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Five-Year Plans of India
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From 1947 to 2017, the Indian economy was premised on the concept of planning. This was carried through the Five-Year Plans, developed, executed, and monitored by the Planning Commission (1951-2014) and the NITI Aayog (2015-2017). With the prime minister as the ex-officio chairman, the commission has a nominated deputy chairman, who holds the rank of a cabinet minister. Montek Singh Ahluwalia is the last deputy chairman of the commission (resigned on 26 May 2014). The Twelfth Plan completed its term in March 2017.[1] Prior to the Fourth Plan, the allocation of state resources was based on schematic patterns rather than a transparent and objective mechanism, which led to the adoption of the Gadgil formula in 1969. Revised versions of the formula have been used since then to determine the allocation of central assistance for state plans.[2] The new government led by Narendra Modi, elected in 2014, has announced the dissolution of the Planning Commission, and its replacement by a think tank called the NITI Aayog (an acronym for National Institution for Transforming India).

History
First Plan (1951–1956)
Second Plan (1956–1961)
Third Plan (1961–1966)
Plan Holidays (1966–1969)
Fourth Plan (1969–1974)
Fifth Plan (1974–1978)
Rolling Plan (1978–1980)
Sixth Plan (1980–1985)
Seventh Plan (1985–1990)
Annual Plans (1990–1992)
Eighth Plan (1992–1997)
Ninth Plan (1997–2002)
Tenth Plan (2002–2007)
Eleventh Plan (2007–2012)
Twelfth Plan (2012–2017)
Future
See also
References
External links
Last edited 14 hours ago by 2409:4073:4E1D:13E2:F510:898A:9E88:DD08

Content is available under CC BY-SA 3.0 unless otherwise noted.
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Answered by pruthvichauhan
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Answer:

Here is your chance to improve coverage of Indian culinary diversity on Wikipedia.

Submit photographs and win prizes!

More details[Help with translations!]

Five-Year Plans of India

Language

Download PDF

Watch

Edit

From 1947 to 2017, the Indian economy was premised on the concept of planning. This was carried through the Five-Year Plans, developed, executed, and monitored by the Planning Commission (1951-2014) and the NITI Aayog (2015-2017). With the prime minister as the ex-officio chairman, the commission has a nominated deputy chairman, who holds the rank of a cabinet minister. Montek Singh Ahluwalia is the last deputy chairman of the commission (resigned on 26 May 2014). The Twelfth Plan completed its term in March 2017.[1] Prior to the Fourth Plan, the allocation of state resources was based on schematic patterns rather than a transparent and objective mechanism, which led to the adoption of the Gadgil formula in 1969. Revised versions of the formula have been used since then to determine the allocation of central assistance for state plans.[2] The new government led by Narendra Modi, elected in 2014, has announced the dissolution of the Planning Commission, and its replacement by a think tank called the NITI Aayog (an acronym for National Institution for Transforming India).

History

First Plan (1951–1956)

Second Plan (1956–1961)

Third Plan (1961–1966)

Plan Holidays (1966–1969)

Fourth Plan (1969–1974)

Fifth Plan (1974–1978)

Rolling Plan (1978–1980)

Sixth Plan (1980–1985)

Seventh Plan (1985–1990)

Annual Plans (1990–1992)

Eighth Plan (1992–1997)

Ninth Plan (1997–2002)

Tenth Plan (2002–2007)

Eleventh Plan (2007–2012)

Twelfth Plan (2012–2017)

Future

See also

References

External links

Last edited 14 hours ago by 2409:4073:4E1D:13E2:F510:898A:9E88:DD08

Content is available under CC BY-SA 3.0 unless otherwise noted.

Privacy policy Terms of UseDesktop

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