ROLE OF STATE AND ECONOMIC GROWTH: A COMPARATIVE STUDY OF SYRIA AND INDIA (1970-2010)
ROLE OF STATE AND ECONOMIC GROWTH: A COMPARATIVE STUDY OF SYRIA AND INDIA (1970-2010)
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Date
2020-06
Authors
MOHAMMAD SULIMAN, FORAT
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
University of Hyderabad
Abstract
Much of the story of development for post-colonial nations begins with their respective
dates of getting independence. Achieving development and structural transformation have been
the major objectives to remove abject poverty and give people a reasonable standard of life,
made possible by modern societies. What is the ideal model of development to achieve is a
debate remains inconclusive as any of the simplistic propositions are dismissed by wider
evidence. There is an attempt to thrust a dominant view, and theoretical and empirical
evidences are mustered to prove them as the right. But equally enough, no one model seems to
have worked well everywhere. As Paul Feyeraband had cautioned us not to get bogged down
by any one method for a successful evolution of science, it appears this equally true for the
project of development. India, for example, was hailed at one point for choosing liberal
democracy and mixed economy till the 1970s, then it was severely criticized for choosing an
inefficient statist model (Nayyar, 2005). The fall of the Soviet Union and East Europe is
attributed to the ultimate failure of state-led development. China is shown as the loadstar for
development after it embarked on a liberalized strategy. South Korea is also hailed as a case
for export-led free market-led capitalist economies to achieve the highest levels of growth.
Soon, we learned that neither China nor South Korea is an example of a free market. China has
60 percent of its economy constituted by the public sector. South Korea has a significant role
of its state in development strategy and it has not followed any free-market policy, rather it
followed pro-business strategy (Kohli, 2005). It is now perhaps amply clear that it is not the
role of state per se which determines the path of development, rather what is the role that the
state actually plays in development. The object of research in this thesis is precisely this issue
discussed in a comparative study of the two nations, namely, Syria and India.