TODAY marks the 10th birthday of a national organisation—the Niti Aayog—that succeeded the Planning Commission. What was it meant to do? And what has it achieved in the last decade?
To understand what Niti Aayog could have done, we need to place on record what the Planning Commission did. Shorn of all verbiage, the Planning Commission essentially had four functions. First, it articulated a vision for the next five years for the country's economic and social development based on a political vision given to them by the Union government (which was to consult line ministries and state governments) through the National Development Council. Second, it was to formulate a five-year plan in accordance with the vision and convert it into an actionable document. Third, it was to articulate programmes to implement the vision. Finally, it was required at the beginning of each financial year to negotiate, with the finance minister and the commission's chairman (the PM) annual budget allocation for plan and non-plan funds. This then left the finance minister free to formulate the national budget for that financial year.
The last 10 years have shown that the Niti Aayog performs practically none of these four functions. India is the only Asian country which, after 2014, has no ministry planning, nor a five-year plan (other than South Korea since 1994, soon after which it became a high-income country). In the 1980s and 1990s, Latin American and sub-Saharan countries abandoned central planning under the influence of neo-liberal, IMF- and World Bank-driven structural adjustment policies. They saw their per capita incomes stagnating and poverty increasing. No Asian economy abandoned central planning and continued to grow relatively evenly.
This story is from the January 01, 2025 edition of The New Indian Express Vellore.
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 01, 2025 edition of The New Indian Express Vellore.
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
Axar Steps Into A New Role
Now part of the leadership group, the all-rounder doesn't feel the need to prove to anyone
From draught-prone village to WHIL: Rutuja Pisal story
IF you wish to visit Rutuja Pisal's village from Pune and opt to use the public vehicle, you have to get to Phaltan—a town in the northeast part of Satara district—first.
THE NEED TO CELEBRATE DIVERSITY WITHIN LGBTQIA+
Donald Trump's recent statements about abolishing \"transgender lunacy\" and emphasizing binary gender identities have sparked widespread concern.
Sinner beats dizziness, Rune in round four
JANNIK Sinner battled dizzy spells on Monday to reach an Australian Open quarter-final against Alex de Minaur, admitting a long interruption when he accidentally broke the net was \"big, big luck\".
Appavu walks out of meeting of speakers after RS deputy chief objects to remarks on TN guv
TAMIL Nadu Speaker M Appavu on Monday walked out of a meeting at the two-day 85th All India Presiding Officers' Conference in Patna after Deputy Chairman of the Rajya Sabha Harivansh Narayan Singh objected to certain remarks Appavu was making about the Tamil Nadu governor in his speech.
Gomutra claim backed by science: Kamakoti
'There are 5 research papers, including one published in Nature, that show cow urine has medicinal properties'
Admin bans community feasts in village hit by mysterious deaths
EVEN as the high-level inter-ministerial team visited remote Budhal village in Jammu and Kashmir's Rajouri district on Monday to ascertain the cause of the 17 deaths in three families due to a mysterious illness, the administration sealed the spring in the affected village after water samples from it tested positive for a few pesticides and insecticides and also banned community feasts in the village.
Allow import of panels, solar developers urge TN
SOLAR power developers in Tamil Nadu have urged the union government to allow import of cost-effective solar panels from China and other countries, at least until such time when there is a competitive domestic market for them.
HC bins Jaya death panel advisory to probe former minister Vijayabaskar
THE Madurai Bench of the Madras High Court on Monday quashed a portion of the Justice A Arumughaswamy Commission report, which recommended a probe against former health minister C Vijayabaskar in connection with the death of former chief minister J Jayalalithaa.
2025 World Cup set to be hosted in India, confirmation soon
THE official announcement may take a few more days, but in reality, India was pencilled in to host the 2025 World Cup by FIDE (chess' governing body) last year itself.