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Growth and Prosperity

The State, Democracy and Markets: Lessons for India from the Global Experience

The State, Democracy and Markets: Lessons for India from the Global Experience is a monograph by Rajiv B. Lall, Distinguished Fellow, Artha Global and former Chairman, IDFC Limited.


May 30, 2025

The State, Democracy and Markets: Lessons for India from the Global Experience is a monograph by Rajiv B. Lall, Distinguished Fellow, Artha Global and former Chairman, IDFC Limited.

Context

The State, Democracy and Markets: Lessons for India from the Global Experience is a monograph by Rajiv B. Lall, Distinguished Fellow, Artha Global and former Chairman, IDFC Limited. It provides a critical analysis of the relationship between free markets and democracy and examines the role of the state from an historical perspective. It challenges the neoconservative view that free markets unencumbered by state intervention are the basic recipe for economic development and that liberal democracy and free markets are intertwined and mutually reinforcing companions.

Read the monograph here.

Methodology

The goal of this monograph is multifold. First, it examines the interface between the state and markets across various parts of the world, highlighting the limits of what free markets can achieve on their own and exploring the role of the state in delivering transformational economic change. Second, it analyses the Anglo-American and Western European experience in managing the inherent tension between capitalism and democracy. Third, it draws broad lessons for India. The underlying premise is that India must pursue a democratic path—both as a normative commitment and a pragmatic necessity. Market-based economic policy offers the best prospect for delivering sustained economic growth, but lessons from international experience remain highly relevant as India charts its path to economic prosperity as a democracy where the median voter is still very poor.

The monograph is structured as follows: it begins with reflections on the historical spread of capitalism and democracy and the influential advocacy of the Washington Consensus, which promoted the power of economic and political freedom. It argues that the world has changed in fundamental ways since the break-up of the Soviet Union in 1989, leaving little room for ideological triumphalism in contemporary global discourse. Drawing on evidence from emerging markets, the text highlights the limits of free-market policies across Africa, Latin America, and South-East Asia and compares these outcomes with the role of the state in the economic transformation of South Korea, Taiwan, Singapore, and China. The discussion then turns to the tension between markets and democracy and examines the ongoing challenges facing Western models of democratic capitalism. A comparative analysis of Anglo-American and Western European models is used to explore the importance of state capacity in managing this tension.

The broad argument is that in a democracy where the median voter remains poor, it is essential for the state to have the capacity to complement, nurture, regulate, and legitimise markets. Strengthening state capacity across multiple dimensions is likely the most important reform priority to ensure sustained economic growth with social stability.

Outcomes

An assessment of democracy and markets in India is more useful when approached through a comparative lens—one that places the Indian experience in a global context. A comparative perspective is especially important at a time of deep reflection on the Western model of democratic capitalism and long-held orthodoxies about the role of the state. The interaction between markets and democracy is being actively re-examined, even in countries like the United States. As a result, research on the ‘varieties of capitalism’ and alternative models of state engagement in both democratic and non-democratic contexts has grown significantly. This monograph emerges from that body of work.

The global evidence synthesised here aims to offer insights into the powers and limitations of markets, the challenges of managing their interaction with democracy, and the critical role of the state in enabling transformational economic change. While India is not the sole focus, the lessons drawn from global experiences are highly relevant to its pursuit of economic transformation as a democracy where the median voter remains very poor.

Team Members

Dr. Rajiv B. Lall

Our Work

Paper

The State, Democracy and Markets: Lessons for India from the Global Experience

Strengthening state capacity in its multiple dimensions is probably the most important reform priority for keeping India on a path of sustained economic growth with social stability.
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