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Amiya Kumar Bagchi (1936–2024) was an Indian economic historian known for his work on the economic history of India, colonialism, capitalism, and development economics. Over a long academic career, he contributed to scholarly debates on industrialisation, deindustrialisation under colonial rule, banking history, and the political economy of development.
| Name | Amiya Kumar Bagchi |
|---|---|
| Born | 1936 |
| Died | 2024 |
| Nationality | Indian |
| Field | Economic history, development economics |
| Known for | Studies on colonial economic history of India and capitalism |
Bagchi was an Indian scholar whose academic interests centred on the long-run economic transformation of India and the wider developing world. His writings engaged with questions of how colonial rule shaped industrial capacity, agrarian structures, and financial institutions in South Asia, and how these legacies influenced post-independence development.
Bagchi's research spanned several themes that recur in the historiography of modern India:
His scholarship is generally placed within the political economy tradition, drawing on historical evidence to examine structural features of underdevelopment.
Bagchi is recognised as one of the prominent voices in Indian economic history of the late twentieth and early twenty-first centuries. His writings are frequently cited in academic discussions of colonial economic impact, the evolution of Indian industry, and critiques of mainstream development paradigms. Through his long teaching and research career, he contributed to the training of researchers in economic history and political economy in India.