Chapter-3

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📚 JAIIB • IE & IFS • Module A • Chapter 3

Economic Planning in India & NITI Aayog

From 12 Five Year Plans to NITI Aayog — how India planned its way from a poor colony to one of the world’s fastest growing economies. Every plan tells a story.

⏱ 18 min read 🎯 High Exam Weightage 📋 All 12 Plans Covered ⚡ Flash Cards Inside

Banky is confused again! 🤔

Banky heard his manager mention “Five Year Plan targets” during the credit review meeting. He had no idea what that meant — or why the government stopped making Five Year Plans!

“Sir, I thought Five Year Plans ended long ago. What is NITI Aayog then? And why does it even matter for my bank?” 🤔
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Section 1 — Why Read This Chapter?

How economic planning directly affects your banking work

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Sir, government planning happened decades ago. Why study old history?
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Banky, it’s not old history — it’s the blueprint of everything around you! Your bank’s priority sector lending targets come from planning objectives. Agriculture loan schemes, MSME lending, rural banking — all have roots in Five Year Plans. NITI Aayog still shapes policy today. Your branch’s KPIs, your credit targets, government schemes you sell — all linked to economic planning philosophy!
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Policy Context

Every government scheme your bank implements — PM Jan Dhan, Mudra loans, Kisan Credit Card — traces back to Five Year Plan objectives of financial inclusion and rural development.

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Institutional Knowledge

Understanding Planning Commission vs NITI Aayog shows you how India shifted from top-down control to cooperative federalism. Essential for interview and promotion exams.

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JAIIB Marks

Plan periods, objectives, NITI Aayog structure and Planning Commission facts — all high-frequency exam topics. 3-5 direct questions appear from this chapter.

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Section 2 — How Will It Benefit You?

Practical career advantages from mastering this chapter

🧑‍💼
Fine sir, but will this help me beyond passing JAIIB?
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Absolutely! When a farmer asks “Sir, my Kisan Credit Card limit is ₹3 lakh — why so low?” — you understand it’s because RBI’s priority sector norms (rooted in Five Year Plan objectives) cap it based on land holding. When your bank announces new MSME schemes — you know it connects to NITI Aayog’s Atmanirbhar Bharat strategy. This chapter transforms you from a form-filler to a banker who understands why things work the way they do.
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Section 3 — What Is This Chapter About?

The full chapter in plain English

🧑‍💼
Sir, give me the 30-second version of this chapter!
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This chapter covers how India planned its economic growth after independence — through 12 Five Year Plans from 1951 to 2017. Each plan had different goals based on what India needed at that time. Then in 2015, the old Planning Commission was replaced by NITI Aayog — a modern think-tank that works with states rather than imposing targets on them. The chapter also covers the 6 objectives of economic planning and the key differences between the Planning Commission and NITI Aayog.

Section 4 — Key Definitions Like a 10-Year-Old

Every term explained as simply as possible

Planning Commission vs NITI Aayog — The Big Shift 📋 PLANNING COMMISSION (1950-2014) Top-Down approach | Centre decides, States follow • Statutory: NO (executive body) • Head: PM as Chairman, Deputy Chairman runs it • Plans approved by: National Development Council (NDC) • Style: Centralised, allocative — told states what to do • Replaced by NITI Aayog on 1 January 2015 REPLACED Jan 1, 2015 💡 NITI AAYOG (2015-Present) Bottom-Up approach | States as partners • Statutory: NO (advisory think-tank) • Head: PM as Chairperson + Vice Chairperson • Members: CMs of all states + LG of A&N Islands • Style: Cooperative Federalism — collaborates with states • Two hubs: Team India + Knowledge & Innovation Hub

Planning Commission (command and control) vs NITI Aayog (think-tank and collaborate)

Key Term
Economic Planning
“A government’s roadmap for how to grow the economy”
Since 1951

Economic planning means the government decides what to produce, how much to produce, and who gets the benefits. H.D. Dickinson defines it as “making major economic decisions by a conscious authority, based on a comprehensive survey of the economic system.” In India, the National Planning Committee (1938) defined it as technical coordination by experts of consumption, production, investment, trade and income distribution — aligned to social objectives. In simple terms: planning is how India decided to spend its limited money after independence to grow fastest and help the most people.

