Indian Economy
Socio-economic Planning
- Control all major sectors of the economy
- Legislate on their use and about the distribution of income
- State decides on what should be produced and how much; sold at what price
- Private property is not allowed)
(Indicative plan (see ahead) is one where there is a mixed economy with State and market playing significant roles to achieve targets for growth that they together set.) (It is operated under a planned economy but not command economy.)
The difference between planned economy and (command economy is that in the former there may be mixed economy and while in the latter Government owns and regulates economy to near monopolistic limit.)
(Command economies) were set up in China and USSR, mainly for rapid economic growth and social and economic justice but have been dismantled in the last two decades as (they do not create wealth sustainably and are not conducive for innovation and efficiency.) (Cuba and North Korea are still command economies.)
History of Economic Planning in India: The beginnings
India being devastated economically after more than 2 centuries of colonial
exploitation resulting in chronic poverty, eradication of poverty was the
driving force for the formulation of various models of growth before
Independence.
(In 1944 leading businessmen and industrialists (including Sir Purshotamdas
Thakurdas, JRD Tata, GD Birla and others) put forward "A Plan of Economic
Development for India" -popularly known as the 'Bombay Plan".) It sawIndia's
future progress based on further expansion of the textile and consumer
industries already flourishing in cities like Bombay and Ahmedabad. It saw an
important role the State in post-Independent India: to provide infrastructure,
invest in basic industries like steel, and protect Indian industry from foreign
competition.
(Visionary engineer Sir Mokshagundam Visvesvarayya. pointed to the success of
Japan and insisted that 'industries and trade do not grow of themselves, but
have to be willed, planned and systematically developed') - (in his book titled
"Planned Economy for India"(1934)) Expert economists and businessmen were to do
the planning. The goalwas poverty eradication through growth.
(The Indian National Congress established a National Planning Committee under
the chairmanship of Jawaharlal Nehru.) It (1938) stated the objective of
planning for development ("was to ensure an adequate standard of living for the
masses, in other words, to get rid of the appalling poverty of the people"). It
advocated heavy industries that were essential both to build other industries,
and for Indian self- efence; heavy industries had to be in public ownership, for
both redistributive and security purposes; redistribution of land away fromthe
big landlords would eliminate rural poverty.
(During the 1940's, the Indian Federation of Labour published its People's
Plan by MN Roy) that stressed on employment and wage goods). (S.N.
Agarwala, follower of Mahatma Gandhi published Gandhian Plan that emphasized on
decentralization; agricultural development; employment; cottage industries etc.)
Planning Goals
After Independence in 1947, India launched the year plan for rapid growth. (Planning has the following long term goals).- Growth
- Modernization
- Self-reliance and
- Social justice
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