000 01767nam a2200193Ia 4500
999 _c12624
_d12624
005 20220613171823.0
008 200202s9999 xx 000 0 und d
082 _aIB 338.9 BHA
100 _aBhagwati, Jagdish N.
245 0 _aIndia planning for industralization : industrialization and trade policies since 1951
245 0 _nc.2
260 _aLondon
260 _bOxford.
260 _c1970
300 _a537 p.
520 _aIN writing a scholarly book, on a major subject such as India's experience with industrialization, we expected to run into several difficulties: and we did, in ample measure. Much of the problem arises from the difficulty of getting in formation in a usable form. This reflects, in turn, the still in adequate character of empirical research in India: data improve when there is a demand for them. We have thus had to spend an enormous amount of time getting together quite elementary data, requiring adjustments in classifications, etc. An excellent example of these problems is Chapter 5, where we decided to put together data on imports, production, exports, taxes, etc., on a comparable commodity classification for four years: 1951, 1957, 1961, and 1963 (the last year for which we could do this). The purpose was to provide some solid statistical basis for our policy discussions. The astonishing thing was that, while several input-output tables had been constructed in India in the past few years, for different years, they were not on a comparable basis and we just had to carry through our work as if from scratch. This work alone took four months of our time, despite a conscientious research assistant and access to statistician friends who knew the sources well.
650 _aIndustralization
942 _cB
_2ddc