Agriculture and rural development 1990s and beyond: redesigning relations between state and institutions of development
By: Shah Tushar.
Material type:
ArticleSubject(s): Agricultural Development -- India | Rural Development -- India
In:
Economic and Political WeeklySummary: "In India on the threshold of the 21st century, orthodox economic planning is unlikely to prepare the nation to meet the challenge of rapid agricultural and rural employment growth that it has failed to tackle so far. More is wrong with India than just the planning of her resource generation and allocation. What India needs to do most is to focus, above all else, on devising radical and innovative strategies that can yield and sustain 5-7 percent annual growth rate in the value of output of the agricultural sector; and recent experience suggests that in nation's which have secured anywhere near such high growth rate, the state and its institutions of economic development have done more than just orthodox eco
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Indian Institute of Public Administration | Available | AR25650 |
"In India on the threshold of the 21st century, orthodox economic planning is unlikely to prepare the nation to meet the challenge of rapid agricultural and rural employment growth that it has failed to tackle so far. More is wrong with India than just the planning of her resource generation and allocation. What India needs to do most is to focus, above all else, on devising radical and innovative strategies that can yield and sustain 5-7 percent annual growth rate in the value of output of the agricultural sector; and recent experience suggests that in nation's which have secured anywhere near such high growth rate, the state and its institutions of economic development have done more than just orthodox eco


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