Module 5. Programme planning

 

Lesson 16

FIVE-YEAR PLANS IN INDIA

16.1  Introduction

Plans need not be made for nuts and bolts, but are essential to prevent future bottlenecks. If enough cushions are provided for the future, the economy will grow smoother and faster.  The importance of plan is that when you design it before you implement it; you have a better chance of eliminating design flaws from the beginning. If you start out coding and later on figure out you have a design flaw, it is extremely painful to go back and re-implement everything. Certain software engineering experts have estimated that it can cost up to 10x more (time and money) to fix a design problem in the later stages of software development than in the early stages.

16.2  Five-Year Plans

The five-year plan in India is framed, executed and monitored by the Planning Commission of India, which is headed by the Prime Minister. Currently, India is in its 11th five-year plan. A glimpse of the five-year plans of our country, along with the respective objectives in each plan, is as under:

16.2.1  1st Plan (1951-56)

·         The first five-year plan was presented by Jawaharlal Nehru in 1951. The First Five-Year Plan was initiated at the end of the turmoil of partition of the country. It gave importance to agriculture, irrigation and power projects to decrease the countries reliance on food grain imports, resolve the food crisis and ease the raw material problem especially in jute and cotton. Nearly 45% of the resources were designated for agriculture, while industry got a modest 4.9%.The focus was to maximize the output from agriculture, which would then provide the impetus for industrial growth.

·         Though the first plan was formulated hurriedly, it succeeded in fulfilling the targets. Agriculture production increased dramatically, national income went up by 18%, per capita income by 11% and per capita consumption by 9%.

16.2.2  2nd Plan (1956-61)

The second five-year plan was initiated in a climate of economic prosperity, industry gained in prominence. Agriculture programmes were formulated to meet the raw material needs of industry, besides covering the food needs of the increasing population. The Industrial Policy of 1956 was socialistic in nature. The plan aimed at 25% increase in national income.

16.2.3  3rd Plan (1961-66)

16.2.4  Annual plans (1966-1969)

Due to failure of third five year plan Government of India did not implemented fourth five year plan, but implemented 3 Annual plans by replacing five year plan. This period (April 1, 1966 to March 31, 1969) known as plan holiday in Indian planning period. The main objective of Annual Plans are:

·        To remove the strains in the economy arising from many unforeseen events during the third plan.

·        To secure a feasible growth rate without generating inflationary pressures in the economy.

·        To have fuller utilization of the infrastructure already created during previous plan periods.

Annual plans given more importance to irrigation and Agriculture sector and to control inflation increasing agricultural production

16.2.5  4th plan (1969-74)

16.2.6  5th plan (1974-79)

16.2.7  Annual plan (1978-1980)

The Janata Government ended the fifth five year plan one year earlier to its term i.e. only within four years span (1974-78) and introduced a new plan since April 1, 1978. This plan was named as the Rolling plan. Rolling plan period was 1978-1980. In the first phase of this rolling plan, the sixth plan was initially started for 5 years (1978-83) on April 1, 1978. In 1980, the sixth plan (rolling plan) prepared by the Janata Government was abandoned by the congress Government and a new sixth plan was introduced for the period 1980-85.

16.2.8  6th plan (1980-85)

16.2.9  7th Plan (1985-90)

The first three years of the seventh plan saw severe drought conditions, despite which the food grain production rose by 3.2%. Special programmes like Jawahar Rozgar Yojana were introduced. Sectors like welfare, education, health, family planning, employment etc got a larger disbursement.

16.2.10  Annual plan (1990-1992)

This period was of political instability hence, no five year plan was implemented during the period; only annual plans were made for the period between 1990 and 1992. The country faced severe balance of payment crisis.

16.2.11  8th plan (1992-97)

16.2.12  9th  plan (1997-2002)

It was observed in the eighth plan that, even though the economy performed well, the gains did not percolate to the weaker sections of the society. The ninth plan therefore laid greater impetus on increasing agricultural and rural incomes and alleviates the conditions of the marginal farmers and land less labourers.

16.2.13  10th  plan (2002-2007)

16.2.14  11th plan (2007-2012)