It was in early days of my professional career. I got a chance to conduct a session in an international conference. It was a great opportunity and I was desperate to make an impression. I worked hard day and night and prepared, according to me, a stellar speech. The day came and I was on the stage of a packed room. And, like a well wrought machine, I delivered the lecture, without heeding the blank faces amongst the audience. At the end of the session, which was concluded without a thunderous applause as I had expected, as the crowd dispersed and I was packing my stuff, an elderly gentleman, probably French, came up to me and politely said with a heavy accent, "Youngman! can I make a suggestion?" I encouraged him for the feedback. "From your talk, the only thing I learnt is that you know the subject very well. But, sadly, I couldn't understand anything. Next time, when you speak, see to it, that people understand what you say."
I felt this book was like my session of that day.
Reading this, I realized that Prof. Subramanian is very knowledgeable in his subject.
But, did I, as a layman reader with manageable knowledge of Economics yet keen on understanding the motif behind our Government's economic policies, gain a lot from this? Sadly, No.
Even if some of Prof. Subramanian's opinion, I don't think I particularly agree with, I still wished I could learn more.
Sadly, most of his chapters with lots of academic jargons, and without lucid explanations, are big let-down . He was conspicuously silent about the biggest economic incident during his tenure as the Chief Economic Advisor - demonetization (Come on - an 8 page chapter in a 350 odd page book where he is equivocal on the topic, is as good as saying nothing). Even on the other big reform during his times - GST - discussion lacked much additional substance that was not known to a keen reader of newspapers. I found the remaining chapters were boring. The first chapter, where he summarized his discussion with another economist Karthik Muralidharan, was written in I-said-he-said format, which decreases the readability. A plain transcript of the conversation could have been a better read. There were no insider's memoirs or explanations of government's policies. Rather, some chapters sounded like justification of his own actions and stands.
I had higher expectations from Prof Subramanian's book.