Documenti di Didattica
Documenti di Professioni
Documenti di Cultura
A
PROJECT REPORT
ON
ECONOMIC PLANNING
SUBMITTED TO:
PREFACE
Life is full of efforts and struggles and, success and failures. But the sincere efforts done in
right direction and at right time will give us fruits of success as a student of management
faculty we are expected with something more organized specific and effective efforts with
desire results towards the work entrusted to us.
Now a day’s cut throat competition prevails in each and every area of management. So with the
intension to teach the students how to merge the theoretical knowledge with the actual practice
give to the students of M.B.A. Hemchandracharya north Gujarat university has compulsory for
each group of student to prepare a report on some topic covered under circulation of
Hemchandracharya north Gujarat university. So as per the requirements we the student of
Nootan Sarva Vidhyalaya Kelvani Mandal Sanchalit MBA department have tried our level best
to prepare the project report and submitting to the college.
Our Report is on ECONOMIC PLANNING. First we have collected the information from
books and internet and from that information we made the Project report. We are lucky
because Nootan Sarva Vidhyalaya Kelvani Mandal Sanchalit MBA College has given us this
type of project report.
Date:
TABLE OF CONTENTS
CHAPTER PAGE NO.
• Preface…………………………………………………………………………...i
• Acknowledgement……………………………………………………………….ii
• Executive summary………………………………..…………………………....iii
• Objectives…………………………………………………………………...…...iv
• List of tables and graphs………………………………………………………..vi
1. Introduction………………………………………………………………..……01
1.1 What is Economic
Planning?.........................................................................03
1.2 Planning in India and impact
……………………………………………....04
1.3 Role of Planning on GDP………………………………..
………………….09
1.4 Role of Planning in Industry and Service………………………………..…
13
1.5 Role of Employment...………………………………………………...……
20
1.6 Role of
Education…………………………………………………………...25
1.7 Problems in backward
countries…………………………………………….28
1.8 Advantages and Disadvantages of Planning………………………………..
29
1.9 Characteristics………………………………………………………………
.35
1.10 Organization……………………………………………………………....3
7
1.11 Members of Planning Commission……………………………….………
39
1.12 Types of Planning…………………………………………………………
41
1.13 Deficiencies in
Planning…………………………………………………..43
1.14 Evolution………………………………………………….………….……
46
1.15 Planning in Developing Countries………………………………….….
….47
1.16 Objectives………………………………….………………………………
51
1.17 Growth……………………………………………………………………..
55
1.18 Functions………………………………………………………….
……….57
2. Divisions…………………………………………………………….…………….59
2.1 Financial resource division………………………………………..……..........59
2.2 Perspective Planning Division……………………………………………..….61
2.3 Project Appraisal Management Division……………………………………...63
2.4 Women & Child Development Division………………………………………65
3. Five Year Plans…………………………………………….……….…………….69
3.1 Macro Economic Indicators……………………………………………………82
3.2 Socio Economic Indicator…………………………………..………………….83
• Conclusion…………………………………………………………………………84
• Bibliography………………………………………………………………………85
LIST OF TABLES
Varti Institute of Management 3
ECONOMIC PLANNING 2009
1. Economy of India…………………………………………………………….08
2. Unemployment by the level of households…………………………………..22
3. Male and Female Population…………………………………………………24
4. Divisions……………………………………………………………………...38
5. Growth Rates…………………………………………………………………55
6. 10th Plan allocation…………………………………………………………...76
7. Scenarios of 11th Plan………………………………………………………...81
8. Macroeconomic Indicator……………………………………………………82
9. Socio-Economic Indicator…………………………………………………...83
LIST OF GRAPHS
NAMES: PAGE NO.
1.INTRODUCTION
According to Lionel Robbins, “strictly speaking1, all economic life involves planning…. To plan
is to act with a purpose, to choose and choice is the essence of economic activity”.
In the words of Barbara Wooten, “Planning may be defined as the conscious and deliberate
choice of economic priorities by some public authorities”.
Laissez faire policy is a luxury for modern governments. So they have economic plans. In the
developed nations of the world, they plan for economic stability. But in the underdeveloped
nations, they plan for economic growth and development.
The 20th century was an era of planning. Almost every country had some sort of planning. In
socialist countries, planning is almost a religion. Even in countries like the U.S.A. and the U.K.
with a capitalistic system, they have partial planning. The 19th century State was a Laissez faire
state. It followed a policy of non – intervention in economic affairs. But the modern State is a
Welfare State. The two World Wars, the Great Depression of 1930s and the success of planning
in former Soviet Russia have underlined the need for planning. Planning is a gift of former
Soviet Russia to the world. For, it was the first country to practice economic planning on a
national scale.
Many economists today agree that planning is an organized, conscious and continuous attempt to
select the basic available alternatives to achieve specific goals. Planning involves the
economizing of scarce resources.
Most of the underdeveloped countries of the world became independent only fifty or sixty years
back and most of them were poor at that time. So it became the main business of the
Governments of the newly emergent nations to provide food, clothing and shelter to their people.
For that, first of all, they had to increase their national income. Since most of them were
agricultural countries, they had to evolve some programmes for agricultural development. Not
only that, they had to industrialize their economies. And they had to provide more jobs to their
people. That means, they had to do something for expanding employment opportunities. Further,
as most of them were wedded to some kind of socialism, they had to reduce inequalities of
1
http://www.textbooksonline.tn.nic.in/Books/11/Econ-EM/Chapter_05.pdf
income and wealth. All these things, the poor countries attempted to do by means of economic
planning.
Another main reason for the emergence of planning in underdeveloped countries is the failure of
the market mechanism. The capitalist economy is basically a market economy and price
mechanism works through the market system. The price system is a basic institution of
capitalism. The allocation of resources and distribution of rewards are done through the price
system. All decisions of the businessmen, farmers, industrialists and so on are guided by the
profit motive. If the market is perfect, price system is good. But if there is monopoly and other
types of imperfect competition, the market system fails. And it calls for government intervention
by way of planning.
The dispute between planning and Laissez faire is essentially about efficiency. The case against
Laissez faire rests on the following grounds:
1. Under Laissez faire, income is not fairly distributed. As a consequence, less important and less
urgent goods are produced for the wealthy people while the poor lack basic goods like education,
health, housing, good food and ordinary comforts. Under such a situation, the State can control
economic activity by means of planning and reduce inequalities of income and wealth.
2. The market economy is a victim of trade cycles. And there will be alternating periods of
prosperity and depression. And during depression, there will be bad trade, falling prices and
mass unemployment. So there is need for state intervention. By means of proper planning, the
State can control trade cycles as they did in the case of former Soviet Russia.
During the latter half of the 20th century, planning was popular in many underdeveloped
countries, in addition to former Soviet Russia and Eastern European countries. It does not mean
that they believed in complete central planning. The central issue in planning is not whether there
shall be planning but what form it shall take. The debate, in fact, centered on whether the State
shall operate through the price system or by getting rid of it.
Economic development of India over the last five decades in unique in several ways. In an
innovative effort the founding fathers adopted the middle course of a mixed economy.
Assigning a pivotal role to public sector & economy planning. The new approach to socio-
economic growth was set within a framework of Parliamentary Democracy Guarantying
Universal Franchise.
The planning commissions prepare the blue print of the economic plans in consultation with the
state and in accordance with the guide line provided by the National Development Council
(NDC) which insists of the Prime Minister, Central Cabinet Ministers, Chief Ministers of the
States and Member of planning commission.
Successful execution of a plan presupposes co-operation between the central and states
governments.
The NDC was set up in August, 1952 with the following objectives.
To review the working of the National plan from time to time.
To consider important question of social and economic policies affecting national
development and to recommend measure for the achievement of the aims & target
of the national plan.
1.2 PLANNING IN INDIA AND IMPACT
The economy of India is the twelfth largest in the world by market exchange rates and the fourth
largest in the world by GDP, measured on a purchasing power parity (PPP) basis. The country
was under socialist-based policies for an entire generation from the 1950s until the 1980s. The
economy was characterized by extensive regulation, protectionism, and public ownership,
leading to pervasive corruption and slow growth. Since 1991, continuing economic liberalization
has moved the economy towards a market-based system.
Independence to 1991
Indian economic policy after independence was influenced by the colonial experience (which
was seen by Indian leaders as exploitative in nature) and by those leaders' exposure to Fabian
socialism. Policy tended towards protectionism, with a strong emphasis on import substitution,
industrialization, state intervention in labor and financial markets, a large public sector, business
regulation, and central planning. Five-Year Plans of India resembled central planning in the
Soviet Union. Steel, mining, machine tools, water, telecommunications, insurance, and electrical
plants, among other industries, were effectively nationalized in the mid-1950s. Elaborate
licences, regulations and the accompanying red tape, commonly referred to as Licence Raj, were
required to set up business in India between 1947 and 1990.
Jawaharlal Nehru, the first prime minister, along with the statistician Prasanta Chandra
Mahalanobis, carried on by Indira Gandhi formulated and oversaw economic policy. They
expected favorable outcomes from this strategy, because it involved both public and private
sectors and was based on direct and indirect state intervention, rather than the more extreme
Soviet-style central command system. The policy of concentrating simultaneously on capital- and
technology-intensive heavy industry and subsidizing manual, low-skill cottage industries was
criticized by economist Milton Friedman, who thought it would waste capital and labour, and
retard the development of small manufacturers.
India's low average growth rate from 1947–80 was derisively referred to as the Hindu rate of
growth, because of the unfavorable comparison with growth rates in other Asian countries,
especially the "East Asian Tigers".
The Rockefeller Foundation's research in high-yielding varieties of seeds, their introduction after
1965 and the increased use of fertilizers and irrigation are known collectively as the Green
Revolution, which provided the increase in production needed to make India self-sufficient in
food grains, thus improving agriculture in India. Famine in India, once accepted as inevitable,
has not returned since the introduction of Green Revolution crops and the reduction of cash-
crops that dominated India during the British Raj.
After 1991
In the late 80s, the government led by Rajiv Gandhi eased restrictions on capacity expansion for
incumbents, removed price controls and reduced corporate taxes. While this increased the rate of
growth, it also led to high fiscal deficits and a worsening current account. The collapse of the
Soviet Union, which was India's major trading partner, and the first Gulf War, which caused a
spike in oil prices, caused a major balance-of-payments crisis for India, which found itself facing
the prospect of defaulting on its loans. India asked for a $1.8 billion bailout loan from IMF,
which in return demanded reforms.
