
China and India have long been central to the world economy. Two and a half centuries ago, they contributed 50 percent of the world output; after suffering a decline thereafter, their share fell to a paltry 9 percent in 1950 but has since resurged to over 25 percent today. Their growth and inequality experiences have had strikingly similar trajectories following India's independence (1947) and the Chinese revolution (1949). This book offers novel insights by meticulously analyzing the Chinese and Indian inequality stories (1950–2010) through a class lens. Moreover, it locates their inequality stories within the larger contexts of Asian and global capitalism. Vakulabharanam demonstrates that the mutual interconnectedness between Chinese and Indian growth and inequality dynamics and the transformation and evolution of global capitalism is key to understanding the within-country inequality dynamics in both countries. The book thus offers a new framework on economic development and inequality that builds on and adds to the insights of Kuznets and Piketty.
This book investigates the comparative trajectories of class-based inequality in China and India from 1950 to 2010 to determine how domestic growth dynamics interact with the evolution of global capitalism. Vamsi Vakulabharanam utilizes a class-based analytical lens to evaluate the economic shifts in these two nations following their respective mid-twentieth-century political transformations. By synthesizing historical data and economic theory, the author constructs a framework that expands upon the foundational inequality models established by Kuznets and Piketty. The work argues that internal inequality in both countries cannot be understood in isolation from the broader structural changes within the global capitalist system.
What You Will Find
Experts identify this work as a significant contribution to comparative development studies, particularly for its focus on the intersection of national policy and global market forces. Readers frequently note the academic density of the prose, which is tailored for scholars and students of political economy and economic history.
Page Count:
304
Publication Date:
2025-03-28
Publisher:
Oxford University Press
ISBN-10:
0198934122
ISBN-13:
9780198934127
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