cover image: The Indian Review  Monthly Periodical Devoted to the Discussion of all Topics of Interest  November 1927

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The Indian Review Monthly Periodical Devoted to the Discussion of all Topics of Interest November 1927

1927

It was realised more clearly perhaps at the conclusion of the labours of the Commission than at the beginning that the attempt to regulate the ebb and flow of currency without regulatinthe THE continued attitude of obstruction that is noticeable in the India Office in the negotiations that are going on between the India Office and the Government of India over the future fortunes of the Reserve [...] To some extent the question of the constitution of a Central Bank was not specifically referred to the Commission but it had to deal primarily with the steps necessary for securing the stability of exchange of the Indian currency and the reg90'214 THE INDIAN REVIEW NOVEMBER 192'7 ] ebb and flow of credit and credit facilities or the attempt to retain the former function in the hands of a Go [...] The Joint Committee proposed that a prportion of the directorate should be elected by two electorates constituted of the Central and Provincial Legislatpres mainly on the ground that they would in practice be found the most convenient electorates for the representation of the tax-payers and of the agriculturists and for a proper distribution of the personnel of the directorate in the different [...] The MontagChelmsford Report in dealing with the quetion of the effect of the Reform scheme on the position of the Secretary of State and the control which Parliament exercised through him over the Government in India expressly referred to the altered position which lie was bound to occupy by reson of the definite accepted policy of the devolution of responsibility to representative popul [...] Other instances can be cited in the history of the Government of India in wlftch the Government of India acting without the support of the legislatwe and as a subordinate branch of the British Government has had rpeatedly to accept after vigorous protests the mandates of the India Office dictated by British commerical and financial interests to the prejudice of what they conceived to be the
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Segment Pages Author Actions
Frontmatter
i-viii G.A. Natesan view
The Indian Sandhurst Committee
705-713 Hirday Kunzru view
The Reserve Bank Bill
713-723 A. Aiyangar view
Irrigation and Electro-Chemical Industries
724-725 B. Rao view
Industrial Education in Travancore
726-728 N.K. Venkateswaran view
Beggar Relief
729-732 P.G. Naik view
A Solution of the Communal Problem
732-734 S. Husain view
Murugan—The Tiller
735-737 K. Chandrasekharan view
Index Numbers
737-739 B.R. Rao view
The Story of My Experiments with Truth
740-744 Gandhi view
World Events
745-746 A.J. Saunders view
The World of Books
747-748 unknown view
The Statutory Commission
749-752 unknown view
Topics from Periodicals
753-760 unknown view
Questions of Importance
761-761 unknown view
Utterances of the Day
762-762 unknown view
Indian States
763-763 unknown view
Indians Outside India
764-764 unknown view
Industrial and Commercial Section
765-765 unknown view
Agricultural Section
766-766 unknown view
Medical
767-767 unknown view
Science
768-768 unknown view
Literary
769-769 unknown view
Educational
770-770 unknown view
Legal
771-771 unknown view
Personal
772-772 unknown view
Political
773-773 unknown view
Sport
774-774 unknown view
General
775-775 unknown view
Diary of the Month
776-776 unknown view