Key Term
Planning Commission
“India’s old economy planner — top-down controller”
1950-2014

Set up in 1950, the Planning Commission was India’s central planning body. It was not a statutory body — meaning it had no law backing it, created purely by a Cabinet resolution. The Prime Minister was its Chairman. Plans made by the Planning Commission were approved by the National Development Council (NDC), also chaired by the PM. It was criticised for being too centralised — it imposed targets on states without really involving them. This top-down approach became ineffective as India’s economy became more market-driven and diverse.

Key Term
NITI Aayog
“National Institution for Transforming India”
Jan 1, 2015

NITI Aayog was established on January 1, 2015 by a resolution of the Union Cabinet to replace the Planning Commission. NITI = National Institution for Transforming India. It functions as India’s top policy “Think Tank” — not an allocator of funds but an advisor and coordinator. Key features: PM is Chairperson; all Chief Ministers of states are members; promotes Cooperative Federalism — states are partners, not subordinates. It has two hubs: Team India Hub (coordinates state-centre engagement) and Knowledge & Innovation Hub (strategic policy vision). It also transforms itself into a cutting-edge resource centre for research and innovation.

Key Term
Five Year Plan
“Government’s 5-year action plan for economic targets”
12 Plans (1951-2017)

A Five Year Plan is a 5-year national economic roadmap with specific targets for growth, employment, poverty reduction and sector development. India had 12 Five Year Plans from 1951 to 2017. Between some plans, there were “Plan Holidays” — years when the government ran annual plans instead of five-year ones, usually due to wars, droughts or political instability. The 12th Plan (2012-17) was the last. NITI Aayog replaced the Five Year Plan system with a 15-year vision document, 7-year strategy and 3-year action plan framework — more flexible and market-aligned.

Key Term
Plan Holiday
“When government skipped 5-year planning and did annual plans”
Two instances

India had two Plan Holiday periods. First: 1966-1969 (three annual plans) — due to wars with China and Pakistan and a severe drought, the government could not commit to a 5-year plan. Second: 1990-1992 (two annual plans) — due to fast-changing political environment and the economic crisis that eventually led to the 1991 LPG reforms. A Plan Holiday is not a planning failure — it’s a pragmatic pause when circumstances make 5-year commitments unrealistic. The government continues annual planning during this period with the same broad objectives.

Key Term
Cooperative Federalism
“Centre and States working as equal partners — not boss and subordinate”
NITI’s Core

Cooperative Federalism is the philosophy behind NITI Aayog — strong states make a strong nation. Under the Planning Commission, states were given allocations and told what to do. Under NITI Aayog, states participate in decision-making, bring their own development needs to the table, and implement strategies suited to their local context. All Chief Ministers sit on NITI Aayog’s Governing Council. This shift recognises that a farmer in Tamil Nadu has different needs than one in Uttarakhand — and one-size-fits-all central planning doesn’t work in a diverse country like India.

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Section 5 — Chapter Explained in Blocks

All 12 Five Year Plans + 6 Objectives + NITI Aayog

6 Objectives of Economic Planning in India 📈 Economic Growth Sustainable rise in GDP output 🏚️ Poverty Alleviation Multiple schemes by all govts 💼 Employment Generation
Reduce unemployment ⚖️ Social Justice & Equality Reduce inter & intra inequalities 🏭 Self-Reliant Economy Combat global subservience 🔬 Modernise the Economy Industrialise traditional sectors

6 core objectives of India’s economic planning — from independence to today

The 12 Five Year Plans — each told a chapter of India’s story. First 3 plans focused on agriculture and heavy industry. Plans 4-7 dealt with wars, droughts and political crises. Plans 8-12 are the reform era — growth, globalisation and inclusion. The last two Annual Plan periods between plans are called Plan Holidays.
Quick Memory Hook

1-3: Foundation era
4-7: Crisis era
8-12: Reform era
Last plan: 12th (2012-17)

