ABSTRACT

West Bengal has often been perceived as somewhat of an aberration in the wider context of a rather chaotic Indian democracy, as the Left Front (spearheaded by the Communist Party of India-Marxist, CPIM) demonstrated a rare instance of political stability, decisively winning seven consecutive democratic elections from 1977 to 2006. Its development record has also been substantial, with a focus on land reforms, the panchayati-raj institution, and an agriculture centric development agenda.

This book presents a reappraisal of the political economic history of the CPIM/Left Front regime against the backdrop of the Indian reform experience. It examines two distinct areas: the conditions that necessitated the regime to engineer a transition from an erstwhile agricultural-based growth model to a more pro-market economic agenda post-1991, and the political strategy employed to manage such a transition, attract private capital and at the same time sustain the regime’s traditional rhetoric and partisan character. In order to develop a more textured understanding of the recent political developments in West Bengal, the author applies a historically nuanced and inductive political-economic analysis, which draws on published materials, and primary material such as government documents and interviews (with bureaucrats, political activists, members of the intelligentsia and ministers).

A valuable contribution to the ongoing debate in the literature on the drifts underway with the Indian Left and India’s economic transformation post-1990s, this book will be of interest to academics in the field of Political Science, Government, Political Economy and South Asian Studies.

chapter |6 pages

Prologue

chapter 1|18 pages

The politics of economic transition

Surprises, perspectives, and the Indian experience

chapter 2|17 pages

From bhadraloks to party-society

Trends in Bengali Left politics

chapter 3|22 pages

The production and legitimisation of hegemony

Political rationale of the CPIM

chapter 4|45 pages

Reforming by compulsion?

Fiscal, federal and ideological choices 1

chapter 5|48 pages

The politics of transition

Contradictions, negotiation and consensus

chapter 6|36 pages

Land, consent and violence

‘Implosion’ of the shadow-state

chapter 7|7 pages

Conclusion