This book examines the effect of Classical political economy -- the
economic and monetary writings of Adam Smith, Ricardo, Malthus, the
Mills and others -- on the policy-making of the British government in
India in the late eighteenth and nineteenth centuries. Professor
Ambirajan shows how the economic doctrines of laissez-faire
individualism and the freedom of market forces were instilled into the
British administrative class. The East India Company's college at
Haileybury was the most obvious agent but it is clear that a whole nexus
of taught and unconscious attitudes predisposed the administrators to
accept the ideas and ideologies of the economists.