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How Britain stole $45 trillion from India

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Technically 50% of that is owed to Pakistan as most hard work is done in our part of country even in old map days
Lol

If that sum is true then the Brits owe each person in the subcontinent more than 25,000$ each.

Probably more to those including my family whose houses were pulled down as punishment for rebellion in the present KPK back in the late 1800s.
Modi is going to give 15 lacs to each Indian. Let's add this to the amount, this time coming via paypal from Britain
 
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India never existed as a political entity prior to British arrival and creation. It was a geographical expression like equator. After British created India, Indians become self aware and learned nationhood.

Italy, Germany are modern creations as nation states. you seem too hung up on history
 
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And how us poor Indians left them loot us.
People of pakistan, India, bangaldesh should study that and try to find their faults which led British to rule and loot us..
 
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The problem with India is that they lack identity and have identity crisis and somehow believe they are part of the western-world which is an awkward opinion to hold and self damning one.

The Hindus have been the only people to accept colonization with open arms which is also another weird act in itself nobody likes invaders or getting their freedoms taken away.

India suffers from severe identity crisis they don't know who they are and what they stand for and they don't see how the western-world views them.

If you don't know who you are and what you are then you will become a servant because you are then good for nothing. This is something India should learn from their bitter rivals Pakistan who have self-awareness and identity. They stand for something different then the western-world and view the western values inferior to their own
 
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The problem with India is that they lack identity and have identity crisis and somehow believe they are part of the western-world which is an awkward opinion to hold and self damning one.

The Hindus have been the only people to accept colonization with open arms which is also another weird act in itself nobody likes invaders or getting their freedoms taken away.

India suffers from severe identity crisis they don't know who they are and what they stand for and they don't see how the western-world views them.

If you don't know who you are and what you are then you will become a servant because you are then good for nothing. This is something India should learn from their bitter rivals Pakistan who have self-awareness and identity. They stand for something different then the western-world and view the western values inferior to their own

lol ... whatever issues India has
you cannot fix them looking at a country in bigger mess
 
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Stop wallow in self pity, bloody british empire stole from all commonwealth countries.
 
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There is a story that is commonly told in Britain that the colonisation of India - as horrible as it may have been - was not of any major economic benefit to Britain itself. If anything, the administration of India was a cost to Britain. So the fact that the empire was sustained for so long - the story goes - was a gesture of Britain's benevolence.

New research by the renowned economist Utsa Patnaik - just published by Columbia University Press - deals a crushing blow to this narrative. Drawing on nearly two centuries of detailed data on tax and trade, Patnaik calculated that Britain drained a total of nearly $45 trillion from India during the period 1765 to 1938.

It's a staggering sum. For perspective, $45 trillion is 17 times more than the total annual gross domestic product of the United Kingdomtoday.

How did this come about?

It happened through the trade system. Prior to the colonial period, Britain bought goods like textiles and rice from Indian producers and paid for them in the normal way - mostly with silver - as they did with any other country. But something changed in 1765, shortly after the East India Company took control of the subcontinent and established a monopoly over Indian trade.

Here's how it worked. The East India Company began collecting taxes in India, and then cleverly used a portion of those revenues (about a third) to fund the purchase of Indian goods for British use. In other words, instead of paying for Indian goods out of their own pocket, British traders acquired them for free, "buying" from peasants and weavers using money that had just been taken from them.

It was a scam - theft on a grand scale. Yet most Indians were unaware of what was going on because the agent who collected the taxes was not the same as the one who showed up to buy their goods. Had it been the same person, they surely would have smelled a rat.

Some of the stolen goods were consumed in Britain, and the rest were re-exported elsewhere. The re-export system allowed Britain to finance a flow of imports from Europe, including strategic materials like iron, tar and timber, which were essential to Britain's industrialisation. Indeed, the Industrial Revolution depended in large part on this systematic theft from India.

On top of this, the British were able to sell the stolen goods to other countries for much more than they "bought" them for in the first place, pocketing not only 100 percent of the original value of the goods but also the markup.

After the British Raj took over in 1858, colonisers added a special new twist to the tax-and-buy system. As the East India Company's monopoly broke down, Indian producers were allowed to export their goods directly to other countries. But Britain made sure that the payments for those goods nonetheless ended up in London.

How did this work? Basically, anyone who wanted to buy goods from India would do so using special Council Bills - a unique paper currency issued only by the British Crown. And the only way to get those bills was to buy them from London with gold or silver. So traders would pay London in gold to get the bills, and then use the bills to pay Indian producers. When Indians cashed the bills in at the local colonial office, they were "paid" in rupees out of tax revenues - money that had just been collected from them. So, once again, they were not in fact paid at all; they were defrauded.

