Jayati Ghosh

Jayati Ghosh (born 16 September 1955) is an Indian development economist. She is the Chairperson of the Centre for Economic Studies and Planning at the Jawaharlal Nehru University, New Delhi and her core areas of study include international economics, employment patterns in developing countries, macroeconomic policy, and issues related to gender and development.

Jayati Ghosh
Ghosh in 2012
Born (1955-09-16) 16 September 1955
Spouse(s)Abhijit Sen
InstitutionJawaharlal Nehru University
FieldDevelopment economics
Alma materUniversity of Delhi (BA)
Jawaharlal Nehru University (MA, MPhil)
University of Cambridge (PhD)
Doctoral
advisor
Terence J. Byres

Early life

Jayati Ghosh was born on 16 September 1955.[1] Ghosh attended Delhi University for her undergraduate and got her M.A., M. Phil. in economics from Jawaharlal Nehru University. She joined Cambridge University for her PhD.[2] Her 1984 doctoral thesis at Cambridge University was entitled "Non capitalist land rent: theories and the case of North India" under the supervision of Dr. T Byres.

Career

Ghosh has previously held positions at Tufts University and Cambridge University, lecturing meanwhile at academic institutions throughout India. She is one of the founders of the Economic Research Foundation, New Delhi, a non-profit trust devoted to progressive economic research. (Selections of her columns from the Macroscan, the Foundation's outlet, will be published as Tracking the Macroeconomy.) She is also the Executive Secretary of the International Development Economics Associates (IDEAS), a network of economists critical of the mainstream economic paradigm of neo-liberalism.[3]

Ghosh was the principal author of the West Bengal Human Development Report which has received the United Nations Development Programme Prize for excellence in analysis. In addition to her many scholarly articles, she writes regular columns on economics and current affairs for Frontline magazine, Business Line, the Bengali newspaper Ganashakti, Deccan Chronicle, and Asian Age.[4][5] She also writes a regular column for the fortnightly national magazine Frontline, focusing mainly on economic issues.[3]

Ghosh was conferred International Labour Organisation's Decent Work Research Prize along with Professor Eve Landau in February 2011.[4][6] In Spring Term 2011, she served as the first Ragnar Nurkse Visiting Professor in Development Economics at Tallinn University of Technology's Technology Governance graduate program.[2]

Criticisms of the Government

Ghosh has consistently maintained a pro-student stance. In February 2016, she alleged the NDA government of shutting down student protests against the capital punishment sentence to Afzal Guru. In a lecture enumerating the "anti-national policies of the NDA", she spoke about the importance of student protests and discussion, and the current government's aversion to the demand for transparency and accountability. [7]

In October 2019, Ghosh expressed her belief that the relay of policymakers who were fixed to political dogmas that discouraged more public spending was dangerous to the economy and destabilizing to society. [8]

In her co-authored book, Demonetisation Decoded: A critique of India’s monetary experiment, she criticizes the monetary decision taken by the Modi government as an ineffective and wasteful exercise.

In February of 2020, Ghosh criticized the Modi-led government for misrepresenting data in the 2020 Budget which was presented a month earlier than usual. Claiming that the government did not have data post December 2019, she declared Nirmala Sitharaman's pre-budget speech as ineffectual and inaccurate. She also emphasized the lack of attention given to the need for creation of employment in the new budget, stating that there were cuts in almost every employment-intensive sector. [9] By withholding information that by constitutional law should be freely available to the public, she said, the Modi government was able to play caste politics.[10]

Awards and Recognitions[11]

Personal life

She is married to Abhijit Sen, an economist who was a member of the disbanded Planning Commission.

Selected bibliography

  • Ghosh, Jayati; Chandrasekhar, C.P. (2001). Crisis as conquest: learning from East Asia. New Delhi: Orient Longman. ISBN 9788125018988.
  • Ghosh, Jayati; Chandrasekhar, C.P. (2004) [1st. pub. LeftWord Books:2002]. The market that failed: neoliberal economic reforms in India (2nd ed.). New Delhi: LeftWord Books. ISBN 9788187496458. Also reprinted January 2008, January 2009, July 2011.
  • Ghosh, Jayati (2009). Never done and poorly paid: women's work in globalising India. New Delhi: Women Unlimited. ISBN 9788188965441.
  • Ghosh, Jayati (2009). After crisis: adjustment, recovery, and fragility in East Asia. New Delhi: Tulika Books. ISBN 9788189487584.
  • Edited the forthcoming Economics of the New Imperialism.
gollark: "Lemongraph"?
gollark: I only trust deterministic ones.
gollark: Make sure to only run it on an airgapped machine in a VM.
gollark: All computers are mine by divine right of kings.
gollark: The square of power.

See also

References

  1. "Curriculum Vitae" (PDF). Jawaharlal Nehru University. Retrieved 14 October 2019.
  2. "Jayati Ghosh". Jawaharlal Nehru University. Retrieved 14 October 2019.
  3. "Jayati Ghosh". Frontline. Retrieved 14 October 2019.
  4. "Jayati Ghosh". The Guardian. Retrieved 14 October 2019.
  5. "Jayati Ghosh". Serenade. Retrieved 14 October 2019.
  6. Department of Communication (DCOMM) (16 February 2011). "ILO Decent Work Research Prize awarded to two distinguished scholars" (Press release). International Labour Organization. Retrieved 4 November 2014.
  7. Mar 6, PTI | Updated; 2016; Ist, 19:27. "Afzal Guru row 'constructed conspiracy' by state: JNU prof Jayati Ghosh". Bangalore Mirror. Retrieved 10 March 2020.CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link)
  8. Ghosh, Jayati (10 October 2019). "Our Shrinking Economic Toolkits | by Jayati Ghosh". Project Syndicate. Retrieved 10 March 2020.
  9. "Budget 2020 | Every single number is a lie, says Jayati Ghosh". The Hindu. Special Correspondent. 2 February 2020. ISSN 0971-751X. Retrieved 10 March 2020.CS1 maint: others (link)
  10. "Budget 2020 | Every single number is a lie, says Jayati Ghosh". The Hindu. Special Correspondent. 2 February 2020. ISSN 0971-751X. Retrieved 10 March 2020.CS1 maint: others (link)
  11. "Jayati Ghosh". www.jnu.ac.in. Retrieved 10 March 2020.
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