为国家记账,将帝国边缘化:20世纪初的应税能力与殖民统治

Accounting for the Nation, Marginalizing the Empire: Taxable Capacity and Colonial Rule in the Early Twentieth Century

History of Political Economy · 2020
被引 4
人大 A-ABS 2

中文导读

通过解读印度学者K. T. Shah在1920年代关于如何衡量国民经济的辩论,揭示帝国主义如何塑造国民核算的讨论,并指出这些辩论本身是殖民权力结构在两次世界大战期间被争夺和重申的场所。

Abstract

Modern forms of national accounting are widely understood to have emerged within the context of rivalry between the western powers and attempts to manage the economic fallout of World War I. There has been little consideration of the way in which imperialism shaped debates and approaches to national accounting. Providing a close reading of Indian scholar K. T. Shah’s intervention in debates about how to measure the national economy of the 1920s, this article seeks to shed new light on innovative debates within Indian economics in this period. In so doing, it also seeks to draw attention to the ways in which debates about national economy were themselves a site of contestation, and reaffirmation, of colonial power structures in the interwar years.

国民核算殖民统治印度经济学K. T. Shah世纪20年代