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Sunil Bhandare on his experiences with Indian liberal organisations

By Sunil S. Bhandare

2020

Sunil Bhandare on his experiences with Indian liberal organisations

Source: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=g52qPVVXICE Duration: 222.6s

Sunil Bhandare (00:05): My sort of association with Forum of Free Enterprise started probably somewhere in the mid eighties, quite late, and with the Indian Liberal Group early nineties. Now, in early nineties I think there were lots of those conferences which are being organized by the Raju on understanding the economic reforms process, question about privatization, questions about globalization and so on. So I used to participate in that and there used to be a great number of great thinkers coming for those kind of deliberations and discussions. And that is how the whole process became sort of you know participative for me getting involved with the Raju’s Freedom First and as well as the Project for Economic Education. Now, the Project for Economic Education, which is a wing of the Indian Liberal Group sort of thought about producing alternative budgets and just before the presentation of the normal central budget, just about two to three weeks before that or about a month before that, we used to come out with our own publication. And there were in the early stages of this particular first liberal budget which was being presented, We had a had a conference held in in what is this place sort of in Nashik, close to Nashik, I forget the name of the place, but Leslie Sawhney programme which was there and we used to have the this kind of a workshops and conferences. And the first that kind of a conference was attended by T. N. Ninan, then Suresh Tendulkar all these people were there and we used to discuss about what should be the fiscal policy for this country, what should be the trade policy, what should be the pricing policy, what should be the regulatory institutions and all that. Based on those deliberations we came out with the first Indian liberal budget and we also made presentations on that liberal budget both in Bombay and in Delhi held the press conferences and so on. It did receive some attention, but the kind of attention which we were expecting from that kind of activity did not happen. We came out with another three subsequent publications of the Indian Liberal Group’s, so in all about four or five such alternative budgets were being prepared. So, these budgets enable us to at least look at the entire fiscal system at a great deal of sort of in a specific details. We had discussions with Geethakrishnan who was the former finance secretary and he was from Chennai and many others. That was a good kind of contribution which came from the Project for Economic Education for liberal economic thinking.

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