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Breaking Out and Through: An Essay on India’s First Women in Liberal Economics | The 1991 Project

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  • #India #Feminism
Kadambari
@kadambari_shah
(Author)
Shreyas Narla
@shreyas_nl
(Author)
the1991project.com
Read on the1991project.com
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2 Mentions
With a blast of its horn, the SS Independence pulled out of the Bombay docks one rainy August afternoon in 1955. On its deck, 24-year-old Padma Desai stood gripping the handrail and... Show More

With a blast of its horn, the SS Independence pulled out of the Bombay docks one rainy August afternoon in 1955. On its deck, 24-year-old Padma Desai stood gripping the handrail and gazing out at the land she was leaving behind: a newly independent India where she had been an ace student, consistently ranking at state-level exams and winning scholarships that helped her chart her own independent course from Surat, where she was born, to Bombay for graduate studies.

She thought, too, of the baggage she was leaving behind: a loveless marriage, forced on her by circumstance, and the knowledge that life in her young country held no promise for her, no future.

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Shruti Rajagopalan @srajagopalan · Mar 25, 2022
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Fantastic essay by my colleague Shreyas Narla @shreyas_nl on the first generation of female economists working on liberal ideas for the Indian economy. Featuring the journeys of Padma Desai, Isher Judge-Ahluwalia, and Sudha Shenoy. This is part of the 1991 Project @mercatus.
Shruti Rajagopalan @srajagopalan · Apr 30, 2023
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Also read this wonderful essay by my colleagues @kadambari_shah and @shreyas_nl documenting Padma Desai's (and Isher Judge-Ahluwalia and Sudha Shenoy) contributions to what eventually culminated in the 1991 reforms.
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