PlanPeriodKey Theme / GoalActual Growth
1st Plan1951-1956Agriculture, irrigation, power — food self-sufficiency. 44.6% outlay to public sector.3.6% (target 2.1%)
2nd Plan1956-1961Fast industrialisation — heavy industries & capital goods. Mahalanobis model. Steel plants at Bhilai, Durgapur, Rourkela. 5 IITs established.4.27% (target 4.5%)
3rd Plan1961-1965National income growth >5%, agricultural self-sufficiency. Disrupted by wars with China (1962) and Pakistan (1965) and drought.2.4% (target 5.6%)
Plan Holiday 11966-1969Three Annual Plans — war aftermath and drought. New agricultural strategy with HYV seeds introduced.Annual Plans
4th Plan1969-1974Growth with stability, progress toward self-sufficiency (Gadgil strategy). Bank nationalisation. Indo-Pak War 1971-72 diverted funds.Low
5th Plan1974-1979Poverty eradication and self-sufficiency. Twenty-Point Programme (1975). Ended early in 1978 due to change of government (Janata Party).
6th Plan1980-1985Poverty alleviation — rural infrastructure. IRDP (Integrated Rural Development Programme). Broke the Hindu Rate of Growth curse.5.5% (above target)
7th Plan1985-1990Rapid food grain, employment and productivity. Jawahar Rojgar Yojana (JRY) introduced 1989. Balance of payments deteriorated by end.6%+
Plan Holiday 21990-1992Two Annual Plans — economic crisis, political instability. Led to 1991 LPG reforms.Annual Plans
8th Plan1992-1997First plan post-LPG reforms. Indicative planning concept introduced. Market-based development. Decentralisation emphasis.6.7% (target 5.6%)
9th Plan1997-2002“Growth with justice and equity.” 7 Basic Minimum Services (BMS). Impacted by South-East Asian Financial Crisis (1996-97).6.8% (target 7.1%)
10th Plan2002-2007Double per capita income in 10 years. Monitorable targets for 11 indicators. Agriculture declared Prime Moving Force (PMF).7.7% (target 8.1%)
11th Plan2007-2012“Faster and more inclusive growth” — 10% growth target. Fiscal Responsibility Act concerns raised.7.5% (target 9%)
12th Plan2012-2017“Faster, more inclusive and sustainable growth.” 9% growth target. Energy, water, agriculture emphasis. Last Five Year Plan.6.7% (target 9%)
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Section 6 — Exam Angle Points

Everything JAIIB actually asks from this chapter

✅ Must-Know Facts — High Frequency in JAIIB

  • NITI Aayog established: January 1, 2015 by resolution of Union Cabinet
  • NITI Aayog full form: National Institution for Transforming India
  • NITI Aayog replaced: Planning Commission (established 1950)
  • NITI Aayog Chairperson: Prime Minister of India
  • Governing Council members: PM + CMs of all states + LG of Andaman & Nicobar Islands
  • NITI Aayog’s two hubs: Team India Hub + Knowledge and Innovation Hub
  • Planning Commission — statutory body? NO — created by executive resolution
  • Plans approved by: National Development Council (NDC) — chaired by PM
  • Total Five Year Plans: 12 (from 1951 to 2017)
  • First Five Year Plan: 1951-1956 | Priority: Agriculture, irrigation
  • Second Five Year Plan: 1956-1961 | Mahalanobis model | Heavy industry focus
  • Plan Holiday 1: 1966-1969 (3 annual plans) — wars and drought
  • Plan Holiday 2: 1990-1992 (2 annual plans) — economic crisis pre-LPG
  • Last Five Year Plan: 12th Plan (2012-2017)
  • 6 Objectives of Planning: Economic Growth, Poverty Alleviation, Employment, Social Justice, Self-Reliance, Modernisation
  • 8th Plan unique feature: First plan to examine macroeconomic strategies, introduced Indicative Planning concept
  • 9th Plan theme: Growth with justice and equity | 7 Basic Minimum Services
  • 10th Plan — Agriculture declared: Prime Moving Force (PMF) of economy
  • 11th Plan theme: Faster and more inclusive growth
  • 12th Plan theme: Faster, more inclusive and sustainable growth
  • National Planning Committee: Set up in 1938 by Indian National Congress
  • NITI Aayog philosophy: Cooperative Federalism — strong states = strong nation

