Indian Economy on the Eve of Independence
"The British didn't just rule India. They restructured its economy to serve their own."
1. Chapter Overview
Before British rule, India was one of the world's leading economies — known for its HANDICRAFTS, TEXTILES, and AGRICULTURE. After 200 years of colonialism, India was POOR, STAGNANT, and DE-INDUSTRIALISED. This chapter surveys the pre-colonial economy, the colonial POLICIES that transformed it, and the STATE of the economy at independence (1947) — the starting point from which independent India had to build.
2. The Pre-Colonial Indian Economy
Before the British
- India was FAMOUS for its HANDICRAFT industries — cotton and silk textiles, metalwork, precious stone work
- Indian textiles were EXPORTED worldwide — muslin from Dacca, calico from Calicut
- Agriculture was PRODUCTIVE and DIVERSE
- Trade flourished — with Southeast Asia, West Asia, East Africa, Europe
- India was an ECONOMIC POWERHOUSE — producing ~23% of world GDP in the early 18th century
3. Colonial Policies — How Britain Restructured India
1. De-industrialisation
- Britain systematically DESTROYED Indian handicrafts:
- High import duties on Indian textiles in Britain
- No tariff protection for Indian industry
- Flooding Indian markets with CHEAP, MACHINE-MADE British goods
- Result: India, once the world's textile LEADER, became an IMPORTER of cloth
- 'The bones of cotton weavers are bleaching the plains of India'
2. Transforming India into a Raw Material Supplier
- India exported RAW COTTON, INDIGO, JUTE, OPIUM → Britain
- Britain exported FINISHED GOODS → India
- India was locked into PRODUCING what Britain needed, not what India needed
3. Revenue and Taxation
- The LAND REVENUE system (Zamindari, Ryotwari, Mahalwari) extracted HEAVY taxes from peasants
- Revenue was FIXED and INFLEXIBLE — had to be paid even in FAMINE
- Monetisation of revenue (paid in CASH, not kind) → peasants dependent on moneylenders → chronic DEBT
4. Commercialisation of Agriculture
- Shift from FOOD CROPS to CASH CROPS (indigo, cotton, opium, jute)
- Good for: British industry. Bad for: Indian food security.
- Peasants grew what the MARKET (Britain) demanded, not what they ATE
4. The State of the Economy at Independence (1947)
| Sector | Condition at Independence |
|---|---|
| Agriculture | STAGNANT. Low productivity. Over-dependence on monsoon. Fragmented landholdings. Zamindari exploitation. |
| Industry | DE-INDUSTRIALISED. Handicrafts destroyed. Modern industry: limited (mainly cotton and jute — to serve British interests). Capital goods industry: ABSENT (no machine-making capacity). |
| Trade | Surplus — but the benefits went to BRITAIN. India exported raw materials; imported finished goods. Trade was with Britain, not other countries. |
| Infrastructure | Railways, ports, telegraph — built but for COLONIAL PURPOSES (troop movement, raw material export), not for India's development. |
| Demography | High BIRTH rate, high DEATH rate — very slow population growth. Infant mortality: extremely high. Life expectancy: ~32 years. Literacy rate: ~12%. |
| Occupational Structure | ~75% in agriculture. ~10% in manufacturing. ~15% in services. Unchanged for DECADES — sign of STAGNATION. |
Key Indicators
- Per capita income: EXTREMELY LOW — India was one of the poorest countries in the world
- Poverty: MASSIVE — a majority of the population lived below subsistence
- Health and education: ABYSMAL. Literacy 12%, life expectancy 32
5. The Infrastructure Paradox
- The British DID build: railways (54,000 km by 1947), ports (Mumbai, Kolkata, Chennai), telegraph, irrigation (some canals)
- BUT the PURPOSE was colonial:
- Railways: move TROOPS rapidly; transport RAW MATERIALS to ports for export
- Not designed to LINK Indian markets or develop Indian industry
- Suez Canal (1869): shortened Britain-India route — but benefited BRITISH trade, not Indian
6. Some Positive Contributions
- To be fair: the British did introduce:
- Railways and modern transport
- Ports and shipping
- Telegraph and postal system
- A modern LEGAL framework
- English education (which produced a class of Indian professionals)
- BUT: these were SIDE EFFECTS of colonial rule — not INTENDED benefits to India
- The NET EFFECT of British rule was: DESTRUCTION of existing industry, STAGNATION of agriculture, and POVERTY for the masses
- Nationalists like Dadabhai Naoroji ('Poverty and Un-British Rule in India'), R.C. Dutt, and others documented the 'DRAIN OF WEALTH' from India to Britain
7. Exam Focus
- Pre-colonial economy — India as an industrial/export powerhouse
- De-industrialisation — destruction of handicrafts
- Commercialisation of agriculture — food to cash crops
- Drain of Wealth theory (Dadabhai Naoroji)
- State of economy at 1947 — agriculture, industry, trade, infrastructure, demography
- Infrastructure — built but for colonial purposes
8. Conclusion
Independent India inherited a BROKEN economy:
- AGRICULTURE: Stagnant, low productivity, exploited by zamindars and moneylenders
- INDUSTRY: Destroyed. Handicrafts gone. Modern industry limited and dependent.
- INFRASTRUCTURE: Built — but for the coloniser's needs, not India's.
- PEOPLE: Poor, illiterate, dying young.
- THE CHALLENGE: Build an economy from these ruins — which independent India set out to do through planning and the mixed economy.
'The sun never set on the British Empire. But it left India in darkness — to find its own dawn.'
