試す 金 - 無料
The Raj extracted $65 trillion from us: Fact or fiction?
Mint Chennai
|January 29, 2025
Oxfam's huge estimate does not withstand scrutiny as it makes too many flimsy assumptions
xfam, in its report Takers not Makers, claims Imperial Britain "extracted" $65 trillion from India between 1765 and 1900 in today's money, "enough to carpet London with £50 notes" four times over, taking these numbers from calculations others have done before. The origins go back to Dadabhai Naoroji, who, writing 125 years ago, called the outflow a "drain." Oxfam uses the number to support a modern-day movement: a case for reparations Britain should pay India.
Such numbers are more than a criticism of Raj policies. There are plenty of grounds to criticize these. For example, it spent too little on welfare and infrastructure and too much on the army. But extraction data doesn't just put public policy but the entire colonial system to critical scrutiny. It is a case against the combination of colonialism and globalization that made the 19th century special.
Private capital worldwide made heavy use of the open economy protected by the British Empire, with goods, capital, labour and knowledge transacted more freely than in the mid-20th century, when barriers of all kinds went up. In the 20th century, Marxist intellectuals and nationalists said this capitalism had impoverished India by draining India's surplus to Britain. As global Marxist movements declined in the 1980s and 90s, the drain receded into academic obscurity. Historian Kirti Chaudhuri called the drain theory "confused" economics, "coloured by political feelings." I have criticized it too.
このストーリーは、Mint Chennai の January 29, 2025 版からのものです。
Magzter GOLD を購読すると、厳選された何千ものプレミアム記事や、10,000 以上の雑誌や新聞にアクセスできます。
すでに購読者ですか? サインイン
Mint Chennai からのその他のストーリー
Mint Chennai
SC says courts can't impose timelines on Prez, state guvs
The ruling comes even as several states are struggling with delayed assent to important laws
2 mins
November 21, 2025
Mint Chennai
Lots of art and Christmas joy
A Mint guide to what's happening in and around the city
1 min
November 21, 2025
Mint Chennai
US's job additions surprise in Sep
US employers added a surprisingly solid 119,000 jobs in September, the government said, issuing a key economic report that had been delayed for seven weeks by the federal government shutdown.
1 min
November 21, 2025
Mint Chennai
India foodgrain harvest up 8%
India’s foodgrain production rose 8% to a record 357.73 million tonnes (mt) in the 2024-25 crop year ended June, according to government data released on Thursday.
1 min
November 21, 2025
Mint Chennai
Standardize expenditure heads by FY28: CAG tells states
CAG's move is aimed at overhauling India's public finance system.
1 min
November 21, 2025
Mint Chennai
Let's consign the money illusion firmly to history
Is very low inflation a problem? It doesn't suit everyone, admittedly, but the cost of living kept in tight control has wide and enduring economic benefits that go beyond the obvious
3 mins
November 21, 2025
Mint Chennai
Reliance brings in Carrefour exec to boost grocery play
Carrefour senior leader Guillaume de Colonges to oversee Reliance Retail’s grocery business
2 mins
November 21, 2025
Mint Chennai
Lenovo India Q2 revenue jumps 23%
Integrated IT solutions provider Lenovo's India arm on Thursday reported a 23% year-on-year increase in revenue at $1.2 billion in the September quarter, aided by strong demand fuelled by digitisation, premiumisation and improved consumer sentiment following goods and services tax (GST) rejig.
1 min
November 21, 2025
Mint Chennai
Cracks are appearing in OpenAI’s dominant facade
THE 21ST-CENTURY tech landscape was built with a winner-takes-all mindset. It started with Microsoft’s Windows monopoly at the end of the 1990s. Since then Alphabet-owned Google has cornered search and Amazon has become the king of e-commerce. Meta, too, has blanketed much of the world with social media—though on November 18th, a judge in Washington, DC, spared it the ignominy of being declared a monopolist.
2 mins
November 21, 2025
Mint Chennai
Street scales 13-month high as index heavyweights fire
November, showed NSDL data. As of Thursday, FPIs' cumulative net short index futures stood at 165,565 contracts. Covering a part of these can also take the Nifty and Sensex to new highs.
2 mins
November 21, 2025
Listen
Translate
Change font size

