The Oxford History of Contemporary Indian Business

Price: 2995.00 INR

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ISBN:

9780198082248

Publication date:

15/03/2013

Hardback

304 pages

295.0x227.0mm

Price: 2995.00 INR

We sell our titles through other companies
Disclaimer :You will be redirected to a third party website.The sole responsibility of supplies, condition of the product, availability of stock, date of delivery, mode of payment will be as promised by the said third party only. Prices and specifications may vary from the OUP India site.

ISBN:

9780198082248

Publication date:

15/03/2013

Hardback

304 pages

295.0x227.0mm

Dwijendra Tripathi & Jyoti Jumani

Suitable for:  Providing a fascinating account of how Indian business represents a curious mixture of continuity and change, this book is an authoritative guide for students, teachers, and researchers of business history and management, as well as journalists, business analysts, corporate leaders, and general readers.

Rights:  World Rights

Dwijendra Tripathi & Jyoti Jumani

Description

A sequel to Tripathi’s widely acclaimed, The Oxford History of Indian Business, this book provides a comprehensive analysis of the making of modern business and the modern business class, covering the period from 1947 to the present times. Linking socio economic and political changes to shifts in the business climate and policies of the country, it provides the first in-depth narrative of business in post-colonial India. Starting off with an analysis of the new business climate created in the aftermath of Independence, the authors debunk the popular notion that the Nehru government was hostile to the free enterprise system. Its policies, they argue, were, in fact, informed by a judicious balance between state participation in the business system and the freedom of private enterprise. Exploring how Indian business responded to the opportunities and limitations created by the changing environment, the book covers a vast span—from implications of industrial licensing and the planned economy, to vicissitudes of the public sector and experiments in cooperative undertakings; from the opening of the Indian economy and liberalization, the spurt of mergers and acquisitions, and crises in family businesses, to innovations in IT, automobiles, and retailing, among others. In particular, the book covers several new and emerging areas in business history including business education, the rise of a new managerial class, and corporate social responsibility. 

Dwijendra Tripathi & Jyoti Jumani

Dwijendra Tripathi & Jyoti Jumani

Dwijendra Tripathi & Jyoti Jumani

Dwijendra Tripathi & Jyoti Jumani

Description

A sequel to Tripathi’s widely acclaimed, The Oxford History of Indian Business, this book provides a comprehensive analysis of the making of modern business and the modern business class, covering the period from 1947 to the present times. Linking socio economic and political changes to shifts in the business climate and policies of the country, it provides the first in-depth narrative of business in post-colonial India. Starting off with an analysis of the new business climate created in the aftermath of Independence, the authors debunk the popular notion that the Nehru government was hostile to the free enterprise system. Its policies, they argue, were, in fact, informed by a judicious balance between state participation in the business system and the freedom of private enterprise. Exploring how Indian business responded to the opportunities and limitations created by the changing environment, the book covers a vast span—from implications of industrial licensing and the planned economy, to vicissitudes of the public sector and experiments in cooperative undertakings; from the opening of the Indian economy and liberalization, the spurt of mergers and acquisitions, and crises in family businesses, to innovations in IT, automobiles, and retailing, among others. In particular, the book covers several new and emerging areas in business history including business education, the rise of a new managerial class, and corporate social responsibility. 

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