Marvels of India - The Shreni

Ancient Bharat's Marvel of Economic Organisation
Bharat's ancient guilds, known as Shreni, were sophisticated economic institutions of the pre-modern commercial world. Shrenis were the most vital institutions driving economic activity, functioning as legal entities composed of individuals engaged in similar trades, governed democratically through general assemblies and operating under the guiding principles of Shreni Dharma.
A Regulated, Standards-Driven Economy
They regulated manufacturing standards, trade, ethical codes, prices and the quality of crafts. Some of them became wealthy enough to act as custodians and bankers of religious and civic endowments. Kautilya's Arthashastra describes their regulation of trade, fixation of prices, supervision of weights and measures and even their judicial powers in commercial disputes, making them pivotal intermediaries between the state and the economy.
Pioneers of Corporate Banking
They also functioned as a bank, providing loans to its members. There is sufficient historical evidence to prove the existence of distinct Shreni banks owned and managed by the guild members.
A Sophisticated Multi-Functional Model
The research on Bharat's economic history shows that the Shreni model was not a primitive associative structure but an evolved institution providing specialised production, quality assurance, capital formation and social security, all undergirded by a profound ideology of corporate ethics.