Meanwhile, London ended up with all of the gold and silver that should have gone directly to the Indians in exchange for their exports.

This corrupt system meant that even while India was running an impressive trade surplus with the rest of the world - a surplus that lasted for three decades in the early 20th century - it showed up as a deficit in the national accounts because the real income from India's exports was appropriated in its entirety by Britain.

Some point to this fictional "deficit" as evidence that India was a liability to Britain. But exactly the opposite is true. Britain intercepted enormous quantities of income that rightly belonged to Indian producers. India was the goose that laid the golden egg. Meanwhile, the "deficit" meant that India had no option but to borrow from Britain to finance its imports. So the entire Indian population was forced into completely unnecessary debt to their colonial overlords, further cementing British control.

Britain used the windfall from this fraudulent system to fuel the engines of imperial violence - funding the invasion of China in the 1840s and the suppression of the Indian Rebellion in 1857. And this was on top of what the Crown took directly from Indian taxpayers to pay for its wars. As Patnaik points out, "the cost of all Britain's wars of conquest outside Indian borders were charged always wholly or mainly to Indian revenues."

And that's not all. Britain used this flow of tribute from India to finance the expansion of capitalism in Europe and regions of European settlement, like Canada and Australia. So not only the industrialisation of Britain but also the industrialisation of much of the Western world was facilitated by extraction from the colonies.

Patnaik identifies four distinct economic periods in colonial India from 1765 to 1938, calculates the extraction for each, and then compounds at a modest rate of interest (about 5 percent, which is lower than the market rate) from the middle of each period to the present. Adding it all up, she finds that the total drain amounts to $44.6 trillion. This figure is conservative, she says, and does not include the debts that Britain imposed on India during the Raj.

These are eye-watering sums. But the true costs of this drain cannot be calculated. If India had been able to invest its own tax revenues and foreign exchange earnings in development - as Japan did - there's no telling how history might have turned out differently. India could very well have become an economic powerhouse. Centuries of poverty and suffering could have been prevented.

All of this is a sobering antidote to the rosy narrative promoted by certain powerful voices in Britain. The conservative historian Niall Ferguson has claimed that British rule helped "develop" India. While he was prime minister, David Cameron asserted that British rule was a net help to India.

This narrative has found considerable traction in the popular imagination: according to a 2014 YouGov poll, 50 percent of people in Britain believe that colonialism was beneficial to the colonies.

Yet during the entire 200-year history of British rule in India, there was almost no increase in per capita income. In fact, during the last half of the 19th century - the heyday of British intervention - income in India collapsed by half. The average life expectancy of Indians dropped by a fifth from 1870 to 1920. Tens of millions died needlessly of policy-induced famine.

Britain didn't develop India. Quite the contrary - as Patnaik's work makes clear - India developed Britain.

What does this require of Britain today? An apology? Absolutely. Reparations? Perhaps - although there is not enough money in all of Britain to cover the sums that Patnaik identifies. In the meantime, we can start by setting the story straight. We need to recognise that Britain retained control of India not out of benevolence but for the sake of plunder and that Britain's industrial rise didn't emerge sui generis from the steam engine and strong institutions, as our schoolbooks would have it, but depended on violent theft from other lands and other peoples.

Editor's note: A previous version of this article erroneously had the beginning of the British Raj as 1847. The correct year is 1858.

The views expressed in this article are the author's own and do not necessarily reflect Al Jazeera's editorial stance.
https://www.aljazeera.com/indepth/opinion/britain-stole-45-trillion-india-181206124830851.html
 
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This has been posted here before.

Why is it that people of the subcontinent keeps on blaming others for their own failure and incompetency???
In this world only law is Might is Right.

Take example of China before PRC. China was more poorer than subcontinent. Had worse infrastructure than us. Had a very large population. Feudalism was more rampant there than here in subcontinent. Majority of the population was drug addicts. Warlords were rampant there. It was no different than present day Afghanistan.

Yet China overcame all that shit. And will now become the economic superpower. They didn't blame others. They worked hard and changed their fortune.

Every country pursues its own interests irrespective of whether that is good or bad. Whatever Britain did; those C*nts did it for the betterment of their country.
 
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Watch till the end :)

English can't be trusted. They are absolutely exploitative , meethi churi.
I can stress it enough.
 
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Stop wallow in self pity, bloody british empire stole from all commonwealth countries.

Indians like to complain. All Indians are more like American liberals who just complain and don’t work. Hoping that their complains will fill their stomach.
 
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