‘A Plan of Economic\n Development for India’, aka the Bombay Plan, written in two parts and\n published in 1944 and 1945, generated widespread interest in India and abroad\n at the time of its publication. Its authors were none other than J.R.D Tata,\n G.D Birla, Purushottamdas Thakurdas, Kasturbhai Lalbhai, Ardeshir Dala, Lala\n Sri Ram, John Mathai and A.D. Shroff—well-known business leaders and\n technocrats of repute.The Plan is unique in the history of post-colonial\n development. Nowhere in the developing world did a group of business leaders\n come together to articulate such a comprehensive vision for national\n development that simultaneously promoted their own class interests. Nowhere\n did the capitalist business class voluntarily invite State control in key sectors.This\n book revisits the Bombay Plan to show how it was not only prescient in its\n approach to development, but was also influential in shaping economic\n planning and public policy in the first decade after India’s independence. It\n brings together leading voices from Indian industry and academia—Meghnad\n Desai, Sanjaya Baru, Amal Sanyal, Gita Piramal, Omkar Goswami, R.\n Gopalakrishnan, Tulsi Jayakumar, Ajay Chhibber and P.S. Lokanathan—in an\n effort to evaluate and understand the significance of the Plan in setting the\n development planning agenda laid out by successive governments.The Bombay\n Plan brings back to focus a historic document that has been all but forgotten\n despite its many path-breaking ideas.
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