The Price of Aid: The Economic Cold War in India
English
By (author): David C. Engerman
A superb, field-changing bookA true classic.
Sunil Amrith
Makes a major contribution towards a necessary discussion of the politics of aid.
Times Higher Education
Debates over foreign aid are often strangely ahistorical. Economists argue about effectivenesshow to make aid workwhile critics bemoan money wasted on corruption, ignoring the fundamentally political character of aid. The Price of Aid exposes the geopolitical calculus underpinning development assistance, and its costs.
India stood at the center of American and Soviet aid competition throughout the Cold War, as both superpowers saw developmental aid as a way of pursuing their geopolitical goals by economic means. Drawing on recently declassified files from seven countries, David Engerman shows how Indian leaders used Cold War competition to win battles at home, eroding the Indian state in the process. As China spends freely in Africa, the political stakes of foreign aid are rising once again.
A magnificent book. Anyone who seeks to understand contemporary India and its development struggles will have to start here. Engermans work is not only enlightening, it turns much of what we thought we knew about India, foreign aid, and the Cold War in South Asia upside down.
O. A. Westad, author of The Cold War
An outstanding historyDrawing on an unprecedented array of official and private archives in India, Russia, the United States, and Britain, Engerman offers a superb accountone that integrates the ideologies and policies of the superpowers with a sharp analysis of the push-and-pull of policymaking in India. This is a landmark study of independent India as well as the Cold War.
Srinath Raghavan, author of Indias War