Advances, Middlemen and Debt: The Political Economy of the Handloom Weaver How a system of credit and control quietly converted India's free craftsmen into bonded workers — and why the mahajan was both villain and necessity. Source: Report of the Fact-Finding Committee (Handloom & Mills), Govt. of India, 1942 Chapters IV, V & VII By Chuppala Nagesh Bhushan There is a particular moment in the career of any craftsman that determines everything that follows: the moment he runs out of money before his cloth is finished. For the handloom weaver of India, that moment arrived reliably, repeatedly, and with consequences that accumulated over a lifetime. He needed yarn before he could weave. He needed to eat while he wove. And he needed to wait — sometimes weeks, sometimes months — before his finished cloth could be sold. Without capital, he could not bridge these intervals alone. And so he borrowed. And so began the system that the 1942 Fact-Finding Committee on Handloom and Mill...