elaborate developmental state.


"Japan, and have achieved spectacular economic growth of more than nine per cent annually over four decades each," he writes in his book ahead of its release.

A "hard state" enabled credit to be directed only to the most competitive companies who achieved export targets, and the intense competition domestically helped prepare their companies for global export leadership, he writes.

Basu argues that India's civil service and constitution, based on the 1935 Government of Act, impeded the effective pursuit of development not only because had a soft state, but also because the civil service was aimed at colonial control rather than economic development.

He said the book's detailed history of and highlights how the economic development models of East Asian countries can serve as a manual in India's quest to convince global businesses to 'Make in India'.

(This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)

First Published: Fri, September 01 2017. 14:02 IST