In response, Prime Minister Narasimha Rao along with his finance minister Manmohan Singh
initiated the economic liberalisation of 1991. The reforms did away with the Licence Raj
(investment, industrial and import licensing) and ended many public monopolies, allowing
automatic approval of foreign direct investment in many sectors. Since then, the overall direction
of liberalisation has remained the same, irrespective of the ruling party, although no party has
tried to take on powerful lobbies such as the trade unions and farmers, or contentious issues such
as reforming labour laws and reducing agricultural subsidies. Since 1990 India has emerged as
one of the fastest-growing economies in the developing world; during this period, the economy
has grown constantly, but with a few major setbacks. This has been accompanied by increases in
life expectancy, literacy rates and food security.
While the credit rating of India was hit by its nuclear tests in 1998, it has been raised to
investment level in 2007 by S&P and Moody's. In 2003, Goldman Sachs predicted that India's
GDP in current prices will overtake France and Italy by 2020, Germany, UK and Russia by 2025
and Japan by 2035. By 2035, it was projected to be the third largest economy of the world,
behind US and China.
Future predictions
In the revised 2007 figures, based on increased and sustaining growth, more inflows into foreign
direct investment, Goldman Sachs predicts that "from 2007 to 2020, India’s GDP per capita in
US$ terms will quadruple", and that the Indian economy will surpass the United States (in US$)
by 2043. Despite high growth rate, the report stated that India would continue to remain a low-
income country for several decades but can be a "motor for the world economy" if it fulfills its
growth potential. Goldman Sachs has outlined 10 things that it needs to do in order to achieve its
potential and grow 40 times by 2050. These are
1. improve governance
2. raise educational achievement
3. increase quality and quantity of universities
4. control inflation
5. introduce a credible fiscal policy
6. liberalize financial markets
7. increase trade with neighbours
8. increase agricultural productivity
9. improve infrastructure and
10. improve environmental quality.
AGRICULTURE:
India ranks second worldwide in farm output. Agriculture and allied sectors like forestry, logging
and fishing accounted for 16.6% of the GDP in 2007, employed 60% of the total workforce [7] and
despite a steady decline of its share in the GDP, is still the largest economic sector and plays a
significant role in the overall socio-economic development of India. Yields per unit area of all
crops have grown since 1950, due to the special emphasis placed on agriculture in the five-year
plans and steady improvements in irrigation, technology, application of modern agricultural
practices and provision of agricultural credit and subsidies since Green revolution in India.
However, international comparisons reveal that the average yield in India is generally 30% to
50% of the highest average yield in the world.
NATURAL RESOURCES:
India's total cultivable area is 1,269,219 km² (56.78% of total land area), which is decreasing due
to constant pressure from an ever growing population and increased urbanisation.India has a total
water surface area of 314,400 km² and receives an average annual rainfall of 1,100 mm.
Irrigation accounts for 92% of the water utilisation, and comprised 380 km² in 1974, and is
expected to rise to 1,050 km² by 2025, with the balance accounted for by industrial and domestic
consumers. India's inland water resources comprising rivers, canals, ponds and lakes and marine
resources comprising the east and west coasts of the Indian ocean and other gulfs and bays
provide employment to nearly 6 million people in the fisheries sector. In 2008, India had the
world's third largest fishing industry.
PARTICULARS
Currency 1 Indian Rupee (INR) (₨) = 100 Paise
Fiscal year April 1–March 31
Trade organisations WTO, SAFTA
GDP $3.319 trillion (PPP) (2008 est.)
GDP growth 7.3% (2008)
GDP per capita $2,900 (PPP)
GDP by sector agriculture: 17.2%, industry: 29.1%, services:
53.7% (2008 est.)
Population 27.5% (2008 est.)
below poverty line
Labour force 523.5 million (2008 est.)
Labour force agriculture: 60%, industry: 12%, services: 28%
by occupation (2003)
Unemployment 6.8% (2008 est.)
Main industries textiles, chemicals, food processing, steel,
transportation equipment, cement, mining,
petroleum, machinery, software
Exports $175.7 billion f.o.b (2008 est.)
Export goods petroleum products, textile goods, gems and
jewelry, engineering goods, chemicals, leather
manufactures
Main export partners US 15%, the People's Republic of China 8.7%,
UAE 8.7%, UK 4.4% (2007)
Imports $287.5 billion f.o.b. (2008 est.)
Import goods crude oil, machinery, gems, fertilizer, chemicals
Main import partners People's Republic of China 10.6%, US 7.8%,
Germany 4.4%, Singapore 4.4%
Public Debt $163.8 billion (2008)
Revenues $153.5 billion (2008 est.)
Expenses $205.3 billion (2008 est.)
Gross Domestic Product (GDP) is one of the several measures of the size of the economy. It is
defined as the market value of all final goods and services produced within the geographical
boundaries of a country during a given period of time. It does not include the value of
2
Main data source: CIA World Fact Book
intermediate goods and eliminates the possibility of double counting. GDP does not include
depreciation of capital stock. Depreciation deducted from GDP gives Net Domestic Product
(NDP).
India moved from the “Hindu Rate of Growth (HRG)” during the sixties and seventies to a
“Bharatriya Rate of Growth (BRG)” of 5.8 per cent during the eighties and nineties. A number
of eminent economists have asserted that the growth of the economy during the second half of
the nineties was propped up by pay commission related increases in the pay of
government/public servants and this artificial increase is unsustainable. Thus the real growth
rate of the economy is currently not 5.8 per cent but closer to 5 per cent. Other commentators
have gone even further to assert that services growth during the entire nineties, which has kept
average growth during the nineties at 5.8 per cent is unsustainable and that the underlying growth
rate is currently as low as 4.5 per cent. In this article I address these and other related questions
by looking a little deeper into the underlying sector growth rates, particularly the role of
services. Such assertions based on short-term movements, are shown to have little relevance to
long-term growth trends and prospects.
Because of the way in which GDP from administration is measured, it is quite legitimate to
question its role in long-term growth. The productive sectors of the economy meet the market
test in that the consumer is willing to pay for the goods or services purchased. Thus their value
is determined by market prices. As there is no market price for the administrative services
supplied by the government, their contribution to GDP is measured by wages etc. incurred in the
sector. Thus a rise in the real wages paid raises the value added as measured by the GDP
statistics. As long as these services are not produced at rates determined through competitive
bidding, there is no other way in which they can be valued. We can, however, get a better fix on
the sustainable rate of growth by excluding GDP from administration from our growth estimates.
During the eighties and nineties, average rate of growth of GDP (adj.) i.e. excluding the GDP
from administration, was only 0.04 per cent point lower than the growth of conventionally
measured GDP. This leaves the Bharatiya rate of growth unchanged at 5.8 per cent. This is not,
however, true of the Hindu rate of growth. During the sixties and seventies the average rate of
growth of GDP (adj) was 0.13 per cent point lower than for GDP as a whole, so that the HRG is
reduced from 3.4 per cent to 3.3 per cent. The picture is quite similar if we take the HRG as
applying to three decades including the fifties. In this case the growth rate of GDP (adj.) at 3.4
per cent is lower by 0.11 per cent point than the GDP growth rate of 3.5 per cent. Therefore, if
we exclude GDP from administration from our growth estimates, the rate of growth accelerated
from 3.4 per cent per annum (HRG) to 5.8 per cent per annum (BRG). Thus there is little factual
basis for the statement that the excessive rise in pay of government servants during the nineties
distorts the observed growth performance so much that the underlying rate of growth was since
1996-97 (or currently is) between 5 per cent and 5.5 per cent per annum.
As per broad globally accepted definition of goods and services, Agriculture & allied sectors,
mining & quarrying and manufacturing sectors produce goods while the output of all other
sectors constitutes services. The former are traditionally classified as tradable and the latter as
non-tradable, though this is rapidly changing. We can define GDP from Services (adj) by
excluding the GDP from administration. A comparison of the growth rate in this with the
unadjusted GDP completely contradicts the common assertion that much of services growth was
due to the government pay rise. On the contrary the rate of growth of services (adj) during the
last two decades was marginally (0.05 per cent point) higher than that for Services as a whole
(unadjusted).
In fact, the GDP from administration grew much faster during the sixties and seventies than it
grew during the eighties and nineties. Consequently, the growth of GDP services (adj.) is lower
than the growth of Services GDP by 0.2 per cent points during the former period and by 0.16 per
cent points during 1950-1980. With this background we can re-evaluate the contribution of
acceleration in the rate of growth of services to the acceleration in GDP growth between 1950-
1980 (HRG period) and 1980-2000 (BRG period). The contribution of acceleration in growth of
Services (adj) to overall GDP (adj) growth acceleration (2.4 per cent / 2.5 per cent) was even
higher than apparent from the conventional (unadjusted) numbers (2.1 per cent / 2.4 per cent).
It is, however, wrong to conclude, as some have done, that the nineties is the first instance in
which services have grown faster than other sectors of the economy. On the contrary in each of
the five decades since independence, GDP from Services has grown faster than GDP from the
tradable goods sectors of the economy. The gap averaged about 2.2 per cent points in the first
four decades but has expanded to 3.1 per cent points in the nineties. If we exclude GDP from
administration from our GDP calculations, the gap shows much greater fluctuations; It was 0.8
per cent point in the fifties, rose to 1.3 per cent point in sixties and seventies, fell back to 0.7 per
cent point in the eighties and then rose to a peak of 1.7 per cent point in the nineties. Though in
absolute terms the last is unprecedented it is worth noting that it is only 30 per cent higher than
the GDP (adj) growth rate for the nineties. The 1.3 per cent point gap in the seventies & sixties
was respectively 46 per cent & 34 per cent higher than GDP (adj) growth rate.
There are two broad reasons for the higher contribution of non-tradable services to GDP growth
during the nineties. The decline in protection for non-tradable sectors arising from the
elimination of QRs and reduction in tariffs for mining and manufacturing sectors. This has
tended to raise (lower) the relative price of non-tradable services (tradable goods). This coupled
with liberalisation of private entry into modern service sectors like communications and finance
(banking etc.) has resulted in faster growth of these services. The reduction of public monopoly
and more effective competition may also have increased overall productivity in these sectors.
Other traditional services like trade, hotels & restaurants and community services have also
grown at unprecedented rates, because of combination of rising incomes (restaurants),
globalisation (tourism/business travel, hotels) and fall in relative prices & increased variety of
consumer durables (trade) and a combination of government failure and democratic initiative
(community services). The measurement of community services, however, suffers from
valuation problems whenever it is provided free, whether by the government or by non-
governmental organisations. As “Other community services” include education and health
services, it is contaminated by the pay commission related wage increases for government
teachers and doctors. The effect on overall trends is, however, likely to be even less than for
administration.
