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E-book
Author Engerman, David C., 1966- author.

Title The price of aid : the economic cold war in India / David C. Engerman
Published Cambridge, Massachusetts : Harvard University Press, 2018
©2018

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Description 1 online resource (vii, 501 pages)
Contents Introduction: Foreign aid and development politics in India -- Part I. Learning development, 1947-1955: Debating development and discovering India -- Inventing development aid -- Part II. The heyday of the economic cold war, 1955-1966: The geopolitics of economic expertise -- The aid project and cold war competition -- "Free money" and the tilt toward the West -- Military supply and the vicissitudes of development politics -- Part III. The bitter fruits of development politics, 1960-1974: Bets, bargains, and the price for American aid -- Soviet aid from inspiration to armory -- India's double crisis and the price of aid -- Conclusion: Development politics and the price of aid
Summary Debates over foreign aid can seem strangely innocent of history. Economists argue about effectiveness and measurement--how to make aid work. Meanwhile, critics in donor countries bemoan what they see as money wasted on corrupt tycoons or unworthy recipients. What most ignore is the essentially political character of foreign aid. Looking back to the origins and evolution of foreign aid during the Cold War, David C. Engerman invites us to recognize the strategic thinking at the heart of development assistance--as well as the political costs. In The Price of Aid, Engerman argues that superpowers turned to foreign aid as a tool of the Cold War. India, the largest of the ex-colonies, stood at the center of American and Soviet aid competition. Officials of both superpowers saw development aid as an instrument for pursuing geopolitics through economic means. But Indian officials had different ideas, seeking superpower aid to advance their own economic visions, thus bringing external resources into domestic debates about India's economic future. Drawing on an expansive set of documents, many recently declassified, from seven countries, Engerman reconstructs a story of Indian leaders using Cold War competition to win battles at home, but in the process eroding the Indian state. The Indian case provides an instructive model today. As China spends freely in Africa, the political stakes of foreign aid are rising once again.-- Provided by publisher
Bibliography Includes bibliographical references and index
Notes Online resource; title from PDF title page (EBSCO, viewed April 3, 2018)
Subject Economic assistance -- Political aspects -- India -- History -- 20th century
Economic assistance, American -- Political aspects -- India -- History -- 20th century
Economic assistance, Soviet -- Political aspects -- India -- History -- 20th century
Cold War -- Influence.
Cold War -- Economic aspects
Geopolitics -- India -- History -- 20th century
BUSINESS & ECONOMICS -- Industries -- General.
HISTORY -- Modern -- 20th Century.
Economic assistance, American -- Political aspects
Economic assistance -- Political aspects
Economic history
Economics
Geopolitics
War -- Influence
Industry & industrial studies.
Asian history.
India.
History.
Aid & relief programmes.
Diplomacy.
Economic growth.
General & world history.
20th century, c 1900 to c 1999.
Industry.
SUBJECT India -- Economic conditions -- 1947- http://id.loc.gov/authorities/subjects/sh85064895
Subject India
Genre/Form History
Form Electronic book
LC no. 2017036333
ISBN 9780674986084
0674986083
9780674986060
0674986067