The post-1991 reforms have brought unrecognisable change.
However, there is a large unfinished agenda which, if neglected, could hobble India's progress to the next level.
Economic liberalisation, collectively a set of sweeping reforms covering industry, trade, investment and the financial sector, alongside rationalisation of the tax structure, was principally responsible for transforming India from an economy in a low-growth equilibrium trap as late as the late 1980s to the second fastest growing large economy in the world two decades later.
It was extreme crisis that drove change. India, in May 1991, faced a balance of payments crisis and was on the verge of defaulting on its external debt repayment obligations.
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