In conclusion, we find that though the pay commission related pay increases may have distorted
estimates of GDP for a few years they do not affect the trend rate of growth of GDP. The
“Bharatiya rate of growth” remains at 5.8% per annum even if government administration is
excluded altogether. A similar adjustment of services also contradicts the assertion that this
factor is responsible for higher service growth. Further, services (adjusted) have always grown
faster than overall GDP growth, though their contribution has fluctuated. The contribution of
services during the nineties is high only in comparison to the eighties, when their contribution
was unusually low.
India has one of the world's fastest growing automobile industries and is global leader of auto
industry. Shown here is Tata Motors' Nano, world's least expensive car in production.
Industry accounts for 27.6% of the GDP and employ 17% of the total workforce. However, about
one-third of the industrial labour force is engaged in simple household manufacturing only. In
absolute terms, India is 16th in the world in terms of nominal factory output. India's small
industry makes up 5% of carbon dioxide emissions in the world.
Economic reforms brought foreign competition, led to privatization of certain public sector
industries, opened up sectors hitherto reserved for the public sector and led to an expansion in
the production of fast-moving consumer goods. Post-liberalization, the Indian private sector,
which was usually run by oligopolies of old family firms and required political connections to
prosper was faced with foreign competition, including the threat of cheaper Chinese imports. It
has since handled the change by squeezing costs, revamping management, focusing on designing
new products and relying on low labour costs and technology.
Textile manufacturing is the second largest source for employment after agriculture and accounts
for 26% of manufacturing output. Tirupur has gained universal recognition as the leading source
of hosiery, knitted garments, casual wear and sportswear. Dharavi slum in Mumbai has gained
fame for leather products. Tata Motors' Nano attempts to be the world's cheapest car.
India is fifteenth in services output. It provides employment to 23% of work force, and it is
growing fast, growth rate 7.5% in 1991–2000 up from 4.5% in 1951–80. It has the largest share
in the GDP, accounting for 55% in 2007 up from 15% in 1950.
accounted for only about 1% of the total GDP or 1/50th of the total services in 2001 However the
contribution of IT to GDP increased to 4.8 % in 2005-06 and is projected to increase to 7% of
GDP in 2008.
Most Indian shopping takes place in open markets and millions of independent grocery shops
called kirana. Organized retail such supermarkets accounts for just 4% of the market as of 2008.
Regulations prevent most foreign investment in retailing. Moreover, over thirty regulations such
as "signboard licences" and "anti-hoarding measures" may have to be complied before a store
can open doors. There are taxes for moving goods to states, from states, and even within states.
Tourism in India is relatively undeveloped, but growing at double digits. Some hospitals woo
medical tourism.
The Industry Division deals with the industrialisation issues including policies and programmes
relating to large and medium industries. It handles matters concerning formulation,
implementation, monitoring and evaluation of Plans and programmes for the larger and medium
industries for the Annual and Five Year Plans in respect of both the Central Sector and States
/UT's . The industry groups /industries being dealt with by the Division include engineering
industries like capital goods industry, steel, non-ferrous metals, ship building, fertilizers,
chemicals and petrochemicals, drugs and pharmaceuticals, textiles including jute, electronics,
paper and paper board, cement, sugar, leather, alcohol; other consumer industries, etc.
The division also deals with issues such as economic reforms, liberalisation, disinvestment,
technology policies, public sector, foreign direct investment, exports, productivity, consumer
protection, weights & measures, Patent/IPR/Trademark and similar other matters which have a
bearing on industrial development of the country. The matters relating to public sector
enterprises and industrial finance are also handled by the Division, Reference to the Planning
Commission in these areas in the form of Cabinet Notes, Parliament question and other
miscellaneous forms of communication are dealt with in the Division.
• To handle all matters relating to industrial policy and other associated policy issues
relating to industrial development including industrial incentives framework, investment
promotion, infrastructure development, foreign direct investment and technology transfer.
• To deal with policies relating to the public sector enterprises including public enterprise
reforms and privatization programmes as well as private sector development.
• To handle matters relating to industrial finance, financial institutions and capital markets
as also policies towards sick industries, industrial restructuring and industrial relations
policies.
• To study and analyse industrial statistics and undertake special studies relating to
industrial development and sickness.
• To undertake appraisal and evaluation of industrial projects in the public sector and to
examine physical progress of projects and schemes of public sector enterprises including
infrastructural development programmes and also review of financial performance of
these undertakings.
• To undertake appraisal and evaluation of industrial projects related to development of
export infrastructure and allied activities.
• To undertake appraisal of export promotion efforts and market access initiatives in the
wake of WTO regime.
• h) To implement policy issues relating to Disinvestment of PSUs. The Division provides
technical support to officers representing Planning Commission in core Group of
Secretaries on Disinvestment.
• To study and analyse industrial production trends and to make forecast of the demand
estimates and to conduct studies regarding technological and economic aspect of
industrial units, capital formation in the organized industrial sector and source of supply
of funds, problems of allocation of institutional finance, regional and backward area
development, etc.
• j) To undertake coordination and review of industrial development programmes with
related sectors like power and transport and to inter-act with various Ministries on these
and other related subjects.
• To formulate plans and programmes for development of various industrial sub-sectors
and industries, their financing and re-viewing the targets of capacity and production.
• To study scientific and technical advances and technology transfer issues having bearing
on the development in various industrial fields.
• To study factors inhibiting or accelerating growth in particular sectors for industries and
analyse the causes of various problems being faced by individual industries and industry
groups.
• Monitoring the programmes and progress of Centrally Sponsored Schemes relating to
industrial sector export promotion and allied activities.
• To inter-act with various Ministries, Industry Associations and other Governmental and
non-Governmental bodies on industrial matters and participate in the deliberations of
inter-agency committees and groups dealing with these subjects.
• To inter-act with the State Governments and Union Territories on industrial development
issues and to participate in the formulation of Annual and Five year development
programmes for the industrial sector in the State and Union Territory plans.
SERVICE:
The major items of work handled by the Division and activities undertaken include:
• The work relating to formulation of policies, Five Year Plans, Annual Plans, Mid-term Appraisal
of Plans pertaining to Telecommunications, Posts, Information Technology and Information &
Broadcasting sectors of the Economy.
• Examination of the Plan schemes / projects of the above mentioned sectors including the PSUs /
Organizations under them.
• (iii)Examination of various policy documents / papers and preparation of comments as required
by the Commission and Government from time to time.
• Participation in various Inter-Ministerial Committees and Commissions set up by the Government
for these sectors.
• Maintenance and updation of Planning Commission Website :
http: //planningcommission.nic.in
• Printing and distribution of 'Plan Documents' and other reports of the Planning Commission.
• Preparation and circulation of 'Daily News Digest'.
2. The details of organisations and the major programme areas with which the Division is
associated for various aspects of policy formulation, monitoring and evaluation include:
(A) Telecommunications
I. Department of Telecom
• Department of Telecommunications ( DOT )
• Telecom Commission
• Wireless Monitoring Organization ( WMO )
• Wireless Planning & Co-ordination Wing(WPC)
II. Regulatory Bodies
• Telecom Regulatory Authority of India (TRAI)
• Telecom Dispute Settlement and Appellate Tribunal (TDSAT)
III PSUs Providing Telecom Services
• Bharat Sanchar Nigam Ltd. ( BSNL )
• Mahanagar Telephone Nigam Ltd. ( MTNL )
IV Development and Manufacturing of Telecom Equipment
• Indian Telephone Industries (ITI)
• Telecom Engineering Centre (TEC)
• Centre for Development of Telematics (C-DOT)
(B) Postal Sector : Department of Posts
• Expansion of Postal Network
• Computerisation of post offices (installation of MPCMs), Accounts and Administrative offices
and Software Development.
• Computerisation and networking of Mail Offices
• Upgradation of Customer Care Centres
• Modernization & upgradation of VSAT system
• Modernization of operative / working systems (improving ergonomics)
• AMPCs
• Mechanization / upgradation of mail movement
• Modernization / upgradation of premium products
• Upgradation and promotion of philately
• Training
• Construction of buildings
• Modernization of circle stamp depots
• Computerization of international mail processing
• National data centre
• Research and development / studies / surveys
1.A quantitative scenario of the population, labour force and work force is the starting point of
the plan exercise on employment and unemployment. It also serves as a baseline, with reference
to which, the impact of the various plan initiatives, policies and programmes can be articulated in
a quantitative manner.
2. The Eleventh Five Year Plan is being evolved as an ‗Education Plan‘, and a novel feature of
the exercise on projections of labour force is the explicit treatment of the influence of the levels
of education on participation in labour force. The concerns of employment strategy for the
Eleventh Five Year Plan differ from the earlier Plans, in that now there is an explicit focus at the
quality of employment, and not merely at the aggregate unemployment. Of course, it also poses
the technical issue(s) as to what is the most appropriate measure of labour force and
employment. This issue has been examined at some length in this Report, and suggestions put
forward.
3. Besides the focus on growth in output, the strategy for creation of employment opportunities
should carefully look at the institutional environment that governs the exchange of labour for
wages received in the labour market. The issues pertaining to different types of employing
establishments – ranging from proprietory (i.e., the unorganized) to the corporate and the public
sector (organized), as also the nature of self employment have been examined in proposing the
strategy for creation of employment opportunities.
4. The Eleventh Plan aims to address many economic and social problems, such as inadequate
physical infrastructure, in the rural areas, in particular – roads, housing, drinking water,
sanitation, housing, and access to electricity; urban renewal; care of the child and adolescent
girls; children out of school; improving productivity and income from agriculture; and
unemployment among the rural labour households. The Plan therefore envisages a large step-up
in outlays for about 15 main flagship programmes. When implemented properly, these
programmes can yield substantial outcomes by way of creation of new employment
opportunities..
(Table 2)
3
PLANNING COMMISSION OF INDIA
(Graph 1)
The choice between the alternative basis of measurement Thus, for the purpose of making
estimates of labour force, employment and unemployment, for the entire economy, current daily
status, is a better measure, because:
(iii) in contrast with the usual status measures, it does not count ‗the
underemployed‘ as ‗the employed‘,
(ii) it is a better measure of gainful employment, and
(iii) it captures the quality of employment better than the UPSS basis, by exhibiting a higher
incidence of unemployment among the poor than the rich.
