We who have lived through the economic reforms are often unable to clamber onto the conceptual ledge that offers the elevation and distance to appreciate how our lives have changed in the last five years. But changed they have, in a huge variety of ways: from the things we eat to the careers our children aspire to, from the way we dispose of our incomes to perhaps even our fundamental value systems. Every day, for five years, pre-liberalisa-tion life has receded flickeringly in the distance like the lights of a lost city in the rearview mirror.