Planning Commission: NITI Aayog brings down curtains drawn over 65-yr-old legacy body

Planning Commission: NITI Aayog brings down curtains drawn over 65-yr-old legacy body

FP Archives January 1, 2015, 19:01:43 IST

The new institution, which would remain at its predecessor’s address, a few blocks away from the Parliament, would also have a CEO, while prime minister would be the chairperson.

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Planning Commission: NITI Aayog brings down curtains drawn over 65-yr-old legacy body

New Delhi: Set up by India’s first Prime Minister Jawaharlal Nehru, the Planning Commission brought 12 five-year plans and six annual plans involving fund outlays of over Rs 200 lakh crore in its nearly 65-year-history.

Bringing down curtains on it, the government today replaced the fabled Planning Commission (Yoyana Aayog) with a new body named NITI Aayog, or the National Institution for Transforming India.

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Prime Minister Narendra Modi with the CMs at the Retreat at Race Course Road, following the meeting with the CMs on replacing Planning Commission, in New Delhi on 07 December  2014. Image courtesy PIB

The plan panel, as it was commonly known, was set up by a simple government resolution on 15 March 1950 and has withstood many political and economic upheavals.

Incidentally, the new body has also been set up through a cabinet resolution, which has invoked words of leaders like Mahatma Gandhi, BR Ambedkar, Swami Vivekanand and Deen Dayal Upadhyaya.

It was a decisive mandate for a change of government during a politically and economically supercharged 2014 that finally led to the epitaph being written for Plan Panel.

Prime Minister Narendra Modi announced in his first Independence Day speech on 15 August 2014 that the Commission would get a replacement.

The new institution, which would remain at its predecessor’s address, a few blocks away from the Parliament, would also have a CEO, while prime minister would be the chairperson.

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While it went through numerous operational makeovers over the years of its existence, ranging from being a simple planning body to a powerful ‘control-commission’ to a fiscal decentralisation instrument to an official think-tank, the voices had begun to grow louder for an overhaul even before the new government took charge in May 2014.

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The defeat of the last UPA government, however, led to immediate resignation of the Commission’s deputy chairman, Montek Singh Ahluwalia, who was at the helm of affairs for a decade, and other members in the last week of May.

Subsequently, a consultation process was launched for suggestions on the structure and role of the new body.

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It was suggested that instead of a “Control Commission”, the new body should play the role of a catalyst and provide a platform to the Centre, states and experts to discuss issues and come out with the best solutions.

Incidentally, Nehru himself is said to have faced resistance to the idea of setting up of the Planning Commission, but it went on to become a major platform for successive governments to formulate and push forward economic policies and other development plans.

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