0% found this document useful (0 votes)
58 views24 pages

Is Planning Relevant in Indian Context Today?

Planning in India began with the formulation of five-year plans to industrialize and develop the nation after independence. The first five plans from 1951-1990 focused on industrialization, agriculture, employment, poverty alleviation, and self-reliance. More recent plans from 1992-2012 aimed to gradually open the economy, boost GDP growth to 10%, generate jobs, reduce poverty, and improve infrastructure, education, health, and living standards. However, economic crises and other challenges have made fully achieving plan targets difficult at times. The current 12th plan seeks 8% GDP growth, expanded infrastructure, renewable energy, and further progress on social indicators.

Uploaded by

sandeep
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as PPTX, PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
0% found this document useful (0 votes)
58 views24 pages

Is Planning Relevant in Indian Context Today?

Planning in India began with the formulation of five-year plans to industrialize and develop the nation after independence. The first five plans from 1951-1990 focused on industrialization, agriculture, employment, poverty alleviation, and self-reliance. More recent plans from 1992-2012 aimed to gradually open the economy, boost GDP growth to 10%, generate jobs, reduce poverty, and improve infrastructure, education, health, and living standards. However, economic crises and other challenges have made fully achieving plan targets difficult at times. The current 12th plan seeks 8% GDP growth, expanded infrastructure, renewable energy, and further progress on social indicators.

Uploaded by

sandeep
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as PPTX, PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
You are on page 1/ 24

