Partition and the Reorganization of Commercial Networks
Partition and the Reorganization of Commercial Networks
- Rinchan Ali MirzaRinchan Ali MirzaDepartment of Economics, University of Kent
Summary
The Partition of British India represents one of the largest episodes of involuntary mass migration in recorded history—an estimated 17 million people were displaced because of the event. Among the many changes that resulted from the Partition was the substantive untangling of the business architecture that had developed under the colonial regime. A central feature of the untangling was the separation of the extensive commodity trade network that had developed in areas that went to Pakistan from its agro-processing base that was inherited by areas that became part of post-independence India. The implications of such a restructuring of the business architecture were particularly relevant for Pakistan, which started off with a severe imbalance between its commodity trade and industrial sectors, the former of which was at a much more advanced stage than the latter. The rudimentary industrial base from which Pakistan started off in turn fostered a greater reliance of the state on the private capital of a small business elite when it came to promoting industrial growth. It is the changing dynamics of just such a relationship between the state and a small close knit business elite that has characterized the post-Partition business history of the country.
Subjects
- Capitalism
- Citizenship and National Identity/Nationalism
- Economic/Business
- Migration/Immigration/Diaspora
- Peace and Conflict
- Postcolonial Studies
- South Asia