নয়া উদারনীতিবাদের সংকট: সমসাময়িক ভারতীয় রাজনীতির প্রেক্ষাপটে একটি বিশ্লেষণ
Volume-XIII, Issue-III, April 2025 > Volume-XIII, Issue-IV, July 2025
Volume-XIII, Issue-IV, July 2025 |
Received: 19.07.2025 | Accepted: 23.07.2025 | ||||
Published Online: 31.07.2025 | Page No: 58-63 | ||||
DOI: 10.64031/pratidhwanitheecho.vol.13.issue.04W.008 |
নয়া উদারনীতিবাদের সংকট: সমসাময়িক ভারতীয় রাজনীতির প্রেক্ষাপটে একটি বিশ্লেষণ
চাঁদ
অধিকারী, রাজ্য সরকার অনুমোদিত কলেজ শিক্ষক, রাষ্ট্রবিজ্ঞান বিভাগ, স্বামী ধনঞ্জয় দাস কাঠিয়াবাবা মহাবিদ্যালয়, পশ্চিমবঙ্গ, ভারত |
The Crisis of Neo-Liberalism: An Analysis in the Context of Contemporary Indian Politics Chand Adhikari, Government-Approved College Teacher, Dept. of Political Science, Swami Dhananjoy Das Kathiababa Mahavidyalaya, West Bengal, India | ||
ABSTRACT | ||
This paper analyses the crisis of neoliberalism in India, and provides a strategic perspective based on policy realities. While the world grapples with neoliberal trends, India’s struggles serve as both a symptom and an insight – highlighting how economic models built on elite capture, covert violence and authoritarian politics ultimately threaten the social cohesion and democracy that neoliberalism has established since the 1990s. The reason for this is that even today, the majority of countries in the world have established liberal democratic systems and have welcomed the ideals of open market, open culture and foreign direct investment in their internal systems. Today, in the context of world politics, the foundation of a market economy has been laid through the mutual relations of one country with another, and just as foreign direct investment has paved the way, various transnational corporations have spread from country to country through duty-free access to the wealth of the open world. However, it must be remembered that the right wing has never expressed the desire to loosen the noose of the word free from the confines of the market economy. This chapter claims that neoliberalism in India has enabled sustainable GDP growth and corporate savings, yet has led to massive social welfare spending, which has created a clear crisis in the form of distressed farmers, urban precariousness, an indebted middle class, social polarization and democratic regression. Drawing on economic data, agricultural research, labour research, and political analysis, it assesses the trajectory of the neoliberal era and outlines the path toward a redistributive, democratic, post-neoliberal future. | ||
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