History, asked by kamilmalik9765, 1 year ago

The mundas revolted against - policies of british

Answers

Answered by indianbro48
4
The British expanded at the expense of the Indians, and nothing that they did actually benefited the Indian locals. Put it this way, when the British came to India, they weren't even the richest in Europe, but when they were in charge they were.

By the end of the British rule - literacy rates were at 12%. This meant that very few people had the skills required to thrive, and this meant that India had to spend more money on education and had to take more socialistic governments, which created more equality and allowed greater access to healthcare etc, before we could liberalise the economy, as if we had done earlier, there was a risk that many people would struggle, or that our economy would have become like the Chinese.
Similar questions