Description
Majority of economists today are opposed to allowing governments a significant role in economic affairs. In particular, demand management and redistributive policies are frowned upon and supply side policies (that concentrate on enhancing the profitability of business operations) are advocated as the only legitimate channels of government action. The possibility of 'government failure' in the economic sphere is endlessly emphasised.
The book argues that this view is only partially correct, at best. To make development inclusive and sustainable over the long run, the State must step in as an active enabler and regulator of private initiative. In a good society, the public-private relationship should be complementary, not adversarial. The enabler-regulator duty of the government cannot be effectively discharged with only supply side and monetary instruments. Well-designed, effectively implemented fiscal action is indispensable for promoting social welfare with its twin aspects of efficiency and distributive justice.
Within a short compass, the strengths and limitations of tax-expenditure policies in managing the economy are discussed in non-technical language, keeping the 'government failure vs market failure' debate as a focal point.
About the Author
Soumyen Sikdar retired as Professor of Economics at Indian Institute of Management Calcutta, India. He has also taught at Calcutta University, Burdwan University and Presidency University, India. As Faculty/Researcher, he has visited Indira Gandhi Institute of Development Research (India), Osaka University (Japan) and Aarhus University (Denmark). His research interests include Macroeconomics of Open Economies, India and Globalisation and Public Policy.
Book Information
ISBN 9781032955421
Author Soumyen Sikdar
Format Hardback
Page Count 110
Imprint Routledge
Publisher Taylor & Francis Ltd