One of the purposes of making an assessment of the developments in employment situation is to
understand the response of employment to output at the aggregate level of a State, a Sector of
production (agriculture etc.), or the Nation as a whole. In linking the labour input with output,
one should use such a measure that captures better, the gainful employment. Here, again CDS is
the better measure to estimate output elasticity of employment. However, for the study of
employment / unemployment situation, for a specific category or class of persons (educated,
illiterate, women, minority, S.C./S.T., etc), the usual status measure should be used. And for the
purpose of a deeper study of factors underlying the social well being of the persons, the usual
status measure needs to be used in conjunction with the current daily and current weekly status
measures.
(Table 3)
The projections of population under the above assumptions have been made separately for the
urban and the rural areas and are presented in Tables A1a and A1b. Certain features of the
developments in population scenario that have implications for the location of incremental
employment and for the magnitude of new entrants to labour force are summarized in Table.
Rural to urban migration during the 11th Plan period is projected at 19.2 million, and at 18.2
million during the next 5 year period (Table 2.1)Urban share of the increase in population during
the 11th Plan period will be 46 percent, as compared to the base year (2007) share at 29 per cent.
A total revamping of the existing scheme of Vocational Education, keeping in view the existing
weakness and also to consider the special incentives that can be extended to SC/ST/OBCs/girls
and other Disadvantaged Groups, may be done at the earliest.
Planning is much more necessary and much more difficult to execute in backward than in
advanced countries. First of all, “planning requires a strong, competent and incorrupt
administration” (Arthur Lewis). But most of the economically backward nations have weak,
incompetent and corrupt administration. Further, they have democratic planning. So they cannot
do things in a quick manner as was done in former Soviet Russia. They have to go slow. And
agriculture is the main stay of their economies. Since agriculture depends upon natural factors
which are uncertain, there is a lot of uncertainty about their agricultural programmer. Over–
population and low capital formation are some other important problems of planning in
underdeveloped nations.
Supporters of planned economies cast them as a practical measure to ensure the production of
necessary goods—one which does not rely on the vagaries of free market(s).
Stability
Long-term infrastructure investment can be made without fear of a market downturn (or loss of
confidence) leading to abandonment of the project. This is especially important where returns are
risky (e.g. fusion reactor technology) or where the return is diffuse (e.g. immunization programs
or public education). Critics will point out that even though the economy will never go down, it
never goes up.
While a market economy maximizes wealth by evolution, a planned economy favors design.
While evolution tends to lead to a local maximum in aggregate wealth, design is in theory
capable of achieving a global maximum. For example, a planned city can be designed for
efficient transport, while organically grown cities tend to suffer from traffic congestion. Critics
would point out that planned cities will suffer from the same problems as unplanned cities,
unless reproduction and population growth is subject to strict control, as in a closed city.
Planned economies may be intended to serve collective rather than individual needs: under such
a system, rewards, whether wages or perquisites, are to be distributed according to the value that
the state ascribes to the service performed. A planned economy eliminates the individual profit
motives as the driving force of production and places it in the hands of the state planners to
determine what is the appropriate production of different sets of goods.
4
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Planned_economy
The government can harness land, labor, and capital to serve the economic objectives of the
state. Consumer demand can be restrained in favor of greater capital investment for economic
development in a desired pattern. The state can begin building a heavy industry at once in an
underdeveloped economy without waiting years for capital to accumulate through the expansion
of light industry, and without reliance on external financing. This is what happened in the Soviet
Union during the 1930s when the government forced the share of GNP dedicated to private
consumption from 80 percent to 50 percent. While there was a significant decline in individual
living standards, the state was able to meet some of its "economic objectives."
It could be seen as the government deciding: Who produces what, Where it is produced, How
much it costs, and Where it goes.
Taken as a whole, a centrally planned economy would attempt to substitute a number of firms
with a single firm for an entire economy. As such, the stability of a planned economy has
implications with the Theory of the firm. After all, most corporations are essentially 'centrally
planned economies', aside from some token intra-corporate pricing. That is, corporations are
essentially miniature centrally planned economies and seem to do just fine in a free market. As
pointed out by Kenneth Arrow and others, the existence of firms in free markets shows that there
is a need for firms in free markets; opponents of planned economies would simply argue that
there is no need for a sole firm for the entire economy.
Critics of planned economies argue that planners cannot detect consumer preferences, shortages,
and surpluses with sufficient accuracy and therefore cannot efficiently co-ordinate production (in
a market economy, a free price system is intended to serve this purpose). For example, during
certain periods in the history of the Soviet Union, shortages were so common that one could wait
hours in a queue to buy basic consumer products such as shoes or bread. [15] These shortages were
5
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Planned_economy
due in part to the central planners deciding, for example, that making tractors was more
important than making shoes at that time, or because the commands were not given to supply the
shoe factory with the right amount of leather, or because the central planners had not given the
shoe factories the incentive to produce the required quantity of shoes of the required quality. This
difficulty was first noted by economist Ludwig von Mises, who called it the "economic
calculation problem". Economist János Kornai developed this into a shortage economy theory
(advocates could claim that shortages were not primarily caused by lack of supply).
There is also the problem of surpluses. Surpluses indicate a waste of labor and materials that
could have been applied to more pressing needs of society. Critics of central planning say that a
market economy prevents long-term surpluses because the operation of supply and demand
causes the price to sink when supply begins exceeding demand, indicating to producers to stop
production or face losses. This frees resources to be applied to satisfy short-term shortages of
other commodities, as determined by their rising prices as demand begins exceeding supply. It is
argued that this "invisible hand" prevents long-term shortages and surpluses and allows
maximum efficiency in satisfying the wants of consumers. Critics argue that since in a planned
economy prices are not allowed to float freely, there is no accurate mechanism to determine what
is being produced in unnecessarily large amounts and what is being produced in insufficient
amounts. They argue that efficiency is best achieved through a market economy where individual
producers each make their own production decisions based on their own profit motive.
Cannot determine and prioritize social goods better than the market can
Some who oppose comprehensive planned economies argue that some central planning is
justified. In particular, it is possible to create unprofitable but socially useful goods within the
context of a market economy. For example, one could produce a new drug by having the
government collect taxes and then spend the money for the social good. On the other hand,
opponents of such central planning say that "absent the data about priorities conveyed through
price signals created by freely acting individuals, [it is questionable] whether determinations
about what is socially important can even be made at all." Opponents do not dispute that
something useful can be produced if money is expropriated from private businesses and
individuals, but their complaint is that "it’s far from certain that those monies could not have
been spent better" if individuals were allowed to spend and invest as they wished according to
their own wants.
We can see things of value being produced by the state taxing and using those funds to undertake
projects which are believed to be social goods, but we cannot see what social goods have not
been produced due to wealth taken out of the hands of those who would have invested and spent
their money in other ways according to their own goals. These opponents of central planning
argue that the only way to determine what society actually wants is by allowing private
enterprise to use their resources in competing to meet the needs of consumers, rather those taking
resources away and allowing government to direct investment without responding to market
signals. According to Tibor R. Machan, "Without a market in which allocations can be made in
obedience to the law of supply and demand, it is difficult or impossible to funnel resources with
respect to actual human preferences and goals."
Another criticism some make of central planning is that it is less likely to promote innovation
than a free market economy. In the latter, inventors can reap huge benefits by patenting new
technology, so there is arguably much more incentive to innovate. Conversely a planned
economy can deliver vast national resources into research and development if it gets the idea that
a particular field is critical to its interests, usually military technology. The Soviet Union's ability
to maintain fierce competition versus the United States during the space race and Cold War,
despite its smaller economy, is an example of this.
The top down structure of a centrally planned economy dictates a hegemonic operating culture -
whereas in a free market economy several models of operating can compete simultaneously in a
manner similar to organisms in an ecosystem.
Critics also hold that certain types of command economies may require a state which intervenes
highly in people's personal lives. For example, if the state directs all employment then one's
career options may be more limited. If goods are allocated by the state rather than by a market
economy, citizens cannot, for example, move to another location without state permission
because they would not be able to acquire food or housing in the new location, as the necessary
resources were not preplanned.
Likewise, because of the state's controls over an individual's personal choices, critics contend
that central planning intrinsically results in a top-down, dictatorial state where politicians and
bureaucrats use the state to achieve their own ends, which are in turn described as the "social"
objectives of the state. In essence, critics contend that a planned economy has nothing to do with
the preferences of the individuals that comprise a society, but rather the abstract goals of some
group.
This criticism is supported by Rummel's Law which states that the less freedom a people have,
the more likely their rulers are to murder them. R. J. Rummel's top three examples of 20th
century "Megamurders" were Soviet Russia, People's Republic of China and Nazi Germany, all
planned economies with limited individual freedom.
The Road to Serfdom is a book written by Friedrich Hayek and critical of collectivism,
presenting the argument that a central planned economy must ultimately result in tyranny. An
idea similar to this is the idea of the iron cage presented even earlier by Max Weber in The
Protestant Ethic and the Spirit of Capitalism.
The Black Book of Communism claims that Communist regimes are responsible for a greater
number of deaths than any other political ideal or movement.
Central planning is also criticized by elements of the radical left. Libertarian socialist economist
Robin Hahnel notes that even if central planning overcame its inherent inhibitions of incentives
and innovation it would nevertheless be unable to maximize economic democracy and self-
management, which he believes are concepts that are more intellectually coherent, consistent and
just than mainstream notions of economic freedom. As Hahnel explains, “Combined with a more
democratic political system, and redone to closer approximate a best case version, centrally
planned economies no doubt would have performed better. But they could never have delivered
economic self-management, they would always have been slow to innovate as apathy and
frustration took their inevitable toll, and they would always have been susceptible to growing
inequities and inefficiencies as the effects of differential economic power grew. Under central
planning neither planners, managers, nor workers had incentives to promote the social economic
interest. Nor did impending markets for final goods to the planning system enfranchise
consumers in meaningful ways. But central planning would have been incompatible with
economic democracy even if it had overcome its information and incentive liabilities. And the
truth is that it survived as long as it did only because it was propped up by unprecedented
totalitarian political power.”
Corruption
In a planned economy, major economic decisions such as what and how much is to be
produced, when and where it is to be produced and to whom it is to be allocated will be
determined by a central authority such as the State, through the Planning Commission.
The Government will have the powers of implementation. Before the Plan is drawn up, a
detailed survey of all available resources – physical resources, financial resources and human
resources – has to be made. For example, in the former Soviet Russia, after the Revolution in
1917, there was War Communism between 1918–1921. And there was New Economic Policy
(NEP) from 1921 to 1924. And from 1924, the Government made a detailed survey of all
available resources and only in 1928, it implemented its First Five Year Plan. After the survey of
resources, the objectives of planning will be determined. For example, one of the long term
objectives of Soviet Planning was that Soviet Russia should catch up with the production levels
of the leading capitalist nation of the world, namely U.S.A., in steel, coal and electricity.