📝 Previous Year / Practice Questions

Q: NITI Aayog was established on?
A: January 1, 2015 by resolution of Union Cabinet
Q: NITI Aayog replaced which body?
A: Planning Commission (established 1950)
Q: Who chairs NITI Aayog?
A: Prime Minister of India
Q: Which was the last Five Year Plan of India?
A: 12th Five Year Plan (2012-2017)
Q: Period of the first Plan Holiday in India?
A: 1966-1969 (three annual plans due to wars and drought)
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Section 7 — Memory Tricks

Never forget plan periods, themes and NITI Aayog facts

Banky’s Planning Memory Board Plans 1-7 (1951-90) Agri → Industry → Wars → Poverty → Employment “Before Reform India” Plans 8-12 (1992-2017) LPG Reform → Growth → Inclusive → Sustainable “After Reform India” Plan Holidays 1966-69: Wars + Drought 1990-92: Crisis pre-LPG “Both times = crisis!” NITI Aayog Jan 1, 2015 | PM chairs All CMs as members “New Year, New Body!”

Memory board — categorise all 12 plans into 3 eras + know NITI Aayog basics

Trick 1 — NITI Aayog Date

Established January 1, 2015
“New Year, New Planning Body!”
NITI Aayog was born on January 1, 2015 — New Year’s Day! India gave itself a New Year gift by replacing the old Planning Commission with a modern think-tank. Every New Year’s Day, remember: NITI Aayog’s birthday. You’ll never forget this date again!

Trick 2 — 6 Planning Objectives

Growth, Poverty, Employment, Justice, Self-reliance, Modernisation
“Great People Enjoy Just Simple Meals”
Growth → Poverty alleviation → Employment → Justice/Equality → Self-reliance → Modernisation. “Great People Enjoy Just Simple Meals” — 6 words, 6 objectives. The order roughly matches the priority India gave them over the planning era.

Trick 3 — Two Plan Holidays

1966-69 and 1990-92 — both during crises
“Plans take holiday when India has a crisis!”
Both Plan Holidays happened during severe national crises. 1966-69 = wars with China and Pakistan + drought. 1990-92 = economic crisis + political instability that led to 1991 LPG reforms. Simple rule: Plan Holiday = India in crisis. Remember 66 and 90 — both years end in 6 or 0!

Trick 4 — Mahalanobis and 2nd Plan

2nd Plan (1956-61) = Mahalanobis model = Heavy Industry
“Second plan = Steel and Machines by Mahalanobis”
Professor P.C. Mahalanobis designed India’s 2nd Plan focused on heavy industry and capital goods. Result: Steel plants built at Bhilai, Durgapur and Rourkela. Also 5 IITs established. Think: 2nd Plan = 2 things — Steel + IITs. Mahalanobis = “Maha” (great) + industrialisation plan!

Trick 5 — Planning Commission vs NITI Aayog

PC = Boss of states | NITI = Partner of states
“PC = Parent Command | NITI = National Team!”
Planning Commission (PC) told states what to do — like a strict parent commanding children. NITI Aayog treats states as a national team — all playing together. PC: states had no say. NITI: all CMs sit on Governing Council. Both have PM as head but completely different philosophy! PC = top-down, NITI = bottom-up.

Trick 6 — Last Plan + NITI Aayog

12th Plan ended 2017 → NITI Aayog took over
“After 12 plans, India said ENOUGH — bring in NITI!”
India ran 12 Five Year Plans from 1951 to 2017 — a total of 66 years of Five Year Planning! The 12th plan was the last. From 2017 onwards, NITI Aayog replaced the Five Year Plan system with a 15-year vision + 7-year strategy + 3-year action plan. Remember: 12 = a dozen = complete. After a dozen plans, India changed the system!
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Section 8 — Visual Summary Diagram

