Modern economics rests on assumptions that are historically specific and philosophically contestable: that human beings are primarily rational utility-maximisers; that wealth accumulation is inherently beneficial; that market mechanisms, if left sufficiently free, will optimise social outcomes; and that economic growth is the appropriate measure of collective wellbeing. Ancient Indian economics — expressed most systematically in Kautilya's Arthashastra (4th century BCE), the Mahabharata's Shantiparva, the Dharmashastra tradition, and the concept of Purusartha — rested on fundamentally different assumptions that produced a fundamentally different economic philosophy. This article examines five core insights of ancient Indian economic thought that contemporary economics is, in some cases, only recently beginning to approximate: the inseparability of wealth (Artha) from right conduct (Dharma); the circular rather than linear model of prosperity; the concept of trusteeship (Dharmasvami) rather than ownership as the appropriate relationship to wealth; the explicitly articulated limits on accumulation (Mita); and the integration of ecological responsibility into economic calculation through the concept of the Panchamahabhuta. Drawing on Kautilya's Arthashastra, the Mahabharata's economic passages, Mahatma Gandhi's philosophy of trusteeship, and contemporary research on stakeholder capitalism and degrowth economics, the article argues that the ancient Indian economic framework offers not a nostalgic return to the past but a set of corrective principles that modern capitalism urgently requires.
Narayan Rout (Thu,) studied this question.
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