Indian Economy (1947-1991): Types, Five Year Plans, IPR 1956

April 5, 2024 9489 0

Introduction

  • The period from 1947 to 1991 in the Indian economy is characterized by significant economic policies and transformations. Post-independence, the government adopted a mixed economy model, combining elements of socialism and capitalism
  • Key initiatives during this period included the implementation of Five-Year Plans aimed at industrialization, agrarian reforms to address rural poverty, and the establishment of public sector enterprises in strategic industries.
  • The Green Revolution in the 1960s and 1970s led to increased agricultural productivity, while the nationalization of banks and industries in the 1960s aimed to promote economic equity and development.
  • By the late 1980s, India faced serious economic challenges, including a balance of payments crisis, slow industrial growth, and fiscal deficits. In response, the government initiated significant economic reforms in 1991, ushering in an era of liberalization, privatization, and globalization. 
  • These reforms aimed to open up the Indian economy to foreign investment, promote competition, and enhance efficiency, laying the foundation for India’s emergence as a global economic powerhouse in the subsequent decades.

Types of Economic Systems

  • Capitalist System: Goods produced are distributed among people not based on what people need but based on Purchasing Power.
  • Socialist System: The government decides what goods are to be produced by the needs of society.
  • Mixed Economic System: Market  provides whatever goods and services it can produce well, and the government  provides essential goods and services which the market fails to do.
    • India is a socialist society with a strong public sector but also with private property and democracy.
Open Economy: A country engages in international trade and economic transactions with other nations.

Closed Economy: A country  relies on its domestic production and consumption without significant interaction with foreign markets.

The Five-Year Plans

  • Establishment of the Planning Commission: For planned economic development through five year plans the Planning Commission was established in 1950 with the Prime Minister as its Chairperson.
  • Establishment of NITI Ayog: In 2015,  NITI Aayog replaced the Planning Commission making planning a more decentralized process. The Five Year Plan system was also discontinued
  • Objectives of Five-Year Plans
    • Growth: Denotes the increase in a country’s capacity to produce goods and services
      • May be reflected in a larger stock of productive capital or an increase in the efficiency of productive capital and services.
    • Modernisation: Refers to the adoption of new technology which helps in increasing the production of goods and services and  changes in outlook like the recognition of equal rights for women.
    • Self-reliance: Refers to the usage of a nation’s own resources to increase production rather than using imported materials. 
      • The first seven five-year plans gave importance to self-reliance. 
    • Equity: Aims to reduce the inequality in the distribution of wealth. 
      • Equity in agriculture was implemented through Land reforms and land ceiling.
  • Bombay Plan: Aimed at agricultural restructuring by abolishing the Zamindari system, promoting rapid industrialization, and developing essential and consumer goods, along with small, medium, and cottage industries. 
    • The emphasis was on industrialization to alleviate population hardships caused by inflation
  • Gandhian Plan: Drafted by Acharya Shriman Narayan Agarwal; Highlighted economic decentralization and the promotion of small-scale and cottage industries.
  • People’s Plan: Drafted by M.N. Roy for a ten-year period; 
    • Prioritized agricultural development and an increase in agricultural production while maintaining a balanced approach with industrialization.
  •  Sarvodaya Plan: Crafted by Jayaprakash Narayan, it prioritized agriculture, small and cottage industries, advocated for independence from foreign technology, and emphasized the importance of land reforms. 
    • Additionally, it recommended decentralized and participatory planning.
  • Harrod-Domar Model (implemented in the 1st FYP): Highlighted the dual character of capital accumulation, emphasizing its role in increasing national income (demand-side role), Its contribution to enhancing production capacity (supply-side role).
  • Nehru-Mahalanobis Model (implemented in the 2nd FYP): Rooted in a two-sector model comprising Consumer Goods and Capital Goods sectors, prioritized investment in heavy industries to drive industrialization for rapid economic development.
  • Rao-Manmohan Model: Key features- Liberalization, Privatization, Globalization and Financial sector reforms and Stabilization measures to address BoP crisis, fiscal stabilization etc. 
  • Amartya Sen Model: Areas of focus- Capacity development, Human development, Participatory development and freedom. 

 

FYP Target Growth Actual Growth Description
1st Five Year Plan (1951-56) 2.1 3.6
  • Draw inspiration from the Harrod-Domar Model.
  • The plan prioritized:  agriculture, price stability,  Irrigation,  Rural development, power, and transport
2nd Five Year Plan (1956-61) 4.5 4.3
  • Also known as the Mahalanobis Plan
  • It concentrated on rapid industrialization, especially basic and capital goods  industries. [UPSC 2019]
  • Proposed substantial imports facilitated by foreign loans. 
3rd Five Year Plan (1961-66) 5.6 2.84%
  • The plan focused on both heavy industrialization and food grain production.
Three Annual Plans (1966-69)
  • This three-year period was criticized and termed as a “Plan Holiday.
  • A New Agricultural Strategy was implemented encompassing widespread distribution of HighYielding Variety (HYV), exploitation of irrigation potential, extensive use of fertilizers, and a focus on soil conservation.
4th Five Year Plan (1969-74) 5.7 3.3
  • Adhering to the Gadgil strategy with a primary emphasis on agricultural growth.
  •  Marked the first-time prioritization of social justice, correcting the trend of  increased concentration of wealth and economic power. [UPSC 2019]
  • Significant developments during this plan period included Bank Nationalization, abolition of privy purses to princes, the outcomes of the Green Revolution,the Indo-Pak war and Family planning. 
5th Five Year Plan (1974-79) 4.4 4.8
  • Two primary objectives: poverty eradication (Garibi Hatao) and the attainment of self-reliance.
  • New Programmes: Minimum Needs Programme designed to provide basic necessities and enhance living standards; Twenty-point Programme: improve the quality of life for people, particularly those belonging to Below Poverty Line (BPL) families. 

