This analysis of the role of government in eradicating India's rural
poverty raises a whole series of crucial contemporary issues relating to
the state, its degree of autonomy in the developing world and the
problems of effecting genuine redistributive reform. The particular
importance of the book is that it focuses attention on the nature of
ruling political parties as an important factor influencing the success
or failure of redistributive and welfare politics in a democratic
capitalist setting. Dr Kohli compares in detail three state-level Indian
governments of the late seventies: Communist-ruled West Bengal,
Karnataka under the Congress Party, and Uttar Pradesh under the Janata
Party. Comparing these in terms of their success in redistributing
agricultural land and creating employment for the rural poor, the author
argues cogently that well-organised, left-of-centre parties in
government - like that in West Bengal - are the most effective in
implementing reform.