Keeping in mind, the objectives of the Five Year Plan, the physical targets will be fixed. And
ways and means of mobilizing financial resources will be explored. The Plan will also spell out
the details in which the fruits of planning will be distributed in a fair and just manner.
The nature of planning is determined by the type of economic system – capitalism, socialism,
mixed economy - in which it is practiced. There will be partial planning in a capitalist economy,
(e.g., U.K.) but a socialist economy is a totally planned economy (e.g., Former Soviet Russia). In
a mixed economy like India, both public sector and private sector play important roles in
economic planning.
Usually, the period of a Plan is five years. The Plan has to be drawn in advance. It is done by the
Planning Commission in India. A plan will be of a definite size and it will fix the targets for the
Plan period and it will also indicate the ways by which the financial resources are to be
mobilized for the Plan.
The first step in drawing up a Plan is to determine a growth target for an economy over the Plan
period. The planners then divide the economy into a number of sectors such as agriculture,
industry and service sector. The planners will fix the physical targets for the sectors and also
decide how much investment must be made in each sector to achieve the targets. Then they
will decide the right type of investment projects and production techniques. As the UDCs are
poor, labour-intensive techniques will expand employment opportunities. But some heavy
industries like steel have to be capital – intensive. The success or failure of a Plan depends upon
the choices that are made.
1.10 ORGANIZATION
The Prime Minister is the Chairman of the Planning Commission, which works under the overall
guidance of the National Development Council. The Deputy Chairman and the full time
Members of the Commission, as a composite body, provide advice and guidance to the subject
Divisions for the formulation of Five Year Plans, Annual Plans, State Plans, Monitoring Plan
Programmes, Projects and Schemes.
The Planning Commission functions through several Divisions, each headed by a Senior Officer.
The Set up is:
• Chairman
• Sh. Montek Singh Ahluwalia, Dy. Chairman
• Shri V. Narayanasamy, Minister of State
• Members
o Dr. Kirit Parikh
o Prof. Abhijit Sen
o Dr. V.L. Chopra
o Dr. Bhalchandra Mungekar
o Dr.(Ms.) Syeda Hameed
o Shri B.N. Yugandhar
o Shri Anwar-ul-Hoda
o Shri B. K. Chaturvedi
• Dr. Subas Pani, Secretary
• Senior Officials
• Grievance Officers
• Induction Material - PDF | ZIP(MS Word)
• Organisational Chart (PDF)
Divisions (Table 4)
1. Centralized Planning : In a socialist economy (eg. Former Soviet Russia), there was
centralized planning; it was planning by direction. In a socialist state, most of the means of
production are owned by the State. All basic economic decisions such as whether priority is to be
given for industrialization or for development of agriculture ; if it is decided to give importance
to industrialization, whether to give importance to basic and heavy industries or for consumer
goods industries will be made by the central authority.
Rolling Plan : Unlike the Five Year Plan with fixed targets, in the case of the rolling plan, at the
end of each year, targets will be fixed by adding one more year to the Plan. That is, without fixed
targets for all the five years, depending upon the performance of the Plan in the current year,
targets will be fixed for one more year. Like this, it will go on a continuous basis. That is the idea
behind the rolling plan.
A great advantage of centralized planning is that plans can be implemented with great speed and
targets and goals can be achieved. For example, by means of planning, former Soviet Russia
transformed its economy, which was predominantly agricultural into a predominantly industrial
nation, within a short span of 12 years. But a demerit of centralized planning is that as the State
enjoys a considerable degree of monopoly, in the absence of competition, it is rather difficult to
test the productive efficiency of state owned units. Under planning by inducement (democratic
planning), though there is a good deal of freedom for people, because of the procedures and
delays associated with the democratic process and because of Parliamentary democracy, there
will be a lot of delay in the implementation of programmes and economic growth will be slow.
1. Expert s now realize that a minimum standard of living have been ensured for all if
resources had been thought of, not in money term, but in term of people. Economic
development should not have been equated with increasing the supply of good but with
providing opportunity for work to the entire population and raising their productivity by
better knowledge and better equipment.
3. So long emphasis was on financial rather than physical targets. There should be a change
in the way in which target are fixed by the planning commission. In spite of the known
ambiguities associated with financial targets, emphasis still continues to be laid on
financial rather than physical target. It is true that physical targets are mentioned quite
prominently but there is no clear indication of the link between physical and financial
targets
4. After 50 years of planning, the condition created and sustained by the government policy
has resulted in aggravating inequality in the distribution of wealth. Millions of people
specially I rural areas continue to languish on the border line of abject poverty if not of
actual starvation. The planning has not touched even to the fate of large part of
population. Thus there is ample justification for the general feeling that the technique of
planning in India dose not deserve the price that has been paid for it.
5. So far as the conceptual or logical content of planning is concerned there is not much
wrong; the wrong lie is its in implementation, its lack of cohesion with social factors and
the impediments imposed by political, social, administrative and cultural forces rather
then strictly economic factors. What is needed is not an exclusive new approach to
replace the old but a reorientation and modification of the old with some additions here
and there.
6. One of the objectives of the planning is economic self-reliance means economy should be
attaining varies type of securities such as food security, energy security, environment
security, social political security though in various field we have made much progress,
but we have not been able to bridge the resources and a large part of the resources come
from foreign sources. The private sector as well as public sector has failed to generate
adequate resources. We have also failed to create sophisticated equipment and material.
7. The situation is respect of distributive justice has not been ensured in various sector of
the economy. The tenancy reforms have not been complete and insecurity of tenure has
been much more pronounced. The nature of infrastructure has helped mostly to reach
peasantry in the industrial sector also big became bigger. The planning has increased the
inequalities only. The industrial licensing was neither efficient nor egalitarian.
8. The economy has faced an-uninterrupted inflationary process. The inflation is varied
from 5 to 10 % per annum. It has been eroded purchasing power of the people-increased
project cost, and reduced the competitiveness of the economy. It has also affected rates of
saving and real investment. Common people have become hard hit at such inflation.
9. The resources allocation pattern does not show any consistent trend. Sometimes it was on
industry or sometimes it was on agriculture, after the 1st five year plan agriculture got
prime importance again relatively in 10th plan. Allocation on power and transport were
satisfactory but various aspects of social sector has been neglected. Social sectors have
got relative attention from 8th plan onwards.
10. The growth rate in the plan period in most cases has not been satisfactory. Accepting the
year of 8th and 9th plan growth rate was not consistent. Moreover, growth rates have not
helped to remove poverty and unemployment. The product mix that has been generated
has not helped poor people. Balance of payment situation has not been satisfactory. We
had always a deficit in the BOP. Another major area of set back is the inability to
generate adequate revenue, which has given rise to resource gap and deficit financing.
There was generation of black money and corruption and failure to tax black money
income.
1.14 EVOLUTION
The National Planning Commission was set up in India in 1950. A major function of the
Planning Commission was to “formulate a plan for the most effective and balanced utilization of
the country’s resources”. The Planning Commission formulated the First Five Year Plan for the
period (1951–56). Since then, we completed nine Five Year Plans and we are now in the midst of
Eleventh Five Year Plan (2007-12).
Since the end of World War II, it has become an accepted practice among the governments of the
developing countries to publish their “development plans.” These are medium-term plans,
usually for a five-year period. The aim is to select a period long enough to include projects
spanning a number of budget years but not so long as to delay periodic assessment of the
development effort stretching over a series of plans. The development plan attempts to promote
economic development in four main ways: (1) by assessing the current state of the economy and
providing information about it; (2) by increasing the overall rate of investment; (3) by carrying
out special types of investment designed to break bottlenecks in production in important sectors
of the economy; and (4) by trying to improve the coordination between different parts of the
economy. Of these, the first and fourth are perhaps the most important and the least understood
function of economic planning.
The other two functions of planning cannot be efficiently carried out without ample and reliable
information, nor without effective economic coordination between the different government
departments and agencies within the public sector and the private sector. In most developing
countries, information about the economy is scarce, and planning has provided the impetus to
acquire and analyze the necessary data in order to provide a better understanding of the
functioning of the economy. In order to improve coordination it is necessary to spread reliable
economic information to indicate the future course of the government’s economic intentions and
activities so that the people concerned, both in the public and the private sectors, may make
appropriate plans of their own to bring them in line with the government’s plan. In fact, this may
be regarded as the main reason for publishing development plans, although this point is not
always clearly appreciated by the governments that issue them. he newly independent countries,
just starting to plan their economies, usually begin with a simple type of development plan. In
most cases this is merely an ad hoc list of individually conceived social and economic projects
that the various government departments have submitted for the plan. So long as the projects are
well selected (say, to break some obvious bottlenecks in production) and are well designed in a
technical sense, such a simple plan may be quite serviceable. But it tends to suffer from a
number of weaknesses arising from insufficient coordination. (1) Since the projects are drawn up
on a piecemeal basis in separate government departments, there is usually no systematic attempt
to compare the relative costs and benefits of the plans proposed by the different departments on a
uniform basis. As a consequence, the collection of projects included in the plan may or may not
represent the most productive pattern of investing.
(2) A lack of coordination frequently leads to wasteful duplication and a failure to take
advantage of complementary relationships between individual projects. (3) A simple listing of
the projects does not provide a clear-cut system of priorities in their implementation. Typically,
the projects that are relatively easy to implement are pushed far ahead of others that, although
requiring a longer time to prepare and implement, may have the potential to contribute more
directly to the expansion of national output and government revenue. This can have serious
budgetary consequences when the projects that are easier to implement generally happen to be in
the field of social welfare, education, and health and—although they may indirectly contribute to
economic development in the longer run—entail a significant and ever-increasing stream of
recurring government expenditure after their completion.
An obvious way of remedying these defects is to formulate a more systematic plan of the public
investment program as an integrated whole. In order to do this, it is necessary to begin by
making a careful estimate of the total amount and time pattern of the financial resources that the
government expects to receive during the plan period from domestic sources and from external
loans and aid. Next, it is necessary to make realistic estimates of the costs and benefits of the
alternative investment projects within the public sector as a whole so as to select the most
productive combination of projects, taking into account significant complementary relationships
between the different projects. In selecting the best combination of projects to be included in the
plan, it is necessary to pay special attention to the time pattern of costs and benefits. A poor
country, with limited sources of government revenue, would have to discount future benefits
heavily relative to the more immediate benefits and would have to give priority to the type of
project with quicker returns in the form of expansion in output and tax yields over the type of
project that may promise higher rates of return, but only in the more distant future.
