Latha Venkatesh

Executive Editor @CNBCTV18News ; interested in markets and macroeconomics

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Book Recommendations:

LV

Recommended by Latha Venkatesh

Now‘s not a good time to let corporates own banks says former RBI guv Subbarao as he and Tamal Bandopadhyay chat with me on Tamal’s book:Pandemonium- The great Indian Banking Tragedy https://t.co/jP7zke6nV6 (from X)

For the past 25 years, Tamal Bandyopadhyay has been a keen student of Indian banking. A lifelong reporter and journalist, he is an award-winning national business columnist and a bestselling author. He is widely recognised for ‘Banker’s Trust’, a weekly column whose unerring ability to anticipate and dissect major policy decisions in India’s banking and finance has earned him a large print and digital audience around the world. The column won Tamal the Ramnath Goenka Award for Excellence in Journalism (commentary and interpretative writing) for 2017. Banker’s Trust now appears in Business Standard , where he is a Consulting Editor. Previously, Tamal has had stints with three other national business dailies in India, and was a founding member of Mint newspaper and Livemint.com. He is also a Senior Adviser to Jana Small Finance Bank Ltd. Between 2014 and 2018, as an adviser on strategy for Bandhan Bank Ltd, he had a ringside view of the first-ever transformation of a microfinance institution in India into a universal bank. Author of five other books, Tamal is widely recognised as a contributor to the Oxford Handbook of the Indian Economy and Making of New Transformation Under Modi Government. In 2019, LinkedIn named him as one of the ‘most influential voices in India’ .

LV

Recommended by Latha Venkatesh

Isher Ahluwalia’s first book “Industrial growth in india: stagnation since the mid sixties” was the first economics book I ever read. Its empirical thoroughness is amazing. It fashioned my career decisions & is the most quoted reference work in my own Ph.D. May she rest in peace (from X)

This comprehensive analysis of industrial growth in India over the past twenty years charts the marked decline in growth after the mid-sixties. Using a wealth of empirical data, the author examines how income distribution, investment and demand for capital goods, and policy constraints have all affected industrial growth.