I am glad that Ferguson
agrees that India
would not have stood still even in the absence of British conquest. But then he
says: "Sen's counterfactual of 'Meiji India' lacks plausibility." "Meiji
India"?
But that surely is an idea of Ferguson's,
not mine. What I had, in fact, said was: "It is not easy to guess with any
confidence how the history of the subcontinent would have gone had the British
conquest not occurred. Would India
have moved, like Japan,
toward modernization in an increasingly globalizing world, or would it have
stayed resistant to change, like Afghanistan,
or hastened slowly, like Thailand?"
Even after overlooking that misattribution, it can, however,
be asked whether Ferguson should be so sure that India could have done little
of the kind that Japan did. His comparisons with "Qing China" and "Ottoman Turkey" are certainly worth considering,
but does he not overlook here the extent to which there were early industrial
and financial developments, as well as global affiliations, already in India? I commented
on this in my essay: "When the East India Company undertook the battle of
Plassey and defeated the Nawab of Bengal,
there were businessmen, traders, and other professionals from a number of different
European nations already in that very locality. Their primary involvement was
in exporting textiles and other industrial products from India, and the river
Ganges ... on which the East India Company had its settlement, also had (further
upstream) trading centers and settled communities from Portugal, the Netherlands,
France, Denmark, Prussia, and other European nations." Despite the early
history of industrial and financial developments in India,
we cannot, of course, be sure what would have happened there in the absence of
British conquest, but Ferguson's ridicule of
what he calls "Meiji India"
avoids the important issues involved.
As I argued in my essay, India got many important things
from Britain: many of those things, such as Parliamentary democracy, a free
media, legal recognition of individual rights, have flourished only after the
Raj ended. But it should be possible to see the distinction between what India got from
British contact and what was imposed on it by the strong arms of the Raj.