The problems of carrying out an integrated public investment program serve to emphasize the
crucial role of the annual budget in development planning. At the aggregate level, with a given
amount of external aid, the stream of the total investable funds available to the government
during the plan period depends on its ability to raise revenue (and borrow from domestic
sources) and, equally important, to control it’s no development, or “consumption,” expenditure
year by year during the plan period. At the individual project level, the fact that a project requires
a number of budget years to complete does not dispense with the need for annual budgetary
controls to ensure that it is being implemented in stages, according to the timetable as originally
planned. Indeed, it is only through the discipline of annual budgetary controls that a medium-
term development plan is likely to be kept nearer the course as originally planned.
Few developing countries have submitted themselves to the budgetary discipline necessary for
implementing an integrated public investment program. This has not deterred them, however,
from jumping from a simple type of development plan to “comprehensive” economic planning,
embracing both the public and the private sectors and regulating both the aggregate level of
economic activity and its detailed composition. The drive toward comprehensive planning arises
from various causes: from a distrust of the automatic working of the market mechanism and its
ability to promote economic development; from a desire to assert national economic
independence by government control of foreign trade and investment; and from the theories of
economic development, fashionable during the 1950s, that emphasize the need for a “big push”
to overcome technical indivisibilities and the need for a simultaneous setting up of a number of
mutually supporting projects to enjoy the benefits of technical complementary. The economic
development plans published by the developing countries in the 1960s were fairly elaborate. The
trend to “quantitative” planning encouraged the use of elaborate statistical estimates and
projections even when the primary statistical sources on which these computations were based
were often unreliable or conjectural. Advanced mathematical techniques were also increasingly
employed.
Basically, there are three parts to such a development plan: (1) the target figures for increase in
per capita income and consumption to be attained at the end of the plan (with estimated figures
for the intermediate years during the plan); (2) estimates of the quantities of various resources,
such as capital, manpower, and foreign exchange needed to implement the target figures
(including the time profile of the rate at which these resources will be required during the plan);
and (3) parallel but independent estimates and projections of the quantities and the time pattern
of these resources expected to be available both to the government and to the economy as a
whole during the plan period.
The elaborate planning documents issued by some developing countries may be described as
attempts to quantify as far as possible the information required under the three heads and to test
the formal consistency of the plan. This essentially consists in asking (a) whether the total
amount of available resources is sufficient to meet the total requirements of resources as set by
the target figures, and (b) whether the allocation of resources planned for different sectors is
consistent with the detailed target figures for the increased output of different goods and services
required for consumption and investment. When the resources required by some industries are
intermediate goods (the output of other industries), input–output tables are frequently used to
check whether the outputs of different industries are sufficient to supply not only the target
figures for final use in the form of consumption and investment but also the “indirect use”
required by other industries. The more advanced planning models using programming techniques
in an attempt to solve the further question (c) whether the planned pattern of allocating resources
is the most efficient; i.e., whether it minimizes the resources needed to meet the target figures as
compared with other patterns.
1.16 OBJECTIVES
The central objective of planning in India is to raise the standard of living of the people. Five
Year Plans aim at increasing output. At the same time, they aim at reducing inequalities of
income and wealth and providing equal opportunities for all. Growth with social justice is basic
goal. Estimation of poverty line and incidence of poverty for which the Planning Commission is
the nodal agency in the Government of India.
It also did not set a target date “ by when any able bodies person who wants to work and make an
honest living can be assured of a job that would offer him at least a minimum subsistence.” This
explains why unemployment has not decreased over the years. However, the planning
commission stated in the eighth plan document that employment is to be treated as a direct focal
point of policy. The government at the center, it seems, does not share this perception of the
planning commission.
The approach of the planning commission till recently has been of not seeing the question of
employment generation separately from investment programs. It was believed that as investment
increased employment would also grow. In the third plan document, while discussing the
objectives of economic planning the Planning Commission had argued that as national grows in
response to increased investment and development outlay. The demand for labour rises and
employment expands.
as ‘Mahalanobis strategy’. In this strategy, emphasis was laid on rapid industrialization with
priority for basic and heavy industries.
The Planning Commission had spelt out its approach in respect if income inequalities in the
Fourth Plan. In its opinion, fiscal measures at best can reduce disposable income at the top and
thus their importance for eliminating income inequalities is limited. It stressed the need for
raising the living standards of the poor by accelerating the pace of growth on the assumption that
the gains of development will percolate downward. The plan document simply hoped that fiscal
policy, industrial licensing, monopoly control measured and additional employment
opportunities to be created during the plan period should be able to reduce disparities in income
distribution. The seventh plan did not make even a passing reference to these objectives.
Modernisation
Indian planners have always recognized the role of science and technology in the country’s
development. However, until the sixth five year plan modernization was never on the agenda of
any plan. In the sixth plan for the first time the objective of modernization was explicitly
mentioned. The plan document stated, “the term modernization connotes a variety of structural
and institutional changes in the framework of economic activity.” It thus implied a “shift in the
sectoral composition of production diversification of activities, an advancement of technology
and institutional innovations” so as to transform “a feudal and colonial economy into a modern
and independent economy”. If one accepts this concept of modernization, then this is also to be
admitted during the whole of the planning period, India did make advances on the modernization
path though the progress might not have been spectacular.
Over the five decades of planning, the composition of national income has change steadily. The
share of manufacturing, mining, construction and productive infrastructure has increase from
above 20% in early fifties to about 30% in the late 1980’s. In the industrial sector considerable
success has been achieved from the point of view of diversification. Today India’s capabilities in
technical know-how are far greater than those in the early 1950s. Even in the institutional
framework this country’s achievements are not small. For example, setting up of development
banks for industry and agriculture, innovation of Regional Rural Banks and extension of co-
operative credit to the remotest interiors of the country have radically changed the institutional
framework of credit.
Self- reliance
About five decades ago on the eve of the first plan, India was dependent on foreign countries at
least in three respects. First, despite the fact that Indian economy was essentially agrarian, the
output of food grains was not adequate and the country imported big quantities of food grains
from the USA. And some other countries. Second on account of virtual non existence of basic
industries, transport equipment machine tools, heavy engineering goods, electrical plant and
machines and many other capital goods had to be acquired from developed countries. Third,
saving rate being very low, foreign aid had to be obtained in order to step up the investment rate
in the country.
It has been observed in many cases that developed countries while supplying essential
commodities like food grains, machinery and other capital equipment to underdeveloped
countries attempt to take full advantage of their strong bargaining position and extort exorbitant
prices for their products. Often exports of these and other essential goods are used as political
weapons to blackmail the Third World countries. Therefore, if some underdeveloped country
seriously desire to keep it’s growth activity free from political pressure of other countries, it has
no choice but become a completely self-reliant in food and capital equipment. Further, it has also
to minimize it’s dependence in respect of aid from other countries and the institutions like the
IMF and The World Bank.
It is now generally agreed that in the field of self-reliance, India has two achievements to it’s
credit. First, the country is now almost self sufficient in food. Second, with the growth of iron
and steel, machine tools and heavy engineering industries, this country has made considerable
advancement towards self-reliance in capital equipment. In totality, however, the goal of self-
reliance has proved to be elusive.
1.17 GROWTH
In the first 30 years of planning, the trend rate of growth of national income was 3.5 percent.
Eminent economist Raj Krishna called it the Hindu rate of growth. Agricultural production
increased at an average rate of 2.7 percent and industrial production at 6.1 percent. And per
capita income increased at the trend rate of 1.3 percent. Though these rates appear rather small,
we must remember that throughout the British period, for almost a century, there was stagnation
in the Indian economy. For example, in the undivided India from 1901 – 46, the trend growth
rate of the national income was only 1.2 percent. So one of the achievements of planning in
Indian economy is that it has overcome stagnation and we have had a slow but steady economic
growth.
The growth performance of the economy during different plan periods is given in Table 5.1.
From the Table, it can be seen that there are shortfalls in the growth targets during early plan
periods except the First Five Year Plan. During the Ninth Plan period, the GDP growth rate was
5.4 percent as against the target of 6.5 percent.
1.18 FUNCTIONS
The 1950 resolution setting up the Planning Commission outlined its functions as to:
a. Make an assessment of the material, capital and human resources of the country,
including technical personnel, and investigate the possibilities of augmenting such of
these resources as are found to be deficient in relation to the nation’s requirement;
b. Formulate a Plan for the most effective and balanced utilisation of country's resources;
c. On a determination of priorities, define the stages in which the Plan should be carried out
and propose the allocation of resources for the due completion of each stage;
d. Indicate the factors which are tending to retard economic development, and determine the
conditions which, in view of the current social and political situation, should be
established for the successful execution of the Plan;
e. Determine the nature of the machinery which will be necessary for securing the
successful implementation of each stage of the Plan in all its aspects;
f. Appraise from time to time the progress achieved in the execution of each stage of the
Plan and recommend the adjustments of policy and measures that such appraisal may
show to be necessary; and
g. Make such interim or ancillary recommendations as appear to it to be appropriate either
for facilitating the discharge of the duties assigned to it, or on a consideration of
prevailing economic conditions, current policies, measures and development programmes
or on an examination of such specific problems as may be referred to it for advice by
Central or State Governments.
Evolving Functions
From a highly centralised planning system, the Indian economy is gradually moving towards
indicative planning where Planning Commission concerns itself with the building of a long term
strategic vision of the future and decide on priorities of nation. It works out sectoral targets and
provides promotional stimulus to the economy to grow in the desired direction.
Planning Commission plays an integrative role in the development of a holistic approach to the
policy formulation in critical areas of human and economic development. In the social sector,
schemes which require coordination and synthesis like rural health, drinking water, rural energy
needs, literacy and environment protection have yet to be subjected to coordinated policy
formulation. It has led to multiplicity of agencies. An integrated approach can lead to better
results at much lower costs.
The emphasis of the Commission is on maximising the output by using our limited resources
optimally. Instead of looking for mere increase in the plan outlays, the effort is to look for
increases in the efficiency of utilisation of the allocations being made.
With the emergence of severe constraints on available budgetary resources, the resource
allocation system between the States and Ministries of the Central Government is under strain.
This requires the Planning Commission to play a mediatory and facilitating role, keeping in view
the best interest of all concerned. It has to ensure smooth management of the change and help in
creating a culture of high productivity and efficiency in the Government.
