K. S. Krishnaswamy was a leading light in the  Reserve Bank of India  and the Planning Commission between the early 1950s and the late 1970s. He  retired as a deputy governor of the Reserve Bank.
   Armed  with a doctorate from the London School of Economics he began his career at a  time when the road was rocky for newly independent India. The author vividly captures  the optimism, commitment and desire to do well among policy makers in those  days. His ringside view of the pulls and pressures within the administration  and outside it, the hopes that sustained a majority in the bureaucracy and the  lasting ties he formed with many he came in contact with are compelling on  their own. Even more relevant is what he has to say about the political agendas  eroding the Reserve Bank’s autonomy and degrading democratic institutions since  the late 1960s.
  Windows of Opportunity however is not a political polemic; it is a  ruminative memoir by one who saw much happen, and not happen, at a time when  everything seemed possible and promising in India.