Rolling Plan (1978-80)

6th Five Year Plan (1980-85) 5.2 5.66
  • Emphasis was placed on increasing national income, modernizing technology, and ensuring a continuous decrease in poverty and unemployment.
  • Adopted with the slogan ‘Garibi Hatao’ .
  • There was a shift from industrialization toward infrastructure development, with programs such as the National Rural Employment Programme, Integrated Rural Development Programme, and Village and Small Industries Development Programme focusing on employment generation.
7th Five Year Plan (1985-90) 5 6.1
  • Plan prioritized rapid growth in food grain production, increased employment opportunities, and enhanced productivity within the planning framework.
  • Often referred to as the Infrastructure Plan, it gave due importance to the Import Substitution strategy.
Annual Plans (1990-92)
  • The BOP crisis in 1991 and conditions set by the IMF brought significant changes to the Indian economy, leading to the two-year delay of the eighth FYP.
8th Five Year Plan (1992-97) 5.6 6.8
  • The plan was based on the Rao-Manmohan Singh model.
  •  social spending was neglected during this plan. 
9th Five Year Plan (1997-2002) 8 7.6
  • The plan was formulated with a focus on four crucial dimensions: enhancing the quality of life, generating productive employment, achieving regional balance, and promoting self-reliance.
  • Special emphasis was placed on agriculture and rural development.
  • The financial sector became an integral part of the plan. [UPSC 2019]
10th Five Year Plan (2002-07) 8 7.6
  • Primary Objectives: 
    • Reduction of Poverty: Ratio by 5% points by the end of the plan period.
    • Narrowing Gender Gaps: In literacy and wages by at least 50%.
    •  Lowering the decadal rate of population growth between 2001 and 2011 to 16.2%.
    • IMR: Achieving an infant mortality rate of 45 per 1,000 births by 2007 and 28 per 1,000 births by 2012.
    • Minimizing overall capital outflow.
    • Increase in the GDP growth rate to 8% per year.
    • Elevating literacy rates to 72% by 2007 and 80% by 2012.
    • Augmenting forest and tree cover to 25% by 2007 and 33% by 2012.
    • Boosting domestic savings, foreign investment, and foreign exchange.
    • Ensure universal access to primary education.
11th Five Year Plan (2007-12) 9 8
  • The overarching theme of the plan is “Towards Faster and More Inclusive Growth.”
12th Five Year Plan (2012-17) 8.2 6.9
  • The theme was “Faster, More Inclusive, and Sustainable Growth.” [UPSC 2014]

 

Planning after the planning commission: Document by NITI Aayog provides 3 fold division of the planning process according to time frame and objectives 

  • Fifteen-Year Vision
  • Seven Year Strategy
  • Three-Year Action Agenda.

Industry and Trade

  • From the second five year plan onwards industrial development was given special attention.

Industrial Policy Resolution 1956 (IPR 1956)

  • Aligned on the lines of socialist principles and formed the basis for the Second Five-Year Plan. 
  • It classified industries into 4 categories:
    • State Monopolies: Encompassed the manufacturing of arms and ammunition, atomic energy, and railway transport, exclusively under the government’s monopoly.
    • Basic Industries: Industries like coal, iron and steel, shipbuilding, aircraft manufacturing, telephone, telegraph, wireless, and mineral oils, crucial for economic development, were under the central government. 
      • However, existing private companies in these sectors were permitted to continue.
  • Regulated Industries: Sectors such as automobiles, heavy machinery, chemicals, fertilizers, sugar, paper, cement, cotton, woolen textiles, etc., 
    • These were subject to government regulation (pricing, production quantity, etc.) due to their importance to the masses.
  • Private Industries: All other industries were open to operation by the private sector and cooperatives.
  • Small-Scale Industry
    • In 1955, the Village and Small-Scale Industries Committee (Karve Committee) highlighted the role of small-scale industries in promoting rural development. 
    • A Small-Scale Industry is defined with reference to the maximum investment allowed in an industry.  
    • At present, the maximum investment allowed is rupees one crore.
  • Trade Policy: Policy of Import Substitution
    • First 7 Five Year Plans (FYPs) followed a trade policy called import substitution which aimed at substituting imports with domestic production using tariffs and quotas. 
    • Tariffs: Tax on imported goods which are imposed to make imports expensive;  
    • Quotas: Quantity of imported goods which restrict imports. 
  • Effect of Policies on various sectors
    • Contribution of Agriculture to the GDP was reduced in 1991
    • Contribution of the industrial sector increased from 13% (1950-51) to 24.6% (1990-91).
    • There was a significant increase in the contribution of the service sector from 28% (1950-51) to 40.5% (1990-91).
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Conclusion

  • The period from 1947 to 1991 marked a significant phase in India’s economic history characterized by mixed economic policies, with a dominant role for the public sector and extensive government regulation. 
  • Despite initial achievements in areas such as agriculture and industrialization, the economy faced challenges such as low growth rates, fiscal deficits, and external imbalances. 
  • The balance of payments crisis of 1991 prompted a paradigm shift towards liberalization, privatization, and globalization, also known as New Economic Policy ushering in an era of economic reforms aimed at unleashing the potential of the Indian economy.
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UDAAN PRELIMS WALLAH
Comprehensive coverage with a concise format
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UDAAN PRELIMS WALLAH
Comprehensive coverage with a concise format
Integration of PYQ within the booklet
Designed as per recent trends of Prelims questions
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