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INDIA UNBOUND

Extremely useful reading for anyone seeking to invest in or do business with India, and for students of the global economy...

A sturdy—and highly optimistic—analysis of Indian politics and economics.

Times of India columnist Das was once a youthful idealist who believed passionately in Nehru’s version of socialism and later kept faith in India’s mixed-economy path to market democracy. Both models failed, for complex reasons having mostly to do, Das suggests, with incompetence and corruption in the official sector. The worst moments came between 1965 and 1991, when, “instead of changing our course as many countries did, we tightened our system, making it more rigid and bureaucratic”—even as occasional experiments in deregulation showed promise of replacing scarcity with plenty. Now convinced that “alleviating poverty is more important than achieving quality,” and that the creation of wealth is as important as its just distribution, Das heralds India’s sweeping reforms of 1991, which lifted government controls over industries and markets, encouraged foreign trade, and coordinated efforts to build a modern infrastructure. One now-evident result, Das holds, is India’s thriving information-technology sector, which has drawn on an immense pool of “intellectual capital” (i.e., highly educated workers) to create an industry that promises to rival that of Silicon Valley. Much remains to be done to make India competitive as an information-technology power, Das allows, inasmuch as it has only 3 computers for every 1,000 people (and will likely raise that figure only to 20 or so by 2008). Even so, he urges, high-tech is the best path to eradicating India’s persistent poverty. “We have realized,” he writes, “that our great strength is our people. Our great weakness is our government. Our great hope is the Internet.”

Extremely useful reading for anyone seeking to invest in or do business with India, and for students of the global economy generally.

Pub Date: Feb. 26, 2001

ISBN: 0-375-41164-X

Page Count: 384

Publisher: Knopf

Review Posted Online: May 19, 2010

Kirkus Reviews Issue: Dec. 15, 2000

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WHEN TO JUMP

IF THE JOB YOU HAVE ISN'T THE LIFE YOU WANT

An easy reading book of supportive encouragement to follow one’s dreams.

More than 40 career-changers tell their stories.

Introduced by Facebook executive and founder of Leanin.org Sheryl Sandberg, Lewis’ second cousin, the book offers exuberant advice for people who want to make a leap—daring or modest—from one career path to another, just as he did. At the age of 24, working for the investment firm Bain Capital, the author felt restless and dissatisfied. “I began to realize,” he writes, “that I wanted this life mostly because I thought I should,” but he heard “a very distinct if faint voice” urging him to try something “very different.” As he considered following his passion to become a professional squash player, Lewis sought advice from others who made similar jumps: a banker-turned-cyclist, for example, and a journalist-turned-politician. From them, and the others whose stories fill the book, he came up with the idea of the Jump Curve, a process of four key phases: listening to your inner voice, making a practical plan, believing in your own good luck, and rejecting regret. “You will come out stronger,” Lewis insists, even if your initial plan fails. “I keep coming back to the idea of agency,” said a man who made a move from corporate hospitality service to restaurant ownership: “the difference between life happening to you versus you making life happen.” Among the individuals profiled are a nurse who, at the age of 50, became a doctor; a football player–turned-writer; an investment professional who became coxswain of the U.S. Paralympic Rowing Team; a PR executive who found her calling as an Episcopal bishop; and a lawyer who sued the New York fire department to admit women firefighters—and then became the first woman hired. “Harassment, discrimination, death threats,” and physical abuse dogged her 25-year career. But, she says, “this was a jump worth fighting for,” a sentiment that Lewis underscores. Changing careers is risky, but “there is a risk to not taking a jump at all.”

An easy reading book of supportive encouragement to follow one’s dreams.

Pub Date: Jan. 9, 2018

ISBN: 978-1-250-12421-0

Page Count: 336

Publisher: Henry Holt

Review Posted Online: Oct. 16, 2017

Kirkus Reviews Issue: Nov. 1, 2017

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CAPITAL IN THE TWENTY-FIRST CENTURY

Essential reading for citizens of the here and now. Other economists should marvel at how that plain language can be put to...

Awards & Accolades

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  • Readers Vote
  • 37


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  • Kirkus Reviews'
    Best Books Of 2014


  • Kirkus Prize
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  • National Book Critics Circle Finalist

A French academic serves up a long, rigorous critique, dense with historical data, of American-style predatory capitalism—and offers remedies that Karl Marx might applaud.

Economist Piketty considers capital, in the monetary sense, from the vantage of what he considers the capital of the world, namely Paris; at times, his discussions of how capital works, and especially public capital, befit Locke-ian France and not Hobbesian America, a source of some controversy in the wide discussion surrounding his book. At heart, though, his argument turns on well-founded economic principles, notably r > g, meaning that the “rate of return on capital significantly exceeds the growth rate of the economy,” in Piketty’s gloss. It logically follows that when such conditions prevail, then wealth will accumulate in a few hands faster than it can be broadly distributed. By the author’s reckoning, the United States is one of the leading nations in the “high inequality” camp, though it was not always so. In the colonial era, Piketty likens the inequality quotient in New England to be about that of Scandinavia today, with few abject poor and few mega-rich. The difference is that the rich now—who are mostly the “supermanagers” of business rather than the “superstars” of sports and entertainment—have surrounded themselves with political shields that keep them safe from the specter of paying more in taxes and adding to the fund of public wealth. The author’s data is unassailable. His policy recommendations are considerably more controversial, including his call for a global tax on wealth. From start to finish, the discussion is written in plainspoken prose that, though punctuated by formulas, also draws on a wide range of cultural references.

Essential reading for citizens of the here and now. Other economists should marvel at how that plain language can be put to work explaining the most complex of ideas, foremost among them the fact that economic inequality is at an all-time high—and is only bound to grow worse.

Pub Date: March 10, 2014

ISBN: 978-0-674-43000-6

Page Count: 640

Publisher: Belknap/Harvard Univ.

Review Posted Online: April 30, 2014

Kirkus Reviews Issue: May 15, 2014

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