Last week a discussion on a small WhatsApp group of Gokhale Institute alumni turned a bit acrimonious. It began with a general query on who could be termed the "Father of Economics in India" - some names that came up - Gopalkrishna Gokhale, MG Ranade - but the discussion soured fast when one member took affront to the topic itself - the argument given was that Adam Smith has been generally recognised as the father of Economics, because of his conceptualization of the problem at hand and later economists built on the methods and concepts he developed; who did something first is hardly important, what follows is what matters. "On this count all the Indian names mentioned as "fathers" do not deserve that title because nothing of any consequence followed."
The last line struck me hard as I found this line of argument singularly unappealing - yes, identifying a "Father of Indian Economics" may be debatable, trivia for many, may not be considered of any "serious" value. However, to say that "nothing of any consequence followed" from the work of Indians in the field of economics before independence is not because their work was unworthy.
"nothing of any consequence followed" because we didn't take their work forward. In fact, the point of the discussion now should be limited to the fact that many do not want to even recognise that we have forgotten our own stalwarts; worse, in the current political atmosphere, such reading has unfortunately become contentious.
As economics students in India, we are not told about our own, and their contributions. Why does this matter? Let us at least start by looking at the work we have ignored. One of the best references on Indian Economists prior to independence is "Toward Development Economics: Indian Contributions 1900-1945" by J. Krishnamurty. Read his article in The Wire, "Looking Back at a Hundred Years of Research in Indian Economics" to get a good idea of the research in India prior to independence.
"Among the important papers published in the IJE before independence, I would single out four papers, all of which are reproduced in my book. I am confident others would come up with other lists.
- In 1934, Radhakamal Mukherjee published a highly original paper on the ‘Broken Balance of Population, Land and Water’ dealing with the ecological problems of the Gangetic valley. This was long before environment economics became part of professional and popular discourse.
- In 1935, Gyanchand in his paper ‘The Essentials of Economic Planning for India’, questioned the then current euphoria over economic planning. He pointed to the futility of achieving redistribution with growth in a colonial setting. This paper was a precursor to the debates after independence on the relevance of trickle-down economics and whether growth by itself would lead to better redistribution.
- Again, in 1935, P.J. Thomas in his paper, ‘A Plan for Economic Recovery’, used the employment multiplier of R.F. Kahn to plead for public works in the context of the 1930s depression in India. He estimated that four men newly employed in public works would lead to three or four more secondarily employed. Unfortunately, the government in India was tied to conservative finance and did not give up its belief in balanced budgets.
- What was perhaps the most original paper published in the IJE in 1938. This was V.K.R.V. Rao’s paper, ‘The Problem of Unemployment in India.’ It was the earliest attempt to apply Joan Robinson’s concept of disguised unemployment to a less developed country."
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