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dc.contributor.authorRam Mohan, T. T.
dc.date.accessioned2010-10-14T06:50:03Z
dc.date.available2010-10-14T06:50:03Z
dc.date.copyright2000
dc.date.issued2000-10-14T06:50:03Z
dc.identifier.urihttp://hdl.handle.net/11718/9638
dc.descriptionEconomic and Political Weekly, Vol. 35, No. 25, (June 17-23, 2000), pp. 2123-2126en
dc.description.abstractThis book is somewhat ambitiously subtitled. For while it purports to critically examine the impact of liberalisation on economic institutions, its scope is limited to a few – and by no means the most important – aspects of this broad subject: industrial clusters, principal-subcontractor relationships and the responses of some large firms. An even more serious limitation is that there is often little attempt to relate to the principal theme, the impact the neoliberal regime has had so far, or to project what we might expect to see in the near future. The value of the book thus lies entirely in the historical perspective it provides on certain forms of economic organisation in the country.
dc.language.isoenen
dc.subjectLiberalisationen
dc.subjectEconomic Institutionen
dc.subjectCaseen
dc.titleCase unprovenen
dc.typeArticleen


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