Is Planning relevant in Indian

context today?
What is Plan?
Define Plan
• Spells out how the resources of a nation
should be put to use.
• Has some general goals as well as specific
objectives, which are to be achieved within a
specified period of time.
• Unrealistic to expect all the goals of a plan to
be given equal importance in all the plans.
History of Plans
• Borrowed the concept of five-year plans from the
former soviet union, the pioneer in national planning
• Jawaharlal Nehru was impressed with the
remarkable successes in industrialization achieved by
the USSR in their initial five year plans
• India has an extensive network setup to formulate 5-
year plans under the supervision of the planning
commission
Why to Plan
• After independence, was in dire conditions and needed
to start acting soon
• Some of the problems necessitated need for an
immediate plan:
– Vicious circle of poverty
– Foreign Trade
– Need for Rapid industrialization
– Population pressure
– Development of Natural resources
– Backward Population
– Capital Deficiency
– Market imperfections
Objectives of Planning
• Central objective - raise the standard of living of
the people
– To increase per capita and NI
– Higher level of employment
– Growth with social justice
– Increasing industrial output
– To remove bottlenecks in agriculture, manufacturing
industry
– Reduction of inequality in income
– Modernization
– Self- reliance
Stages in Planning
• Formulation- by planning commission. In this stage,
planning commission prepares draft that goes to
National development council. The council then
endorse the draft, and it is forwarded to Parliament.
• Adoption- By Parliament
• Approval- After the approval of Parliament only, the
draft becomes the planned document.
• Execution-By executive
• Supervision- By Officials
Pre-conditions of Planning
• Collection of Statistical Data- If at collection stage
data is incorrect or irrelevant or collected half
heartedly then economic planning won‘t be effective
at all.
• Economic Organization
• Government Setup
• Public Cooperation- Citizen must provide every
information so that government can formulate
policies for their betterment.
Characteristics of Planning
• Major economic decisions are determined by
a central authority, through the planning
commission.
• The government will have the powers of
implementation.
• The planners fix the targets for the sectors and
also decide how much investment must be
made in each sector to achieve the targets.
Planning Organization & its Divisions
• Prime minister is the chairman of the planning
commission
• The planning commission functions through several
divisions, each headed by a senior officer.
• Works under the overall guidance of the national
development council.
• Deputy chairman and the full time members of the
commission provide advice and guidance to the
subject divisions
Five year Plan overview
First plan (1951-1956)
• Plan primarily addressed the agrarian sector
• Including investments in dams and irrigation
• Total plan budget of 206.8 billion INR was allocated to seven broad areas:
o Irrigation and energy (27.2 percent)
o Agriculture and community development (17.4 percent)
o Transport and communications (24 percent)
o Industry (8.4 percent)
o Social services (16.64 percent)
o Land rehabilitation (4.1 percent), and
o Other (2.5 percent)
• Target 2.1% annual GDP growth, achieved 3.6 % ; per capita income up by 8%
• The Bhakra dam and Hirakud dam projects initiated
• Contracts signed to start 5 major steel plants
• UGC set up; plans to set up IITs initiated
Second plan (1956-1961)
• Focused on industry, especially heavy industry
• Development of the public sector
• Advocated huge imports, which led to emptying of funds
leading to foreign loans
• 5 steel mills established, coal production increased
• Initiated license raj
• Price level increased by 30%
Third plan (1961-1966)
• Stressed on agriculture and improving production of rice
• Panchayat elections were started and the states were given more
development responsibilities
• Higher stress on grass-root level education
• Increased focus on cement and fertilizer plants
• Sino-Indian War in 1962 exposed weaknesses in the economy and shifted the
focus towards defence
• War-time policies led to inflation and the priority was shifted to price
stabilisation
• Increased foreign aid needed to maintain development expenditures
eventually provided 28 percent of public development spending
Fourth plan (1969-1974)
• Nationalised 14 major Indian banks and the Green
Revolution in India advanced agriculture
• Spending on war efforts reduced industrial spending
• Poor monsoon and influx of refugees form Bangladesh
• Projected national income growth at 5.7 percent/ yr;
realized rate - 3.3 percent
• Focus on sorting short-term problems; No long term
focus in plan
Fifth plan (1974-1979)
• Stress on employment, poverty alleviation, and justice
• Also focused on self-reliance in agricultural production and defence
• Rapidly changing oil prices in 1973 forced series of revision during
formulation of plan
• Turmoil in world economic situation caused high inflation in prices
of energy, fertilizers and food sector
• Terminated in 1978 by the newly elected Morarji Desai govt
• Janta govt’s 5-yr plan was terminated in 1980 by next Congress
govt.
Sixth plan (1980-1985)
• Aimed for rapid industrial development, especially in the area
of information technology
• Marked the beginning of economic liberalization
• Price controls were eliminated and ration shops were closed -
led to an increase in food prices and an increased cost of living
• Family planning concept introduced – but not forcibly
• Planned GDP growth - 5.1 percent a year, achieved 5.4 percent
• Political constraints limited effectiveness of industrial growth
policies
Seventh plan (1985-1989)
• Establish growth in the areas of increasing economic productivity,
production of food grains, and generating employment opportunities
• Stress on improving the productivity level of industries by
upgradation of technology
• Long-term steady growth plan: focused on achieving the pre-
requisites of self-sustaining growth by the year 2000
• Economy recorded 6% growth rate against the targeted 5%
– 1989-91 was a period of political instability in India and hence no five
year plan was implemented
– In 1991, India faced a crisis in foreign exchange(Forex) reserves
Eighth plan (1992-1997)
• Gradual opening of the Indian economy to reduce the
high deficit and foreign debt
• Energy was given priority with 26.6% of the outlay
• Avg annual growth rate of 6.7% against the target 5.6%
• major objectives included containing population growth,
poverty reduction, employment generation, strengthening
the infrastructure, Institutional building, Human Resource
development, Involvement of Panchayat raj
Ninth Plan (1997 - 2002)
• Developed in the context of four important dimensions:
Quality of life, generation of productive employment,
regional balance and self-reliance
• 1998 Nuclear test and subsequent sanctions imposed
affected Ex-Im but developed domestic capabilities
• Services sector showed higher growth
• Growth rate was 5.35 per cent, against the target GDP
growth of 6.5 per cent
Tenth plan (2002-2007)
• Reduction of poverty ratio to 20% by 2007 and to 10% by 2012
• Providing gainful high quality employment to the addition to the labour
force over the tenth plan period
• Universal access to primary education by 2007
• Reduction in gender gaps in literacy and wage rates by atleast 50% by
2007
• Reduction in decadal rate of population growth between 2001 and 2011
to 16.2%
• Increase in literacy rate to 72% within the plan period and to 80% by
2012.
• Reduction of Infant Mortality Rate (IMR) to 45 per 1000 live births by
2007 and to 28 by 2012
• All villages to have sustained access to potable drinking water by 2012
• Achieved 7.7% growth rate against visualized 10%
Eleventh plan (2007-2012)
• Accelerate GDP growth from 8% to 10% and then
maintain at 10% in the 12th Plan in order to double per
capita income by 2016-17
• To reduce the poverty by 10% and generate 7cr new
employment opportunities
12th Five Year plan (2012-2014)
Economic Growth
Real GDP growth at 8%.
Agriculture growth at 4%.
Manufacturing growth at 10%.
Every state must attain higher growth rate than the rate achieved during 11th plan.
Poverty and Employment
Poverty rate to be reduced by 10% than the rate at the end of 11th plan.
5 Crore new work opportunities and skill certifications in non-farm sector.
Education
Mean years of schooling to increase to 7 years.
20 lakh seats for each age bracket in higher education.
End gender gap and social gap in school enrollment.
Health
Reduce : IMR to 25; MMR to 1. Increase Child Sex Ratio to 950.
Reduce Total Fertility Rate to 2.1
Reduce under nutrition of children in age group 0-3 to half of NFHS-3 levels.
Infrastructure
Investment in Infrastructure at 9% of GDP
Gross Irrigated Area 103 million hectare (from 90 million hectare)
Electricity to all villages; Reduce AT&C losses by 20%.
Connect Villages with All Weather Roads
National and State high ways to a minimum of 2 lane standard.
Complete Eastern and Western Dedicated Freight Corridors.
Rural Tele-Density to 70%.
40 Litres Per Capita Per Day Drinking Water to 50% of rural population; Nirmal Gram Status
to 50% of all Gram Panchayats.
Environment and Sustainability
Increase green cover by 1 million hectare every year.
30,000 MW renewable energy during Five Year Period.
Emission intensity of GDP to be reduced to 20-25% of 2005 levels by 2020.
Service Delivery
Banking Services to 90% of Indian Households.
Subsidies and Welfare related payment to be routed through Aadhar based Direct Cash
Transfer Scheme.

You might also like

pFad - Phonifier reborn

Pfad - The Proxy pFad of © 2024 Garber Painting. All rights reserved.

Note: This service is not intended for secure transactions such as banking, social media, email, or purchasing. Use at your own risk. We assume no liability whatsoever for broken pages.


Alternative Proxies:

Alternative Proxy

pFad Proxy

pFad v3 Proxy

pFad v4 Proxy