OPENING REMARKS
BY THE PRIME MINISTER AT
THE FULL PLANNING COMMISSION MEETING
The Prime Minister
chaired a meeting of the full Planning Commission to consider
the draft of the Tenth Five Year Plan, here today. The Prime Minister
reiterated the need to achieve speedier and more balanced development
in order to overcome poverty and under-development. Shri Vajpayee
underscored the need for accelerated tax reforms, fiscal prudence,
efficient and productive investment, public-private partnership,
smooth energy-transport-water infrastructure and governance reforms.
Following is the
text of the opening remarks of the Prime Minister:
"I welcome you
all to this full Planning Commission meeting today. We are meeting
to consider the draft of the Tenth Five Year Plan.
The Tenth Plan, which
is the first Five Year Plan of the new century, is an important
milestone in India’s journey of planned development. The country
has amassed a wealth of experience and learnt many useful lessons
from this journey. Major changes have taken place in our national
economy as well as in the global economy during the past five
decades.
Planning in India
is not a static concept. It is not enslaved by any dogma. It has
to respond to the changing developmental needs of the nation.
It has to take into account the dominant new trends in the national
and global economies. The draft of the Tenth Plan reflects this
dynamic quality, insofar as it has incorporated the rich experience
of the past, and prepares us to face the challenges of the present
and the future.
The biggest challenge
before us is how to achieve speedier and more balanced development,
so that India can leave behind the problems of the last century
– namely, poverty and underdevelopment –- and march confidently
to becoming a Developed Nation before the end of the second decade
in this new century.
You will recall
that, more than a year and a half ago, I had wondered whether
the Indian economy could grow at a rate by which we would be able
to double the per capita income of our people within ten years.
I have always felt that our country has the potential, in terms
of human, physical and natural resources, to perform substantially
better than it has done in the past. I was unwilling to believe
that it was not possible for us to achieve what other countries
in our neighbourhood had done, sometimes with much lower endowments
than ours.
I had directed the
Planning Commission to examine the feasibility of attaining such
acceleration in our growth rate and to outline the steps that
would be necessary. Just over a year ago, the Approach Paper to
the Tenth Plan was prepared, which clearly reaffirmed my belief
in the immense hidden potential of our country. It indicated that
it was indeed possible for the economy to achieve an 8 per cent
average annual GDP growth during the Tenth Plan period, which
could be further accelerated in the Eleventh Plan to attain a
doubling of per capita income in ten years.
The Approach Paper
also brought to the fore a serious lesson. It reminded us that
our achievements on social and environmental indicators, which
reflect the welfare of our people and the sustainability of our
developmental process, were deficient. It made us realize that
it was necessary to specify quantifiable and monitorable targets,
towards which we could work collectively.
This was by no means
an easy task. It required us to harness full political commitment
on a wide range of reforms covering policies, procedures and institutions.
We went to the National
Development Council with the Approach Paper and placed the issues
before it without in any way glossing over the problems that could
be encountered and the difficult decisions that would have to
be taken. I regard the unanimous endorsement by the NDC of the
8 per cent growth target, and the extensive reform measures that
would make it achievable, as a measure of the national resolve.
Since then, it is
being widely realized that achieving an 8 per cent growth target
is not merely desirable; it is inescapable if we are to meet the
legitimate and long-unfulfilled aspirations of our people.
I am told that the
rate of growth of our labour force during the coming years will
be such that unless we achieve an over 8 per cent GDP growth,
the rate of unemployment could rise further at the end of the
Plan period. We simply cannot imagine such a situation, much less
tolerate it.
We have made a solemn
commitment to the youth of this country that our economy would
generate one crore employment and self-employment opportunities
each year. Our Plan and our policies must deliver on this promise.
There are, therefore, compelling reasons for us to examine every
conceivable way to accelerate the rate of growth and the pace
of employment generation.
I am, of course,
aware that in recent years our economy has not performed up to
our expectations. There is even skepticism in some quarters: Is
at all feasible for us to climb from a rate of growth of 5.5 per
cent last year to 8 per cent in the Tenth Plan?
It is when the climb
is steep that a good mountaineer musters his hidden strength and
determination. Similarly, our nation has to prepare itself for
the big challenges ahead of us.
Moreover, we have
no choice. The issue before us is not whether we can achieve a
significantly higher growth rate; rather, it is whether we can
afford not to.