India’s complete planning journey in one picture

Economic Planning in India — Complete Timeline 1951-1965 🌾 Plans 1-3 Agriculture Heavy Industry IITs + Steel Plants Foundation Era 1966-69 Plan Holiday 1 Wars + Drought Annual Plans 1969-1990 ⚔️ Plans 4-7 Wars, Poverty Bank Nationalise JRY Scheme Crisis Era 1990-92 Plan Holiday 2 Economic Crisis Led to LPG 1991 1992-2017 🚀 Plans 8-12 LPG Reforms Inclusive Growth Sustainable Dev Reform Era Jan 1, 2015 💡 NITI Aayog Think Tank Cooperative Fed. PM Chairs Modern Era NITI Aayog Structure • Chairperson: Prime Minister of India • Vice Chairperson: Appointed by PM • Governing Council: PM + All CMs + LG of A&N Islands • Two Hubs: Team India Hub + Knowledge & Innovation Hub 6 Planning Objectives 1. Economic Growth 2. Poverty Alleviation 3. Employment Generation 4. Social Justice 5. Self-Reliant Economy 6. Modernisation Memory: “Great People Enjoy Just Simple Meals” BankerBro.com • Free JAIIB Study Material • IE&IFS Module A Chapter 3

India’s complete planning journey — from First Plan (1951) to NITI Aayog (2015-present)

Section 9 — Quick Revision Flash Cards

Read these 10 minutes before your JAIIB exam!

NITI Aayog Established
January 1, 2015
By resolution of Union Cabinet — replaced Planning Commission
NITI Aayog Full Form
National Institution for Transforming India
India’s top policy “Think Tank” — not an allocator of funds
NITI Aayog Chairperson
Prime Minister of India
All CMs of states + LG of A&N Islands in Governing Council
NITI Aayog’s Two Hubs
Team India + Knowledge & Innovation
Team India = state-centre coordination | KI Hub = policy research
Planning Commission
Est. 1950 | NOT statutory
PM = Chairman | Plans approved by NDC | Headed by Deputy Chairman
Total Five Year Plans
12 Plans (1951-2017)
Last Plan = 12th (2012-17) | Replaced by NITI Aayog framework
Plan Holiday 1
1966-1969 (3 Annual Plans)
Wars with China + Pakistan + drought — unable to commit to 5-year plan
Plan Holiday 2
1990-1992 (2 Annual Plans)
Economic crisis + political instability → led to 1991 LPG reforms
2nd Plan Architect
Prof. Mahalanobis
Heavy industry + capital goods focus | Steel plants + 5 IITs established
9th Plan Theme
Growth with Justice and Equity
7 Basic Minimum Services (BMS) | Affected by SE Asian Financial Crisis
10th Plan Unique Feature
Agriculture = Prime Moving Force
First plan with monitorable targets for 11 development indicators
12th Plan Theme
Faster, Inclusive, Sustainable Growth
9% target, 6.7% actual | Last Five Year Plan of India

⚡ Chapter 3 Complete — Economic Planning in India & NITI Aayog

  • India has had 12 Five Year Plans from 1951 to 2017 — covering 66 years of planned economic development
  • 6 objectives of economic planning: Economic Growth, Poverty Alleviation, Employment, Social Justice, Self-Reliance, Modernisation
  • Planning Commission set up 1950 — NOT a statutory body — headed by PM as Chairman and Deputy Chairman
  • Plans approved by National Development Council (NDC) — chaired by the Prime Minister
  • Plan Holiday 1: 1966-1969 (3 annual plans) — wars with China and Pakistan + drought
  • Plan Holiday 2: 1990-1992 (2 annual plans) — economic crisis that led to 1991 LPG reforms
  • 2nd Plan (1956-61): Mahalanobis model — heavy industry, steel plants at Bhilai/Durgapur/Rourkela, 5 IITs
  • 8th Plan (1992-97): First plan post-LPG reforms, introduced Indicative Planning concept
  • 10th Plan (2002-07): Agriculture declared Prime Moving Force (PMF) of economy
  • 12th Plan (2012-17): Last Five Year Plan — theme: Faster, More Inclusive and Sustainable Growth
  • NITI Aayog: Established January 1, 2015 — National Institution for Transforming India
  • NITI Aayog Chairperson = PM | All CMs on Governing Council | Philosophy = Cooperative Federalism
  • NITI Aayog has Two Hubs: Team India Hub (state coordination) + Knowledge & Innovation Hub (policy think-tank)

Banky says: “Now I know exactly why we have PSL targets and rural schemes!” 🎉

You can now recite all 12 plans, both plan holiday periods, the difference between Planning Commission and NITI Aayog, and 6 planning objectives. Next time your manager mentions “plan targets” — you’ll be the one explaining it! 💪

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