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Review: The Dragon & The Elephant: Agricultural and Rural Reforms in China and India edited by Ashok Gulati and Shenggen Fan

机译:评论:《龙与象:中国和印度的农业和农村改革》,由Ashok Gulati和Fan Shenggen编辑

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Review: The Dragon & The Elephant: Agricultural and Rural Reforms in China and India Ashok Gulati and Shenggen Fan (Eds.) Reviewed by Varinder Jain Centre for Development Studies, India Gulati, Ashok and Fan, Shenggen (Eds.). The Dragon & The Elephant: Agricultural and Rural Reforms in China and India. Baltimore: The Johns Hopkins University Press, 2007. xxvi + 548pp. ISBN 978-0-8018- 8787-1. US$38.00, paper. The economies of China and India have gained recognition as growing Asian giants, who have made wonders in attaining not only higher levels of growth but also mitigating the plight of their masses through a variety of public programmes. A variety of reforms undertaken by these economies have engaged researchers worldwide in making detailed enquiries about these economies mainly for tracing out potential lessons for other developing nations who are yet in the preliminary stages of a voyage towards economic growth and poverty mitigation. One such sincere effort is made by ‘International Food Policy and Research Institute’ (IFPRI) who have brought researchers and practitioners from both the countries together to provide a detailed (comparative) account of rural and agricultural reforms undertaken by these Asian giants. Consequently, as many as thirty-two eminent scholars from both countries have engaged themselves in providing a comparative account of rural development and agricultural reform experiences of China and India, mainly with an interest to enquire about the nature, pattern, processes, impacts and potential lessons emanating from the rural and agricultural reforms undertaken by both economies. The subject matter of the book is quite comprehensive, informative and thought-provoking. Specifically, the twenty-two contributions address the issues of land tenure system, land institutions, land reforms, health systems, public investment and poverty reduction, anti-poverty programmes, agricultural trade, agricultural diversification, rural non-farm sector, agricultural research and technology etc. Obviously such broad coverage of subject matter, besides the comprehensiveness of each and every contribution, makes this anthology a unique volume providing a comparative account of the rural segments of both economies. It is noteworthy that though a number of books on comparative assessment of Chinese and Indian economy’s growth performance have emerged recently, the appearance of this anthology fulfills the long desire of researchers and practitioners who wish to understand the dynamics and contrast of rural segments in these economies. Overall, the book is well-conceived and well-written and above all, is quite user-friendly with detailed index, references and succinctly described contents. Given the twofold aim of the book, i.e. “What can the two nations learn from each other in terms of their reform experiences and their impact on agricultural growth and poverty? What can countries in transition learn from these two experiments?” (pp. xxi), a careful reading leaves no disappointment with the editors’ and writers’ sincere effort in fulfilling these objectives. The analytical exercises provide a range of policy and strategic options to attain the twin objectives of high growth and poverty reduction in the future. Strengthening of specific institutional arrangements, development of sound safety nets, introducing suitable trade and market reforms in addition to channeling properly the public spending undertaken by these economies have been the major thought-provoking policy guidelines emerging from this volume. It is, beyond doubt, an outstanding contribution to the existing literature on the Chinese and Indian economies and thereby a must-read for the students of international relations, practitioners, policy makers and researchers interested in not only the economies of China and India but also those who are interested in eradicating poverty from the globe and ameliorating the conditions of rural poor. Varinder Jain , Research Scholar, Centre for Development Studies, Thiruvananthapuram – 695 011, Kerala, India. TEL: +91-989-541-8673. Electronic Green Journal, Issue 27, Fall 2008, ISSN: 1076-7975
机译:评论:《龙与象:中国和印度的农业和农村改革》 Ashok Gulati和樊胜根(编辑),印度Varinder Jain发展研究中心评论Gulati,Ashok和樊胜根(编辑)。龙与象:中国和印度的农业和农村改革。巴尔的摩:约翰霍普金斯大学出版社,2007年。xxvi+ 548pp。 ISBN 978-0-8018- 8787-1。 38.00美元,纸。中国和印度的经济体已成为公认的成长中的亚洲巨人,它们不仅通过各种公共计划实现了更高的增长水平,而且还减轻了群众的苦难。这些经济体进行的各种改革吸引了全世界的研究人员对这些经济体进行详细的查询,主要是为了向其他发展中国家(可能正处于向经济增长和减缓贫困的航行的初期阶段)寻找潜在的教训。 “国际粮食政策与研究所”(IFPRI)做出了这种真诚的努力,这两个国家的研究人员和从业人员汇聚一堂,对这些亚洲巨人进行的农村和农业改革进行了详尽(比较)的描述。因此,来自两国的多达三十二位杰出学者致力于对中国和印度的农村发展和农业改革经验进行比较,主要是想了解其性质,模式,过程,影响和潜力。这两个国家进行的农村和农业改革所产生的教训。本书的主题非常全面,内容丰富且发人深省。具体而言,二十二份文稿涉及土地权属制度,土地机构,土地改革,卫生系统,公共投资和减贫,反贫困计划,农业贸易,农业多样化,农村非农部门,农业研究和发展等问题。显然,如此广泛的主题范围,除了每一项贡献的全面性之外,使本选集成为独一无二的书,提供了对这两个经济体农村地区的比较描述。值得注意的是,尽管最近出现了许多有关中印两国经济增长绩效比较评估的书,但该选集的出现满足了研究者和从业者的长期愿望,他们希望了解这些经济体中农村地区的动态和对比。 。总体而言,这本书构思精巧,编写合理,最重要的是,它对用户友好,具有详细的索引,参考文献和简洁描述的内容。鉴于本书的双重目标,即“两国在改革经验以及对农业增长和贫困的影响方面可以互相学习什么?转型国家可以从这两个实验中学到什么?” (pp。xxi),认真阅读不会对编辑者和作家为实现这些目标而做出的真诚努力表示失望。分析活动提供了一系列政策和战略选择,以实现未来高增长和减贫的双重目标。加强具体体制安排,发展健全的安全网,进行适当的贸易和市场改革,以及适当地引导这些经济体承担的公共支出,已成为这一卷中引人深思的主要政策指导方针。毫无疑问,这对现有的有关中国和印度经济的文献做出了杰出的贡献,因此对于国际关系的学生,从业人员,政策制定者和不仅对中国和印度的经济感兴趣的研究人员都必须阅读。有兴趣消除全球贫困和改善农村贫困人口状况的人。特里凡得琅(Thiruvananthapuram)– 695011,印度喀拉拉邦,发展研究中心研究学者Varinder Jain。电话:+ 91-989-541-8673。电子绿色杂志,第27期,2008年秋季,ISSN:1076-7975

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