The answer is obvious:
We cannot afford to set a lower growth target if we want to move
towards our cherished dream of building an India free of poverty,
illiteracy and homelessness, free of regional, social and gender
disparities and with a modern physical and social infrastructure
and effective conservation of our environment and natural resources
that would help us achieve high Human Development levels; and,
above all, if we want India to be capable of facing all possible
challenges to her national security.
I wish to underscore
once again that achieving these objectives will entail many difficult
decisions. These simply cannot be avoided.
- Tax reforms will have to be accelerated.
We must quickly move towards an integrated Central and State
Value Added Taxation system for goods and services.
- Fiscal prudence, with all its
attendant measures, will have to be pursued vigorously both
by the Centre and State Governments.
- We have to squeeze maximum efficiency
and productivity from every rupee of investment already made.
Specifically, we must utilize excess capacity effectively, upgrade
existing capital assets, raise the knowledge and skill level
of our workforce in all sectors; reduce public sector dissavings,
and remove all non-financial barriers to speedier development.
It is for this reason that we have to effect labour reforms,
remove legal and other restrictions in the evolution of a national
market, particularly for agriculture, and actively pursue disinvestment
of our PSUs.
- We have to adopt public-private
partnerships in the widest possible range of activities in both
physical and social infrastructure to leverage private sector
resources for development.
- Removal of the bottlenecks in
our energy-transport-and-water infrastructure is a task that
cannot be delayed any longer. I am deeply worried by the very
slow pace of power sector reforms. One of the principal reasons
why our current growth rate is stagnating at around 5.5% is
due to severe infrastructural constraints, which can only be
eased by accelerating reforms.
- Our experience of over ten years
of economic reforms has clearly shown that these cannot yield
optimal results without concomitant governance reforms – reforms
in our administrative system, judiciary and internal security
system. In the economic sphere, the primary aim of these governance
reforms will have to be greater encouragement to private entrepreneurship,
with the government strengthening its role in the formulation
and implementation of policies, legislation, regulation, and
facilitation, and exiting from direct participation in production
and distribution.
It is obvious that
State Governments would have to extend their fullest and most
enthusiastic cooperation to the Centre, if all these daunting
tasks are to be accomplished.
It is also equally
obvious that we have to effectively communicate the goals, strategies
and tasks of the Tenth Plan to various constituencies of our diverse
society, without whose support we cannot move ahead rapidly. We
should generate enthusiasm about the Plan and its targets among
our people. We can achieve these ambitious targets only when we
are able to make Development a People’s Movement, and the Tenth
Plan a People’s Plan. I seek the cooperation of all the political
parties, social organizations, voluntary agencies and the media
in this important endeavour.
Friends,
There is much debate
these days on the content and direction of India’s development,
as also on the policies and strategies that we should follow to
realize our developmental goals. This is natural in a democracy;
it is even desirable provided the debate is conducted in a constructive
manner with a desire to promote consensus.
The draft Tenth Plan
addresses the concerns voiced in this debate. For example, it
has consciously adopted the path of Growth With Employment and
Equity, not Jobless Growth that widens disparities. Accordingly,
it lays much emphasis on speeding up the development of our agriculture,
agro-industries, small-scale and cottage industries, and the whole
array of activities in the informal sector. It stresses the need
to increase the flow of credit to this sector through micro-finance
and other measures. In addition, we must ensure that a range of
legal impediments faced by the unorganised sector are quickly
removed.
Another concern is
about the role of Foreign Direct Investment. I would like to allay
all apprehensions on this score. We have to achieve our developmental
goals by our own efforts and primarily by harnessing our own resources.
The draft Plan makes it very clear that the bulk of the vastly
higher level of savings and investments needed to achieve the
8 per cent growth target would have to come from domestic sources.
However, we need
greater inflow of FDI to supplement our domestic resources, in
areas where it would strengthen our economy and enhance our competitiveness.
We also need to increase our trade and technology cooperation
with other countries. But let there be no worry in any quarter
that we would follow such an FDI policy as would weaken Indian
industry or hurt our national interests. This will never happen.
I congratulate the
Deputy Chairman of the Planning Commission and his team for having
laboured hard to flesh out the details of a plan of action, which
would enable us to achieve our objectives. The draft Tenth Five
Year Plan is now before us. It is a formidable document, reflecting
the intellectual effort that has gone into its preparation.
I would request the
Deputy Chairman to make a brief presentation of its salient features
so that we can deliberate upon the strategy that is proposed and
the specific suggestions that have been made.
At the end of this
meeting, we shall formally adopt the Tenth Plan document."