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India’s hidden backbone
Financial Express Kochi
|March 08, 2026
An immersive journey into the lives of women quietly reshaping India’s economy & culture
SHINJINI KUMAR'S NEW book, Busy Women: Building Commerce and Culture in Middle India, arrives at exactly the right moment in India’s story.
We speak often about the country’s rise, about consumption curves and startup headlines, about new airports and gleaming metros. But the deeper question has always been this: who is carrying this transformation in the vast spaces beyond the big cities, in the districts and tier-two towns where aspiration is quieter, more negotiated, and often more courageous?
Kumar’s book is an answer to that question. It asks us to look at contemporary India not through GDP charts alone, but through living rooms, workplaces, family kitchens, coaching centres, boutique storefronts, and small enterprises where women are reshaping what progress means.
Based on extensive travel across 30 cities and interviews with more than 300 women, Busy Women is not a sociological treatise disguised as reportage. Kumar writes with wit and empathy, with the instinct of someone who understands that the most important shifts in India are not always announced loudly. They unfold in daily lives, in places that rarely receive literary attention.
There are very few books on the women of what Kumar calls Middle India. Not the elite professional of a metropolitan, not the inherited entrepreneur from an established business family, and not the caricature of leisure that popular imagination sometimes assigns to women’s social circles. This is a different figure altogether. The woman who is ambitious but not always applauded for it, navigating modern homes and old expectations at once.
Perhaps the most haunting refrain in the book is the question these women are repeatedly asked: “Kya zaroorat hai?” What is the need? Why do you need to work? Why do you need financial independence? Why do you need ambition?
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