000 01639nam a2200193Ia 4500
999 _c43836
_d43836
005 20220609193922.0
008 200204s9999 xx 000 0 und d
020 _a9780670847273
082 _a338.0924 Nan
100 _aNanda, H.P.
245 4 _aDays of my years
260 _aNew Delhi
260 _bViking
260 _c1992
300 _a274 p.
520 _aIn 1947, when the partition of the Indian subcontinent took millions of lives and destroyed the fortunes of numberless others, a successful young entrepreneur fled Lahore with his family. Of the fortune he had built up in the place of his birth, he had nothing. Undaunted, H.P. Nanda began all Over again, and in a few decades, had put together a second fortune-one that was even bigger than the first. Then, he almost lost his second empire-Escorts-when Swraj Paul, a "raider" from overseas laid seige to it. But Hari Nanda was not about to go down without a fight. His battle to save his company must surely figure as one of the finest moments in the history of Indian industry. In addition to telling the story of how a near-penniless refugee created one of the ten largest industrial groups in India, The Days Of My Years takes in its sweep current industrial policy and industrial relations, the changes that Indian industry has seen over the years and the part industry needs to play in the development of India. Finally, H.P. Nanda's work philosophies, and insights into the world of business should prove invaluable to young people in industry who wish to carve out successful careers for themselves.
650 _aIndustrialists India
942 _cB
_2ddc