Programme
Schedule (click to download)
Introduction: The context
The current global economic crisis – reflected in stock market crashes,
growth slowdowns, banking crises, capital flights and large job losses
– has indeed halted the march of neo-liberalism as the dominant ideology
of our times. It marks the end of a phase in which finance enjoyed historically
unprecedented rights and privileges in deciding economic policy. The crisis
has forced Western governments to intervene, regulate, and even nationalise
financial institutions.
Though the process of financial liberalisation began much later in Asia
than it did in Latin America, recent decades had witnessed rapid liberalisation
leading to a restructuring of financial sectors in the region. The first
indication that this can have adverse macroeconomic and welfare effects
came with the severe financial crises that afflicted several South-East
Asian countries in 1997. While these countries have substantially recovered
ground since then, that experience did not slow the pace of subsequent
financial liberalisation. As a result, financial volatility has been a
persisting phenomenon and has finally culminated in the global financial
crisis, triggered by the sub-prime mortgage crisis in the United States.
While much has been written on the financial crisis per se, its effects
on the real economy and the mechanisms-international and domestic-through
which those effects are transmitted are only now being understood. Analysing
these processes and outcomes is, needless to say, crucial to the formulation
of appropriate responses to the crisis globally and individual countries.
In India, financial liberalisation was the centrepiece of the larger programme
of ''economic reform.'' Much of the prescriptions of the WC found their
echo in the post-1991 economic reform programme in India. The programme
began with a radical programme of stabilization and structural adjustment,
assisted by the World Bank and the IMF. Immediate measures of macroeconomic
stabilization, fiscal correction, exchange rate adjustment, monetary targets
and inflation controls were announced. These stabilization measures were
to be supplemented by structural reform measures, which included industrial
deregulation, liberalisation of foreign direct investment, trade liberalisation,
overhauling of public enterprises and financial sector reforms. In the
initial period, the liberalization of the agricultural sector proceeded
only slowly. However, over the years, the pace of reforms in the agricultural
sector was also accelerated.
The onset of the global financial crisis provides an ideal opportunity
to discuss the effects of the new economic regime, with financial liberalisation
at its core, on the real economy, with special focus on the living and
working conditions of the Indian people. The proposed conference has been
conceptualised with this broad objective in mind.
The onset of the global financial crisis provides an ideal opportunity
to discuss the effects of the new economic regime, with financial liberalisation
at its core, on the real economy, with special focus on the living and
working conditions of the Indian people. The proposed conference has been
conceptualised with this broad objective in mind.
List of Papers presented in the Conference (Click
the title to download)
- Jomo K. Sundaram, "The
Global Crisis" (Presentation)
- C. P. Chandrasekhar, "The
Crisis and the Road Ahead: New Directions for Regulating Finance"
- Giovanni Andrea Cornia, "Democratic
Change and Income Inequality in Latin America during the Last Decade"
- Sanjay G. Reddy, - Paper not received -
- Jayati Ghosh, "The
Global Financial Crisis, Developing Countries and India"
- Alicia Puyana, "Déjà
vue: The Impact of the Global Economic Crisis on Latin American Economies"
(Presentation)
- Wang Shaoguang, "Is
China Prepared to Cope with Economic Slowdown?” (Presentation)
- Andong Zhu,
"China’s Growth Model: Problems and Alternatives"
- R. Ramakumar, "Indian
Agriculture under Economic Reforms: A Preliminary Review"
- Madhura Swaminathan, "Neo-Liberal
Policy and Food Security in India: Impact on the Public Distribution
System"
- Parthapratim Pal, "WTO
Agreement on Agriculture: Time to Rethink the Framework?'
- Sudip Chaudhari, "Nature
of Manufacturing Growth in Post-Reforms India: Some Disquieting Features"
- T. Jayaraman, "Science,
Technology and Innovation Policy in India under Economic Reform: A Survey"
- Ben Fine,
"Social Policy and the Crisis of Neo-Liberalism"
- Praveen Jha, "The
Well-Being of Labour in Contemporary Indian Economy: What’s Active Labour
Market Policy Got to do with it?"
- Prabhat Patnaik,
“The Economic Crisis and Contemporary Capitalism”
January 27, 2009.
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