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Traders, Speculators, and Captains of Industry

How Capitalist Legitimacy Shaped Foreign Investment Policy in India
Brief Description
An incisive account of the moral beliefs that have guided foreign investment policy in India since the late colonial period, with an eye toward their implications for the twenty-first-century global economy. Is foreign capital an agent of economic growth in developing countries or a vehicle of... Read More
Format: Hardback
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Traders, Speculators, and Captains of Industry

Foreign capital can catalyze economic growth in developing countries but can also be a vehicle for extraction. Jason Jackson shows how Indian officials have navigated this terrain, developing moral discourses and economic policies that favor firmsβ€”both foreign and domesticβ€”seen as investing in industrial transformation and societal modernization.

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An incisive account of the moral beliefs that have guided foreign investment policy in India since the late colonial period, with an eye toward their implications for the twenty-first-century global economy.

Is foreign capital an agent of economic growth in developing countries or a vehicle of extraction? Examining how Indian elites wrestled with this question in the late colonial and postcolonial periods, Jason Jackson argues that it reflects a false binary. Instead of simply choosing between domestic and foreign capital, Indian policymakers have long considered the business ethics of individual firms. Indian economic nationalism, in other words, has never been characterised by a straightforward preference for domestic over foreign capital.

Jackson demonstrates that Indian policymakers have sought to favour firms that they believe are most likely to advance industrial development and societal progress at home. In particular, official policy and discourse have sought to confer a kind of moral legitimacy on businesses that invest their profits in local professional development and technological innovationβ€”practices deemed synonymous with economic modernisation. Meanwhile, firms seen as simply trading rather than producing, or as engaging in financial speculation and other allegedly regressive activities, have been viewed unfavourably. Jackson argues that these moral categories of capitalist legitimacy have shaped policymaking from the demise of the East India Company and rise of a new class of Indian industrialists in the late nineteenth century; to clashes between companies including Coca-Cola, Thums Up, Hero, and Honda in the twentieth; to more recent efforts to centralise political power through controversial market-governance projects.

An incisive look at the contested terms of capitalist self-interest and business ethics, Traders, Speculators, and Captains of Industry sheds new light on debates over investment policy and state-market relations in a global economy.

Book Details

INFORMATION

ISBN: 9780674293762

Publisher: Harvard University Press

Format: Hardback

Date Published: 18 November 2025

Country: United States

Imprint: Harvard University Press

Illustration: 20 illus.

Audience: Professional and scholarly

DIMENSIONS

Width: 156.0mm

Height: 235.0mm

Weight: 0g

Pages: 320

About the Author

Jason Jackson is Associate Professor of Political Economy and Director of the Political Economy Lab at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology.

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