S.K. Pant (Ed.)

Our experience of more than five decades of planned development shows that the process of planning has not been able to provide a uniform level of human development to all sections of the society. The consensus emerging during all these years has been that by stepping up investment in the fields of education, health, sanitation and other critical social inputs, the capacity of vulnerable sections of the society could substantially be enhanced, which would also help in striking a socio-economic parity. With the onset of globalisation, there has been a drastic cut in the plan allocations in many of these critical social components, which is likely to affect adversely the building up capacity of these groups and ultimately the overall level of human development.
Research papers presented in this book offer a critical analysis of various dimensions of human development.
S.K. Pant, an economist by training, has been on the faculty of the G.B. Pant Social Science Institute, Allahabad for over two decades. He has contributed more than two dozen research articles to national and international journals and has undertaken several projects on various socio-economic issues, sponsored by prestigious organisations like the Planning Commission, NCERT, Ministry of Human Resource Development, Rajiv Gandhi National Drinking Water Mission, Rajiv Gandhi Foundation, National Literacy Mission, etc.
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