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India’s Economic Life: From Tradition to Industry

December 12, 2023 440 0

Economics of Identity: Work, Society, and Power

The study of work and economic life is a fundamental aspect of sociological inquiry, exploring the intricate relationships between individuals, societies, and the economic life that shape human existence. Work is not only a means of economic survival but a crucial dimension of identity, social organization, and power dynamics within societies.

Caste-based markets and trading networks in precolonial and colonial India: Beyond Colonial Stereotypes

  • Challenging Narratives of Economic Stagnation: Traditional accounts of Indian economic life once depicted India as unchanging, with economic life attributed solely to colonialism.
    • They believed that Indian villages were self-sufficient, didn’t rely on buying and selling, and didn’t use money much.
    • Things started to change only when the British took over and after India gained independence.
      • Villages began to connect more with the money-based economy, and this brought big changes to how people lived in cities and the countryside.
  • Economic Life in Pre-Colonial India: However, recent studies have rectified this colonial view which made sharp distinctions between traditional and modern society. 
    • Complex Trading Networks: Modern research has highlighted extensive trading networks that existed in pre-colonial India. 
      • Example: Various kinds of non-market exchange systems (such as the ‘jajmani system’) did exist in many villages, having wider networks of exchange through which agricultural products and other goods circulated. 
    • India’s Global Economic Role: India was a significant producer and exporter of handloom cloth (both ordinary cotton and luxury silks), as well as the source of many other goods such as spices that were in great demand in the global market, especially in Europe.
    • Economic Life and Trade in Pre-colonial India: Pre-colonial India had well-organized manufacturing centers and indigenous merchant groups, trading networks, and banking systems that enabled trade to take place within India, and between India and the rest of the world.
    • Indigenous Banking and Credit Systems: These communities had their own banking and credit systems, including instruments like the hundi, or bill of exchange (a credit note) that facilitated long-distance trade within caste and kinship networks.
  • This challenges the notion of a sharp divide between traditional and modern economies in India.

Caste-based trade among the Nakarattars of Tamil Nadu

  • The Nakarattars had a unique banking system where they loaned and deposited money within their caste-defined social relationships.
  • These relationships were based on factors like business territory, where they lived, their family lineage, marriages, and shared religious beliefs.
  • Unlike modern Western banks, this system didn’t rely on a government-controlled central bank.
  • Instead, public trust was built on the reputation, decisions, and shared reserve deposits within these social spheres.
  • Essentially, the Nakarattar banking system was rooted in their caste, and individual Nakarattars managed their lives by participating in and overseeing various communal institutions dedicated to accumulating and distributing capital reserves.

Social Organisations of Markets – Traditional Business Communities

  • The Indian economy has often focused on traditional merchant communities like the Nakarattars. 
  • The Intersection of Caste and Economy: The caste system has a deep connection with the Indian economy, including aspects like land ownership and occupational roles.
  • Vaisyas: One of the four varnas in Indian society, represent the merchant and business class
    • But this identity can be flexible and aspirational rather than fixed.
    • Some caste groups, while not traditionally associated with trade, enter into business and claim the “Vaisya” status as they move upward socially. 
  • Traditional Business Communities in India: These were not only the “Vaisyas” but also other groups with distinct religious or community identities, such as Parsis, Sindhis, Bohras, or Jains.
    • Historically, merchant communities did not always hold high social status.
    • Example: During colonial times, the long-distance salt trade was controlled by the marginalized Banjaras, a tribal group.
  • Cultural Foundations of Business: The specific nature of community institutions and values shapes how business is organized and practiced.
    • Understanding how markets operate in India involves examining how certain communities control specific business domains.
  • This caste-based specialization often arises because trade relies on caste and kinship networks, as seen with the Nakarattars.
  • Businesspeople typically trust those within their own community or kin group, leading to caste monopolies in specific areas of business.

Agricultural work in a village

Agricultural work in a village

Colonialism and the emergence of new markets: Economic Shifts and Market Evolution

  • Economic Life in Colonial India: The advent of colonialism in India brought significant economic disruptions, impacting production, trade, and agriculture.
  • Example: The handloom industry suffered due to the influx of cheap manufactured textiles from England.
  • Colonial Integration: While pre-colonial India already had a complex monetized economy, the colonial period was a moment when India became more integrated into the global capitalist economy.
  • Shift in India’s Economic Role: Before British colonization, India was a major supplier of manufactured goods to the world market.
    • After colonization, it became a source of raw materials.
    • Agricultural products and a consumer of manufactured goods, primarily benefiting industrializing England.
  • European Entry into Indian Trade: Europeans entered the trade and business landscape partnering with existing merchant communities or displacing them. 

 New Markets

New Markets

  • Expansion of the Market: However, instead of completely overturning existing economic institutions, the expansion of the market economy in India presented new opportunities for certain merchant communities.
    • They adapted to changing economic circumstances and new communities emerged and retained economic life even after Independence.

 

How did the Marwaris transform themselves into modern industrialists?

  • The Marwaris became a successful business community during colonial times, capitalizing on opportunities in colonial cities like Calcutta and establishing trade and money lending networks across the country.
  • Their success relied on extensive social networks that fostered trust, vital for their banking system. 
  • Many Marwari families accumulated wealth, becoming moneylenders and supporting British commercial expansion in India.
  • In the late colonial and post-independence eras, some Marwari families transitioned into modern industrialists, and even today they continue to wield significant control over India’s industry.
  • This transformation from small migrant traders to merchant bankers to industrialists illustrates the importance of the social context in economic processes

 

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Quick Revise Now !
AVAILABLE FOR DOWNLOAD SOON
UDAAN PRELIMS WALLAH
Comprehensive coverage with a concise format
Integration of PYQ within the booklet
Designed as per recent trends of Prelims questions
हिंदी में भी उपलब्ध
Quick Revise Now !
UDAAN PRELIMS WALLAH
Comprehensive coverage with a concise format
Integration of PYQ within the booklet
Designed as per recent trends of Prelims questions
हिंदी में भी उपलब्ध

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