textIn this dissertation I offer an explanation for why Indian states are undertaking economic liberalization at different rates, focusing on reforms to the electricity sector. In the period between 1991 and 2003, India's states restructured their electricity systems to vastly different degrees. The dissertation evaluates three variables that feature prominently in the literature on economic policy change: ideological predilections of governing elites, external pressures like those coming from international financial institutions, and state-society interactions. I argue that it is the last explanation, focusing on the degree to which the potential "losers" from reform dominate state politics--that most compellingly accounts for the unev...
How to explain political monopolies in democratic institutional settings? Dominant parties in countr...
A puzzle of economic liberalization in democratic and democratizing countries is how reforms were im...
Electric power is so vital to both our economic and personal wellbeing that the erstwhile state poli...
textIn this dissertation I offer an explanation for why Indian states are undertaking economic liber...
As developing countries climb the ladder of economic and social development, providing electricity t...
publisher: Elsevier articletitle: The politics of electricity reform: Evidence from West Bengal, Ind...
This dissertation analyzes voting behavior and presence of political cycles in India. While such exe...
Why do power sector reforms succeed and fail in democratic contexts? We conduct comparative case stu...
How has the Indian state changed with economic liberalization? While many scholars have explored the...
My dissertation focuses on two crucial issues that face developing economies how political and insti...
This thesis presents three papers that contribute to the measurement and understanding of the proces...
State intervention in India has persisted but has proved far from immune to critiques of traditional...
Thesis (Ph.D.)--Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Dept. of Economics, c1999.Includes bibliograp...
The relationship between democracy and inequality and the role of democratic participation in foster...
The electricity subsidy distribution pattern needs to be scrutinised to assess whether the policy be...
How to explain political monopolies in democratic institutional settings? Dominant parties in countr...
A puzzle of economic liberalization in democratic and democratizing countries is how reforms were im...
Electric power is so vital to both our economic and personal wellbeing that the erstwhile state poli...
textIn this dissertation I offer an explanation for why Indian states are undertaking economic liber...
As developing countries climb the ladder of economic and social development, providing electricity t...
publisher: Elsevier articletitle: The politics of electricity reform: Evidence from West Bengal, Ind...
This dissertation analyzes voting behavior and presence of political cycles in India. While such exe...
Why do power sector reforms succeed and fail in democratic contexts? We conduct comparative case stu...
How has the Indian state changed with economic liberalization? While many scholars have explored the...
My dissertation focuses on two crucial issues that face developing economies how political and insti...
This thesis presents three papers that contribute to the measurement and understanding of the proces...
State intervention in India has persisted but has proved far from immune to critiques of traditional...
Thesis (Ph.D.)--Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Dept. of Economics, c1999.Includes bibliograp...
The relationship between democracy and inequality and the role of democratic participation in foster...
The electricity subsidy distribution pattern needs to be scrutinised to assess whether the policy be...
How to explain political monopolies in democratic institutional settings? Dominant parties in countr...
A puzzle of economic liberalization in democratic and democratizing countries is how reforms were im...
Electric power is so vital to both our economic and personal wellbeing that the erstwhile state poli...