One argument that's gained ground in recent years is that growth itself is the problem
Different people mean different things when they talk of social democracy and its somewhat close kin, democratic socialism
Williamson and Alesina were both economists who offered insights that India must follow over the next two decades. If it doesn't, it can resign itself to its current low-grade economic status.
The demise of the office has been foretold yet again. But there's a lot of fight left in the old lady.
At a time when revenues have been disrupted, these are the ones that could go belly up first
Book review of All the Wrong Turns: Perspectives on the Indian Economy
Book review of CAPITAL AND IDEOLOGY
The data and the feel after six years under PM Modi prove a strong leader doesn't necessarily give us decisive economic leadership unmindful of immediate political risks
Book review of Halla Bol: The Death and Life of Safdar Hashmi
Embracing capitalism in a new avatar
The classical liberal order is under threat from 'woke' progressives
On a national level, lack of trust in capitalism was highest in Thailand and India on 75% and 74% respectively, with France close behind on 69%
The Indian economy and its workforce deserve freedom from the damaging tyranny of the tiny elites in the next decade
A growing challenge has gripped society
The simultaneous waning of confidence in neoliberalism and in democracy is no coincidence or mere correlation
The emerging backlash against CSR and the resultant endorsement of shareholder capitalism make sense
The book is a sequel to 'Capital in the 21st Century,' which has sold more than 2.5 million copies in 40 languages since 2013, according to its publisher
There are reasons to believe that corporate leaders renouncing shareholder primacy are being a little disingenuous
Progressive capitalism represents the best chance we have of escaping our current economic and political malaise
For Mr Cowen, the real reason business is so unpopular is that we humans tend to anthropomorphise companies, turning corporations 'into people in our minds, and also in our hearts'