We will replace the Planning Commission with a new institution having a new design and structure, a new body, a new soul, a new thinking, a new direction.
These were the words of Narendra Modi on August 15, 2014, in his first Independence Day speech as Prime Minister (PM). While radical, the step was not unexpected; much commentary within and outside the government had concluded that the existing institution no longer reflected the needs and structure of an increasingly market-driven Indian economy.
Niti Aayog came into legal existence on January 1, 2015. Its first decade has been shaped by the steady and wise leadership of its chairman, PM Modi, and by India's rising profile in the global economy. It is my honour and privilege to hold the position of vice chairman at this auspicious moment, the third successive policy economist to be selected for this role.
Under our chairman's guidance, certain principles have been established which have served the institution well over the last decade.
The first has been to extract Niti Aayog from a direct financial allocation role. This is of particular relevance to India's states, which earlier had to seek the Planning Commission's funding for part of their development expenditures.
As such, the creation of Niti Aayog has marked a major move toward decentralisation. It has also prompted Niti Aayog to invent new tools to support the doctrine of "competitive and cooperative federalism". These started with data-driven comparative indicators noted later in this article and have evolved to support states (at their request) to set up state-level 'institutions of transformation' (SITs).
This story is from the January 02, 2025 edition of Hindustan Times Amritsar.
Start your 7-day Magzter GOLD free trial to access thousands of curated premium stories, and 9,000+ magazines and newspapers.
Already a subscriber ? Sign In
This story is from the January 02, 2025 edition of Hindustan Times Amritsar.
Start your 7-day Magzter GOLD free trial to access thousands of curated premium stories, and 9,000+ magazines and newspapers.
Already a subscriber? Sign In
Rohit and Virat still have the hunger, says Gambhir
No one in the team will say it, but they are all surely thinking it.
Lebrun brothers, the French connection in Thakkar's rise
Manav Thakkar, India's No.2 male paddler, noticed how the Lebrun brothers, the French siblings who have taken the table tennis world by storm, would \"invent stuff\" after training sessions even as the others would wind down.
Shipping To Get Infra Status To Push Local Shipbuilding
The government may grant infrastructure status to the shipping industry to help improve India's position among the top five countries globally in shipbuilding and ownership by 2047, two persons aware of the development said.
Harris set to certify Trump's presidential poll victory today
In a striking turn of political fortunes, Vice President Kamala Harris will preside over the certification of her own electoral defeat on January 6, marking both a constitutional milestone and the fourth anniversary of one of America's darkest days of modern democracy.
Powerful winter storm hammers parts of the US
A blast of snow, ice, wind and plunging temperatures stirred up dangerous travel conditions in parts of the central US on Sunday, as a disruptive winter storm brought the possibility of the \"heaviest snowfall in a decade\" to some areas.
Ridding Campuses of Caste Discrimination
The Supreme Court's directive asking the UGC to notify within six weeks new regulations to fight caste-based discrimination and suicides in higher education institutions (HEIs) has come not a moment too soon.
Challenges the world must confront in 2025
Global leaders will need to address questions arising from wars, the climate crisis, and evolution of Artificial Intelligence
Ensuring Digital India is safe, secure and inclusive
When we talk about the global future, then human-centric approaches should be foremost
Roping in universities for a sustainable future
Scientific and technological innovations have driven human societies toward economic growth. However, such innovations also led to irreversible consequences because of their impact on the environment.
New pain points on China border
Mega dam on Brahmaputra and new counties in occupied Ladakh can adversely affect relations