The key to efficient utilisation of resources lies in the creation of appropriate self-managed
organisations at all levels. In this area, Planning Commission attempts to play a systems change
role and provide consultancy within the Government for developing better systems. In order to
spread the gains of experience more widely, Planning Commission also plays an information
dissemination role.
2.DIVISIONS
2.1 FINANCIAL RESOURCE DIVISION
1. The principal task of the Financial Resources (FR) division is to estimate the financial
resources available with the Public Sector for building the economy productive capacity in a
given span of time. Such resources are referred to as Aggregate Plan resources, which the FR
division estimates for the Governments at the Center, States and Union territories with
legislatures. The information on Aggregate Plan resources indicates the ability of the Public
sector in directly developing the productive capacities. Without this, the necessary support
required from the private sector in building the potential size of productive capacity cannot be
delineated.
2. While the size of Aggregate Plan resources reflects the ability of the Public sector in building
productive capacities, its sources of funding have a significant bearing on sustaining this ability.
Accordingly, the FR division provides the information on both the size and composition of
Aggregate Plan resources in a format referred to as the’ Scheme of Financing’ the annual
or five year Plan as the case may be. The inputs necessary for making the ‘Scheme of
Financing’ emerge out of periodic discussions the FR division has with the representatives of
concerned Governments.
3. Some of these inputs include policy prescriptions on raising potential levels of tax and non-tax
revenues, limiting borrowings and therefore interest burden to debt sustainability levels,
restricting establishment and administrative expenses in favour of maintenance of capital assets
and social security schemes and reducing budgetary support to commercial Public sector
undertakings. The objective is to obtain that level and composition of Aggregate Plan resources,
which reflects the stability of Public finances for Governments at all levels.
4. For the State Governments the Scheme of Financing includes Central Assistance of which the
Normal Central Assistance is derived on the basis of Gadgil-Mukherjee formula operated
exclusively by the FR division. The formula gives due cognizance to economically
disadvantaged States as also their performance in meeting specified targets of fiscal and social
objectives. The FR division regularly proposes well-researched modifications of the formula for
consideration of the National Development Council.
5. In obtaining fiscally sound level of Aggregate Plan resources of state Governments, the efforts
of FR division is complemented by Plan-Finance-I, Department of Expenditure,. Ministry of
Finance. The efforts of FR division are also supplemented by expert views which the division
obtains from outside the Planning Commission. While the regular reports of Finance
Commission serve as crucial inputs, the contributions of Steering Committees and Working
Groups on financial resources constituted by Planning Commission in the context of five-year
plans are no less significant. The officers of FR division actively participate in the deliberations
of such Committees and Working-Groups drawing upon their experience of State and sectoral
specific issues. In addition FR division also commissions specialized studies.
Short and medium-term projections for imports, exports at sectoral level; policy issues associated
with the WTO agreements. Projection of imports, exports, invisibles, current account balance
and balance of payments, using a model for the external sector. Status papers on trade and
customs tariff policy. Technical appraisal of WTO agreements and issues of concern for India
based on developments in the global economy.
(d) Consumption and Levels of Living
Assessment of class distribution of consumption and indicators of levels of living. Estimation of
poverty line and incidence of poverty for which the Planning Commission is the nodal agency in
the Government of India. The incidence of poverty and inequality estimated at national and state
level at regular intervals. Analysis of issues relating to human development and their
measurement; preparation of the National Human Development Report.
5. The Division is headed by an Adviser & supported by Joint Advisers, Deputy Advisers, Senior
Research Officers, Research Officers, Section Officer and other supporting staff. The work
amongst various officers is allocated as far as possible on sectoral basis taking into account the
workload at a given point of time.
6. The Division has a well-documented collection of appraisal notes (Chronologically arranged),
sectoral volumes of appraisal notes, records of the minutes of the meetings of the Public
Investment Board. The Division also published in 1992, "Guidelines for the Preparation of
Feasibility Reports", for Industry (including Mines), Coal and Power sectors. Division maintains
all the Appraisal Notes issued since inception of PAMD in bound form for reference and record.
7. EFC/PIB proposals pending for appraisal in PAMD and list of Appraisal Notes issued are
placed at the Website EFC/PIB Proposals" of Planning Commission. This is updated weekly.
(I) Examination of Plan Proposal (Five Year Plan and Annual Plan) of various states relating to
Women and Child Development sector and organizing Working Group Discussion to review the
implementation of policies and programme with physical and financial targets and achievements
and recommendation of sectoral outlay.
(II) Examination of proposal for Additional Central Assistance (ACA) for Women and Child
Development sector by States.
(III) Preparation of Notes and participation in ther performance review meetings for different
states taken by Memebers/Pr.Advisers/Advisers
3. Mid-Term Appraisal
(i).Review of the progress of implementation of policies and programmes
(ii) Assessment of achievements in terms of Physical & Financial targets.
(iii) Suggestions for Mid Term Corrections
4. Other Works
(I) Setting up of Committees/Groups and Task Forces on issues relating to Women & Children,
organizing their meetings and preparation of Reports;
(II) Preparation of background notes and organizing Performance Review Meetings of the
Ministry of Women and Child Development
(III) Work relating to Women Component Plan(WCP) and Gender Budgeting (GB);
(IV) Examination and preparation of briefs and comments on Cabinet Notes, EFC Memos, SFC
Memos with regard to schemes of Ministry of Women & Child Development besides
participating in EFC and SFC meetings;
(V) Advisory role with regard to Subodinate Organizations of Ministry of Woomen & Child
development i.e. National Commission for Women (NCW), National Commission for Protection
of Child rights (NCPCR), national Institute of Public co-operation and Child Development
(NIPCCD), Rashtriya Mahila Kosh (RMK) and Central Social Welfare Board (CSWB) besides
participation in General Body and Governing Body meetings of NIPCCD, RMK and CSWB
(VI) Representing Planning Commission in the meeting of Parliamentary Committees, Inter-
Ministerial Committees, Expert Groups/Committees, Task Forces on the subject relating to
Women & Child Development;
(VII) All parliamentary matters viz. answering Questions, supply of material withn and ouside
the Planning Commission;
(VIII) Coordination with other Ministries/Departments, UN and other International Agencies and
subject Divisions within Planning Commission on women and child issues;
(IX) Examination of the proposals on Research Studies, Seminars, Workshops and Conferences
on Women and Child issues received through Socio-Economic Research Division of the
Planning Commission;
(X) Representing Planning Commission in the meetings of various Sanctioning Committees
constituted under respective schemes and other committees on women and child issues
constituted by the Minstry of Women & Child Development;
(XI) Preparation of material relating to women and child sector for inclusion in Economic
Survey, President Address to the Joint Session of the Parliamnet, Prime Minister Independence
Day Speech, Finance Minister Budget Speech etc.;
(XII) Any other works assigned by the higher authorities of Planning Commission.
Setting up of Committees/Groups and Task Forces on issues relating Examination and
preparation of briefs and comments on Cabinet Notes, EFC Memos, SFC Memos with regard to
schemes of Ministry of Women & Child Development besides participating in EFC and SFC
Meetings.
5. Advisory role for Subordinate Organizations of Ministry of Women & Children i.e. National
Commission for Women. National Child Protection Commission, National Institute for public
Cooperation and Child development, Rashtriya Mahila Kosh and Central Social Welfare Board
besides participation in General Body and Governing Bodies meetings of National Institute for
public Cooperation and Child development, Rashtriya Mahila Kosh and Central Social Welfare
Board.
6.Repersenting Planning Commission in the meeting of Parliamentary Committees, Inter-
Ministerial Committees, Expert Group/Committees, Task Forces on the subject relating to
Women & Child Development.
7. All parliamentary matters viz. answering Questions, supply of material within and outside the
Planning commission.
8. Coordination with women and child related Ministries/Departments ,UN and other
International Agencies and subject Divisions within Planning Commission.
9. The Division examine the proposals of Research Studies, Seminars, Workshops and
Conferences on Women and Child issues received through Socio-Economic Research Division
of the Planning Commission.
10. The Division also represents Planning Commission in the various Sanctioning Committees
for various schemes Constituted by Ministry of Women & Child Development besides various
committees constituted on the various issues relating to women and children
11.The Division also prepares and furnish relevant material relating to women and child sector
for inclusion in Economic Survey, President’s Address to the Joint Session of the Parliament,
Prim Minister’s Independence Day Speech ,Finance Minister’s Budget Speech.
12.Any other works assigned by the higher authorizes of Planning Commission.
The target growth rate was 2.1 percent annual gross domestic product (GDP) growth; the
achieved growth rate was 3.6 percent. During the first five-year plan the net domestic product
went up by 15 percent. The monsoons were good and there were relatively high crop yields,
boosting exchange reserves and per capita income, which went up 8 percent. Lower increase of
per capita income as compared to national income was due to rapid population growth. Many
irrigation projects were initiated during this period, including the Bhakra Dam and Hirakud Dam.
The World Health Organization, with the Indian government, addressed children's health and
reduced infant mortality, contributing to population growth.
At the end of the plan period in 1956, five Indian Institutes of Technology (IITs) were started as
major technical institutions. University Grant Commission was set up to take care of funding and
take measures to strengthen the higher education in the country. Contracts were signed to start
five steel plants; however these plants did not come into existence until the middle of the next
five-year plan.
Hydroelectric power projects and five steel mills at Bhilai, Durgapur, and Rourkela were
established. Coal production was increased. More railway lines were added in the north east.
The Atomic Energy Commission was formed in 1957 with Homi J. Bhabha as the first chairman.
The Tata Institute of Fundamental Research was established as a research institute. In 1957 a
talent search and scholarship program was begun to find talented young students to train for
work in nuclear power.
Many primary schools were started in rural areas. In an effort to bring democracy to the
grassroot level, Panchayat elections were started and the states were given more development
responsibilities.
State electricity boards and state secondary education boards were formed. States were made
responsible for secondary and higher education. State road transportation corporations were
formed and local road building became a state responsibility.Gross Domestic Product rate during
this duration was lower at 2.7% due to 1962 Sino-Indian War and Indo-Pakistani War of 1965.
Funds earmarked for the industrial development had to be used for the war effort. India also
performed the Smiling Buddha underground nuclear test in 1974, partially in response to the
United States deployment of the Seventh Fleet in the Bay of Bengal to warn India against
attacking West Pakistan and widening the war.
The sixth plan also marked the beginning of economic liberalization. Price controls were
eliminated and ration shops were closed. This led to an increase in food prices and an increased
cost of living. Family planning also was expanded in order to prevent overpopulation. In contrast
to China's harshly-enforced one-child policy, Indian policy did not rely on the threat of force.
