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Capitalism, inequality and labour in India

By: Material type: TextTextPublication details: Cambridge University Press New Delhi 2020Description: xiii, 286 pISBN:
  • 9781108744737
Subject(s): DDC classification:
  • 331.11730954 BRE
Summary: Jan Breman takes dispossession as his central theme in this ambitious analysis of labour bondage in India's changing political economy from 1962 to 2017. When, in a remote past, tribal and low-caste communities were attached to landowning households, their lack of freedom was framed as subsistence-oriented dependency. Breman argues that with colonial rule came the intrusion of capitalism into India's agrarian economy, leading to a decline in the idea of patronage in the relationship between bonded labour and landowner. Instead, servitude was reshaped as indebtedness. As labour became transformed into a commodity, peasant workers were increasingly pushed out of agriculture and the village but remained adrift in the wider economy. This footloose workforce is subjected to exploitation when their labour power is required and is left in a state of exclusion when it is surplus to demand. The outcome is progressive inequality that is thoroughly capitalist in nature. Rejects the idea that social development is linear Challenges the trickle-down notion of progress Suggests that capitalism is detrimental to the spread of welfare
List(s) this item appears in: Public Policy & General Management
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Item type Current library Collection Call number Copy number Status Date due Barcode
Book Book Indian Institute of Management LRC General Stacks Public Policy & General Management 331.11730954 BRE (Browse shelf(Opens below)) 1 Available 002460

Table of Contents
Part I. Labour as Codified in Annals of the State:
1. The country liberated
2. An end to servitude?
Part II. Constrained in Decrepitude:
3. The commodification of agricultural labour
4. The class struggle launched and suppressed
5. The Gandhian road to inclusion
Part III. The Political Economy of Boundless Dispossession:
6. The Agrarian Question posed as the social question
7. Labour migration: going off and coming back
8. Indebtedness as labour attachment
Part IV. Conclusion:
9. Capitalism, labour bondage and the social question.

Jan Breman takes dispossession as his central theme in this ambitious analysis of labour bondage in India's changing political economy from 1962 to 2017. When, in a remote past, tribal and low-caste communities were attached to landowning households, their lack of freedom was framed as subsistence-oriented dependency. Breman argues that with colonial rule came the intrusion of capitalism into India's agrarian economy, leading to a decline in the idea of patronage in the relationship between bonded labour and landowner. Instead, servitude was reshaped as indebtedness. As labour became transformed into a commodity, peasant workers were increasingly pushed out of agriculture and the village but remained adrift in the wider economy. This footloose workforce is subjected to exploitation when their labour power is required and is left in a state of exclusion when it is surplus to demand. The outcome is progressive inequality that is thoroughly capitalist in nature.

Rejects the idea that social development is linear
Challenges the trickle-down notion of progress
Suggests that capitalism is detrimental to the spread of welfare

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