1st Edition

India from Latin America Peripherisation, Statebuilding, and Demand-Led Growth

By Manuel Gonzalo Copyright 2023
290 Pages 49 B/W Illustrations
by Routledge India

290 Pages 49 B/W Illustrations
by Routledge India

290 Pages 49 B/W Illustrations
by Routledge India

This book studies the economic history of India and traces the Indian path of development from a Latin American framework and perspective. Despite sharing many historical and geological similarities, dialogue between the young democracies of Latin America and the Indian subcontinent is still extremely scarce. The volume builds a common research agenda for the economic development of the Global... Read more

List of figures

List of tables

Foreword

DR. JOSÉ E. CASSIOLATO

Foreword

DR. K.J. JOSEPH

Foreword

DR. LÍA RODRÍGUEZ DE LA VEGA

Foreword

DR. EDUARDO CRESPO

Acknowledgements

Introduction

1 A Latin American approach

PART I

Peripherisation

2 The Indian Ocean ecosystem

3 The Indian subcontinent peripherisation

4 From regional centre to global periphery

PART II

Statebuilding

5 Emergence, consolidation, and challenges of the Indian State and its National System of Innovation

6 The Indian Statebuilding and a broad understanding of its National System of Innovation

PART III

Demand-led growth

7 The Indian Ocean since the 1990s: (Geo)political chessboard and demand-led growth

8 Structural growth drivers, external sector, and structural heterogeneity

9 Belindia’s growth acceleration

Final remarks

References

Index

Biography

Manuel Gonzalo graduated with magna cum laude in economics from UBA (Universidad de Buenos Aires), Argentina. He has a master’s degree in economics and industrial development from UNGS (Universidad Nacional de General Sarmiento), Argentina and a doctoral degree in economics from UFRJ (Universidade Federal de Rio de Janeiro), Brazil. He is Adjunct Professor at the Degree on Development Economics of the UNQ (Universidad Nacional de Quilmes), Associate Professor at the school of economics of UNDEC (Universidad Nacional de Chilecito), and Co-Coordinator at the South Asia working group of CARI (Consejo Argentino para las Relaciones Internacionales). He has 20 years of experience in doing research, fieldworks, and giving classes and lectures at different universities of Argentina, Brazil, and India (UNQ, UNGS, UNDEC, UNSAM, UNTREF, UNCAUS, UTDT, FLACSO, UNDEF, ISEN, UFRJ, FIOCRUZ, JNU, etc.) mainly on comparative development, innovation and entrepreneurial systems, and industrial, STI and international cooperation policy. He was visiting researcher at the Center for Development Studies (CDS), Jawaharlal Nehru University (JNU), Kerala, India, and at the Research Network on Local Productive and Innovative Systems (Redesist), Economics Institute (IE), UFRJ, Rio de Janeiro, Brazil. He assesses Latin American governments, firms, think tanks, and international organisms in building their relationship with India, South Asia, and the Global South.