More prosperous areas of India adopted family planning more rapidly than less prosperous areas,
which continued to have a high birth rate.
brought the nearly bankrupt nation back from the edge. It was the beginning of privatization and
liberalization in India.
The Approach Paper to the Ninth Five Year Plan, adopted by the National Development Council,
had accorded priority to agriculture and rural development with a view to generating adequate
productive employment and eradication of poverty; accelerating the growth rate of the economy
with stable prices; ensuring food and nutritional security for all, particularly the vulnerable
sections of society; providing the basic minimum services of safe drinking water, primary health
care facilities, universal primary education, shelter, and connectivity to all in a time bound
manner; containing the growth rate of population; ensuring environmental sustainability of the
development process through social mobilization and participation of people at all levels;
empowerment of women and socially disadvantaged groups such as Scheduled Caste, Scheduled
Tribes and Other Backward Classes and Minorities as agents of socio-economic change and
development; promoting and developing people’s participatory bodies like Panchayati Raj
institutions, co-operatives and self-help groups; and strengthening efforts to build self-reliance.
These very priorities constitute the objectives of the Ninth Plan.
Some specific areas from within the broad objectives of the Plan as laid down by the NDC have
been selected for special focus. For these areas, Special Action Plans (SAPs) have been evolved
in order to provide actionable, time-bound targets with adequate resources. Broadly, the SAPs
cover specific aspects of social and physical infrastructure, agriculture, information technology
and water policy.
The Ninth Plan is based on a careful stock taking of the strength of our past development
strategy as well as its weakness, and seeks to provide appropriate direction and balance to the
socio-economic development of the country. The principal task of the Ninth Plan will be to usher
in a new era of growth with social justice and participation in which not only the Governments at
the Centre and the States, but the people at large, particularly the poor, can become effective
instruments of a participatory planning process. In such a process, the participation of public and
private sectors and all tiers of government will be vital for ensuring growth with justice and
equity.
the correction of historical inequalities. Thus the focus of the Ninth Plan can be described as :
"Growth with Social Justice and Equity".
The specific objectives of the Ninth Plan as approved by the National Development Council are
as follows:
i. Priority to agriculture and rural development with a view to generating adequate
productive employment and eradication of poverty;
ii. Accelerating the growth rate of the economy with stable prices;
iii. Ensuring food and nutritional security for all, particularly the vulnerable sections of
society;
iv. Providing the basic minimum services of safe drinking water, primary health care
facilities, universal primary education, shelter, and connectivity to all in a time bound
manner;
v. Containing the growth rate of population;
vi. Ensuring environmental sustainability of the development process through social
mobilisation and participation of people at all levels;
vii. Empowerment of women and socially disadvantaged groups such as Scheduled Castes,
Scheduled Tribes and Other Backward Classes and Minorities as agents of socio-
economic change and development;
viii. Promoting and developing people’s participatory institutions like Panchayati Raj
institutions, cooperatives and self-help groups;
ix. Strengthening efforts to build self-reliance.
important feature of our post-colonial experience is that the people of India have conclusively
demonstrated their ability to forge a nation united despite its diversity, and to pursue
development within the framework of a functioning, vibrant and pluralistic democracy. In this
process, democratic institutions have put down firm roots, which continue to gain strength and
spread. The degree of democratisation that has been achieved in the political sphere is, however,
not matched by its progress on the economic front. There are still too many controls and
restrictions on individual initiatives, and many of our developmental institutions continue to
exhibit paternalistic behaviour, which today has become anachronistic. For the country to attain
its full economic potential, and for the poorest and weakest to shape their destiny according to
their own desires, it requires a comprehensive reappraisal not only of our development strategy,
but also of the institutional structures that guide the development process. This is the task that the
Tenth Plan has set for itself.
PERSPECTIVES:
The last decade of the 20th century has seen a visible shift in the focus of development planning
from the mere expansion of production of goods and services, and the consequent growth of per
capita income, to planning for enhancement of human well being. The notion of human well
being itself is more broadly conceived to include not only consumption of goods and services in
general but more specifically to ensure that the basic material requirements of all sections of the
population, especially those below the poverty line, are met and that they have access to basic
social services such as health and education. Specific focus on these dimensions of social
development is necessary because experience shows that economic prosperity, measured in terms
of per capita income, alone does not always ensure enrichment in quality of life, as reflected, for
instance, in the social indicators on health, longevity, literacy and environmental sustainability.
The latter must be valued as outcomes that are socially desirable in themselves, and hence made
direct objectives of any development process. They are also valuable inputs in sustaining the
development process in the longer run. In addition to social development measures, in terms of
access to social services, an equitable development process must provide expanding
opportunities for advancement to all sections of the population. Equality of outcomes may not be
a feasible goal of social justice but equality of opportunity is a goal for which we must all strive.
OBJECTIVES:
Traditionally, the level of per capita income has been regarded as a summary indicator of the
economic well being of the country, and growth targets have therefore focused on growth in per
capita income or per capita GDP. The Prime Minister’s vision has been the basis for setting the
target in this regard, not only for the Tenth Plan period, but for all of the next ten years.
The Approach Paper had proposed that the Tenth Plan should aim at an indicative target of 8 per
cent average GDP growth for the period 2002-07. It is certainly an ambitious target, specially in
view of the fact that GDP growth has decelerated to below 6 per cent at present. Even if the
deceleration is viewed as a short-term phenomenon, the medium-term performance of the
economy over the past several years suggests that the demonstrated growth potential is only
about 6.5 percent. The proposed 8 per cent growth target therefore involves an increase of at
least 1.5 percentage points over the recent medium term performance, which is substantial.
Nevertheless, the National Development Council (NDC) affirmed its faith in the latent
potentialities of the Indian economy by approving the 8 per cent growth target for the Tenth Plan
period.
The Approach Paper also recognized that economic growth cannot be the only objective of
national planning and indeed, over the years, development objectives are being defined not just
in terms of increases in GDP or per capita income but more broadly in terms of enhancement of
human well being. To reflect the importance of these dimensions in development planning, the
Tenth Plan identifies specific and monitor able targets for a few key indicators of human
development. The NDC has approved that, in addition to the 8 per cent growth target.
The targets mandated by the NDC at the time of approval of the Approach Paper to the Tenth
Five Year Plan are, by and large, consistent with the 8 percent growth target either through direct
linkages that exist or through the resources that are generated by the growth process for more
intensive public interventions. At the time of formulation of the Approach Paper, these linkages
had been assessed on the basis of economy-wide aggregative trends observed in the past, and it
was felt that achievement of even these targets would require concerted efforts. Subsequently,
more detailed study and analysis by the Planning Commission have revealed that it may be
possible to record even better achievement as far as employment generation and poverty
reduction are concerned. The Report of the Special Group on Targeting 10 Million Employment
Opportunities Per Year, which was constituted to deliberate upon the Prime Minister’s vision,
indicated that with appropriate sectoral focus and directed interventions, it would be possible to
generate substantially more employment opportunities than arising merely out of the growth
process, not only to take care of the additions to the labour force, but
also to reduce the backlog of unemployment. Similarly, internal exercises carried out in the
Planning Commission revealed that the state-wise break down of the aggregate growth target,
which seeks to redress regional imbalances, could lead to even faster reduction in the poverty
rate than the assessment made on the basis of the aggregative trends. The Tenth Plan, therefore,
seeks to achieve targets in these two areas which go beyond those set by the NDC in the
Approach Paper.
The 11th Plan provides an opportunity to restructure policies to achieve a new vision based on
faster, more broad-based and inclusive growth. It is designed to reduce poverty and focus on
bridging the various divides that continue to fragment our society. The 11th Plan must aim at
putting the economy on a sustainable growth trajectory with a growth rate of approximately 10
per cent by the end of the Plan period. It will create productive employment at a faster pace than
before, and target robust agriculture growth at 4% per year. It must seek to reduce disparities
across regions and communities by ensuring access to basic physical infrastructure as well as
health and education services to all. It must recognize gender as a cross-cutting theme across all
sectors and commit to respect and promote the rights of the common person. The first steps in
this direction were initiated in the middle of the 10th Plan based on the National Common
Minimum Programme adopted by the government. These steps must be further strengthened and
consolidated into a strategy for the 11th Plan.
Rapid growth is an essential part of strategy for two reasons. Firstly, it is only in a rapidly
growing economy that we can expect to sufficiently raise the incomes of the mass of our
population to bring about a general improvement in living conditions. Secondly, rapid growth is
necessary to generate the resources needed to provide basic services to all. Work done within the
Planning Commission and elsewhere suggests that the economy can accelerate from 8 per cent
per year to an average of around 9% over the 11th Plan period, provided appropriate policies are
put in place. With population growing at 1.5% per year, 9% growth in GDP would double the
real per capita income in 10 years. This must be combined with policies that will ensure that this
per capita income growth is broad based, benefiting all sections of the population, especially
those who have thus far remained deprived.
While encouraging private sector growth the 11th Plan must also ensure a substantial increase in
the allocation of public resources for Plan programmes in critical areas. This will support the
growth strategy and ensure inclusiveness. These resources will be easier to mobilize if the
economy grows rapidly. A new stimulus to public sector investment is particularly important in
agriculture and infrastructure and both the Centre and the States have to take steps to mobilize
resources to make this possible. The growth component of this strategy is, therefore, important
for two reasons: a) it will contribute directly by raising income levels and employment and b) it
will help finance programmes that will ensure more broad based and inclusive growth.
(table 9)
CONCLUSION
On the bases of facts and figures Economic Planning is very important for every country.
Because of excellent economic planning now we are one of the parts of developing countries. On
the bases of need in certain sectors government introduced five years plan for better
development. Now India’s GDP growth is very high as compare with other countries and that is
because of better planning. After introduced 1991 policy the growth of India became very faster
because of liberalization and licensing in different sectors. Because of liberalization the rate
Foreign Direct Investment increased after 1991.
BIBLIOGRAPHY
BOOKS:
Upadhyay, Saroj. Economic Planning, deficiencies of planning. Delhi: Asian Books Private
Limited, Pg no: 212-214
WEBSITE:
Economic Planning:
http://www.textbooksonline.tn.nic.in/Books/11/Econ-EM/Chapter_05.pdf
Economic Planning:
http://www.ccsindia.org/ccsindia/pdf/friedmanindia/03%20Indian%20Economic%20Planning
%20-%20Milton%20Friedman.pdf
Role of employment:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Planned_economy