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Capitalism : A Ghost Story By Arundhati Roy

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The book Capitalism: A Ghost Story by Arundhati Roy is an honest telling of the effects and injustices that have resulted in India due to the rise of which are often not shared, nor given a chance to be shared with those who are not living those injustices in their everyday life. The book focusses on numerous examples in contemporary India which display the corruption, inequality, and the tragic results due to the way which capitalism has been and is unraveling within the country. While the gross domestic product (GDP) has grown since the implementation of a capitalist economy with an emphasis on privatization, the majority of this growth is happening to a very small group of people, mostly in mega corporations. Roy exposes the many difficulties which the overwhelming majority of the Indian population are faced to deal with everyday in the name of capitalism, which are often not realized by those both within and outside of India to uncover the grievances of capitalism in India and other countries across the globe.
The title of the book, Capitalism: A Ghost Story, is expressive of the political economic situation that is current in India in numerous ways. On way which the title reflects of the effect which capitalism is having on the population of India, is that the voices and rights of millions of people are being ignored and silenced. Roy presents multiple instances in which the capitalism has been put over the rights of the people who live in India. Often, when land is bought by a corporation, the people who have previously lived on that land are frequently promised reasonable compensation for their land, as well as promised to have new places to both live and work, (Roy, 2014, p. 17). These new uses of land are often considered to be public interest for all those in the area and India, but in reality are actually in the best interest of the corporation who purchased the land and plan to displace millions of people at a time for their benefit, (Roy, 2014, p. 17). While the gross domestic product (GDP) has increased, employment has not, in fact 60 percent of the workforce is self-employed and 90 percent of the labour force works in the unorganized sector, (Roy, 2014, p. 17). For example, in 2005,

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