1. Punjab: The Right to Organize and the Power to Develop.
- Author
-
Leaf, Murray J.
- Subjects
- *
ECONOMIC development , *POWER (Social sciences) , *GREEN Revolution , *POLITICAL systems - Abstract
India as a whole is not closing its development gap with the West. Economic growth in Punjab exceeded that of the rest of India during the period of the Green Revolution. Since then it has dropped to less than the national average. The most direct reason is that increasingly intensive applicat ion of the technologies of the Green Revolution has become ecologically and economically unsustainable. The deeper reason is that the governmental mechanisms at the national and state levels that were used in introducing these technologies in 1965 are still in place and prevent the development of alternatives. In the West, particularly the United States, the Constitution and laws support an enormous number of organizations that can engage in activities for the public good and support themselves by taxes or compulsory fees. The Constitution and laws of India restrict this power mainly to the central government and the states. This article describes the features of the Indian political system that do this, how the Punjab government used them effectively to create the Green Revolution, and how they have been perpetuated and have prevented the development of alternative productive strategies since. It concludes with a description of how the Punjab government might empower the people of Punjab to engage in a much wider range of productive activities even without change in the constitutional set-up at the national level, although it would be better to install such changes at the national level as well. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2015