The Rise of Goliath: Twelve Disruptions That Changed India

Hardback

Main Details

Title The Rise of Goliath: Twelve Disruptions That Changed India
Authors and Contributors      By (author) A.K. Bhattacharya
Physical Properties
Format:Hardback
Pages:360
Dimensions(mm): Height 240,Width 156
Category/GenreLanguage - history and general works
Economics
Macroeconomics
Economic history
Business and management
Business studies - general
Business strategy
ISBN/Barcode 9780670091805
ClassificationsDewey:954.04
Audience
Tertiary Education (US: College)
Professional & Vocational
General

Publishing Details

Publisher Penguin Random House India
Imprint Penguin Portfolio
NZ Release Date 22 July 2019
Publication Country India

Description

What can best illustrate India's journey in the last seven decades? Disruptions. Almost every decade of India's history since Independence has been marked by major disruptions. India became independent through an act of disruption-Partition-that killed millions in communal violence and turned many more into refugees. The turn towards a model of state-led economic development delivered as big a shock to the economy as did the food crisis or the spike in crude oil price. If the Emergency in 1975 shook the foundations of India's democracy, the unprecedented balance-of-payments crisis of 1990 turned India towards a path of economic reforms. Just as the reservation of jobs for backward castes changed the idiom of India's politics, the movement for building a temple for Ram drove India closer to becoming a majoritarian state. No less disruptive have been the telecom revolution, the banking crisis, demonetization and the launch of the goods and services tax. How did these disruptions impact India? How did they influence the rise of this Goliath? This is the story of twelve disruptions that changed India. The book also provides a peek into the kind of disruptions India could face in the coming years.

Author Biography

A.K. BHATTACHARYA-AKB to every journalist-set the bar for business reporting as the chief of bureau at the Economic Times in the early 1990s, when economic reforms raged. He had a ringside view to many other disruptions, creative and otherwise, during his four decades in journalism, a journey that started when he switched careers after a year of teaching. AKB then went on to become the editor of the Pioneer and Business Standard. He is now Business Standard's editorial director and a writer of two long-running columns. This is his first book.