Indian Planning: History, Objectives & NITI Aayog
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Indian Planning: History, Objectives & NITI Aayog
1. Meaning of Planning
Economic planning refers to the systematic, deliberate, and organized allocation of resources by a central authority to achieve specific socio-economic goals within a defined time period. It involves setting goals, allocating resources, formulating policies, and monitoring outcomes. Planning is distinguished from mere budgeting by its medium-to-long-term horizon and integrated, comprehensive nature across sectors.
2. Need for Planning in Economic Development
Colonial Legacy: At independence, India inherited extreme poverty, a deindustrialized manufacturing sector, poor infrastructure, and minimal capital formation. Laissez-faire colonial policies had left the economy devastated тАФ only state-led planning could reverse this. Market Failures: Free markets fail in developing economies due to information asymmetry, lack of credit, externalities in education and health, and inability of private capital to invest in long-gestation infrastructure. Planning corrects these. Resource Mobilisation: India had limited capital; planning was essential to channel scarce savings into high-development-impact sectors (heavy industry, irrigation, power). Reducing Inequalities: Markets concentrate investment in already-developed regions. Balanced regional development and addressing SC/ST/women's needs required state intervention. Rapid Industrialization: Only the state could build foundational industries (steel, power, dams) that private capital would not undertake in capital-scarce conditions.
3. Imperative vs. Indicative vs. Structural Planning
Imperative/Directive Planning: The state sets mandatory targets and issues binding directives to all economic units. No role for market forces. Example: USSR, Maoist China. India never adopted fully imperative planning. Indicative Planning: The state sets broad targets and provides incentives (subsidies, tax benefits) to nudge private actors. Private sector retains decision-making freedom. France and Japan used this model. India shifted toward this, especially post-1991. Structural Planning: Combines elements of both тАФ restructures the economy (land relations, ownership patterns, industrial structure) using a mix of state commands and market signals. India's early FYPs had structural elements through land reforms, nationalization, and licensing.
4. Objectives of Planning in India
- High Economic Growth: Increasing GDP and per capita income
- Economic Self-Reliance: Reducing dependence on foreign aid/imports of capital goods
- Modernization: Adopting modern technology in agriculture and industry
- Reducing Inequality: Ensuring growth benefits reach the poor
- Poverty Removal: Directly addressing poverty (Garibi Hatao)
- Social Justice: Equal opportunity irrespective of caste, gender, region
- Balanced Regional Development: Reducing developed-backward state gap
- Employment Generation: Creating productive employment for the growing population
5. Indian Planning History: Five Year Plans
Pre-Planning Proposals: Bombay Plan (1944) тАФ Tata/Birla stressed industrialization; Gandhian Plan (1944) тАФ S.N. Agarwal favored village industries; People's Plan (1945) тАФ M.N. Roy urged nationalization; Sarvodaya Plan (1950) тАФ J.P. Narayan advocated bottom-up development.
Planning Commission was established on March 15, 1950 by Cabinet Resolution; PM Nehru was first Chairman. It was an extra-constitutional, non-statutory body. National Development Council (NDC) was created in 1952.
1st FYP (1951-56): Harrod-Domar Model. Priority: Agriculture & Irrigation (Bhakra Nangal). Target 2.1%, Achieved 3.6%. Most successful plan. 2nd FYP (1956-61): P.C. Mahalanobis 2-sector Model. Heavy Industry & Public Sector тАФ steel plants (Durgapur, Rourkela, Bhilai). Led to BoP crisis. 3rd FYP (1961-66): John Sandee Model. Disrupted by Sino-Indian War (1962), Indo-Pakistan War (1965), and drought. Failed badly. Plan Holidays (1966-69): Three Annual Plans due to economic crisis. 4th FYP (1969-74): Growth with Stability and Self-Reliance. Bank nationalization (1969). Green Revolution harnessed. 5th FYP (1974-79): Garibi Hatao & Self-Reliance. 20-Point Programme, Minimum Needs Programme. Terminated early by Janata Govt. 6th FYP (1980-85): Direct poverty alleviation тАФ IRDP, NREP. Strong growth. 7th FYP (1985-90): Food, Work & Productivity. Infrastructure focus. 8th FYP (1992-97): Post-liberalization тАФ Human Development emphasis (employment, education, health). John W. Miller Model. 9th FYP (1997-2002): Growth with Social Justice and Equity. Disappointing performance. 10th FYP (2002-07): 8% target. Quality of growth. Dimension targets for social indicators. 11th FYP (2007-12): Faster and More Inclusive Growth. ~7.9% average тАФ highest ever. 12th FYP (2012-17): Faster, More Inclusive and Sustainable Growth. Last FYP ~6.7% growth. Planning Commission dissolved January 2015.
6. Techniques of Indian Planning
- Input-Output Analysis: Studies inter-industry relationships to ensure supply-demand consistency.
- Mathematical Models (LPM): Linear Programming to optimize resource allocation.
- Plan Models: Mahalanobis 2-sector and 4-sector models were central to early plans.
- Rolling Plans: Flexible, annually revised medium-term plans (proposed D.T. Lakdawala, used 1978-80).
- Indicative Planning (post-1991): Setting broad targets; relying on market forces.
7. Achievements of Indian Planning
- Food Security: Green Revolution ended chronic food shortages; India became net food exporter.
- Industry: Built diversified base тАФ steel, heavy machinery, chemicals, pharma, IT.
- Infrastructure: Major expansion in power capacity, roads, rail, telecom.
- Human Development: IMR fell dramatically; life expectancy rose from ~32 years (1947) to ~70 years.
- Poverty Reduction: From ~45% (1994) to under 22% (2012), Tendulkar methodology.
- Self-Reliance: Defence, satellites (ISRO), nuclear capability.
8. Failures and Shortcomings
- Persistence of Poverty & Inequality: Gini Coefficient remained high; Regional disparities persisted.
- Jobless Growth: High GDP post-liberalization coincided with inadequate job creation.
- Agricultural Neglect: Heavy industry bias led to agrarian distress.
- Public Sector Inefficiency: PSUs became overstaffed, loss-making, and politically protected.
- License-Permit-Quota Raj: Stifled private entrepreneurship; induced rent-seeking.
- Implementation Gaps: Bureaucratic red tape, corruption, and weak state capacity derailed plans.
- External Dependence: India continuously needed World Bank/IMF loans despite self-reliance goal.
9. NITI Aayog vs. Planning Commission
Rationale for change: Top-down planning did not suit India's diverse federal structure. Post-liberalization, state's role shifted from "doing" to "enabling." Command-style planning was obsolete.
| Feature | Planning Commission | NITI Aayog |
|---|---|---|
| Nature | Top-down, directive | Bottom-up, cooperative |
| Financial Power | Allocated funds to states | Advisory only, no allocation |
| Approach | Centralized | Competitive/cooperative federalism |
| Focus | Fixed Five Year Plans | 15-yr vision, 7-yr strategy, 3-yr action |
| States' Role | Passive recipients | All CMs on Governing Council |
NITI Aayog Structure: Chairperson (PM), Vice-Chairperson (expert), Governing Council (all CMs + LGs), Regional Councils, CEO (appointed by PM), Full-time Members.
Key NITI Initiatives: Aspirational Districts Programme (112 backward districts), SDG India Index, India@75 Agenda 2022, Strategy for New India @75 (2019), AIM (Atal Innovation Mission).
10. Conclusion
Indian planning successfully built industrial and agricultural foundations but failed on equity, efficiency, and implementation. NITI Aayog marks a philosophical shift тАФ from the state as primary driver to the state as facilitator and regulator in a market-based, federal democratic economy.
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