Posted: Sep 10, 2011 at 0054 hrs IST
The committee has blamed the disjunction between planning, budgeting and lack of synchronisation between the Planning Commission’s plans and implementation to be the cause of its failures. In a recent note to Plan panel Deputy Chairman Montek Singh Ahluwalia, the standing committee said that the extent of progress made so far has been “far from satisfactory” despite the Commission’s experience of over six decades of planning.
Though a good number of policy measures were initiated and interventions made at various levels, yet the development policies have not benefited majority of the country’s populace, the standing committee, headed by former finance minister Yashwant Sinha said.
This, committee argued, could be widely seen through prolonged imbalance in development across states and within the provinces, unsatisfactory human development parameters, failure in achieving desired farm sector growth, high dropout at primary level education and the absence of universalisation of higher education. The committee said the Plan panel’s policy initiatives have not helped in bridging the mismatch in demand and supply of skilled personnel, and in its inability in earmarking 2-3 per cent of the GDP to the health sector as envisaged. “On the policy front, planning in the country has failed to deliver the desired results owing the disjunction between planning and budgeting and lack of synchronisation between the plans/policies and implementation and proper monitoring. While the issue calls for an immediate and serious introspection, the committee is surprised to note that the Ministry of Planning is satisfied with tailor-made solutions like the UID scheme,” the committee said.
Stating that the commission lacked “futuristic vision” in social planning in the post-reforms period, the standing committee said that while planning was very much relevant in India, “the Planning Commission has to come to grips with the emerging social realities to reinvent itself to make itself more relevant and effective for aligning the planning process with economic reforms and its consequences for the poor.”
“The committee therefore recommend that the government should constitute an expert group immediately for evaluating the performance of the Planning Commission and re-defining its role and objectives so as to relate the planning process to the life of the common man and its role in implementation of schemes.”