ABSTRACT

This volume is about economists, economics, and issues of concern to Indian society. Some essays are expository, and some satirical. Together, they offer a commentary on the state of the discipline of economics today and on aspects of contemporary India’s society and polity.

The volume affords insights into, among other things,

- the pervasive influence of economists such as Kenneth Arrow and Anthony Atkinson, and thinkers such as Tom Paine, Jonathan Swift, and Dadabhai Naoroji;

- the place of markets and game theory (and even crime fiction!) in present-day economics;

- the affectations and convoluted mathematisation of a good deal of ‘mainstream’ economics; and

- India’s recent political climate, and the conduct of various arms of the legislature, the executive, and the judiciary in the country.

Engaging and lucidly written, this volume should be of interest to scholars of economics, political science, development studies, South Asian studies, and, above all, the general reader.

chapter |2 pages

Introduction

part I|24 pages

On economics and economic themes, with some digressions

chapter 1|3 pages

In memoriam

K. J. Arrow and A. B. Atkinson

chapter 3|8 pages

Three themes in economics

The market, game theory, and famine

part II|30 pages

On some tendencies in the dismal science

chapter 5|11 pages

Economics

The view from above

part III|24 pages

On institutions, culture, and society