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A case for going beyond economic reforms

Despite the fact that the Constitution mentions three organs of State — the executive, the judiciary and the legislature — why is the exclusive focus of the reform discourse the executive, as in the Union government, not even state governments? 

July 28, 2021 / 14:35 IST
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Most people will not have read a book ‘Reform and Progress in India’. Since the author preferred not to reveal their name, it is credited to ‘An Optimist’. The subtitle reads, ‘A Few Thoughts on Administrative and Other Questions Connected with the Country and People’ and may give away the vintage. This book was published in 1885. There are many books, monographs, academic papers and media articles on reforms, understandably more since 1991, and several more now, when we are in the 30th year since the 1991 reforms.

These articles will assert, ‘The government is reforming’, or, ‘The government is not reforming’. Implicit in that assertion is some kind of take on what constitutes ‘reform’ and by its very nature, that take is a subjective value judgement. Though one person’s ‘reform’ may not necessarily be another person’s ‘deform’, a listing of ‘reforms’ will vary from one person to another.

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Also Read: 30 Years Of Reforms | The gap between aspirations and reality

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