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Green Revolution, NITI Aayog & Exercises

🎓 Class 12 Social Science CBSE Theory Chapter 3 — Politics of Planned Development ⏱ ~28 min
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Class 12 · Political Science · Politics in India Since Independence

Land Reforms, Green Revolution, White Revolution & End of Planning

Land reform on paper, hunger in the field, food self-sufficiency in the kitchen — and the end of an era. How India fed itself, why the Planning Commission gave way to NITI Aayog, and what the politics of planning teaches us today.

3.17 The Land Question — Reforms on Paper, Politics on the Ground

The First Five Year Plan had identified the pattern of land distribution as the principal obstacle to agricultural growth. India inherited from the British a deeply unequal agrarian structure dominated by absentee landlords — zamindars — who collected rents from millions of insecure tenants. After Independence, four kinds of land reform were attempted:

🏛️
① Zamindari Abolition
Abolition of intermediaries between the state and the cultivator. Begun in 1950 in Uttar Pradesh; spread to all states by the late 1950s.
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② Tenancy Reforms
Security of tenure for tenants, fair rents, the right to purchase land they had cultivated for years.
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③ Land Ceilings
A legal upper limit on the amount of land any one family could own; surplus land to be redistributed to the landless.
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④ Cooperative Farming
Voluntary pooling of small holdings into cooperative units to reap economies of scale. Strongly pushed at the 1959 Nagpur session.

3.17.1 Zamindari Abolition — A Partial Success

Zamindari abolition? was the most successful of the four land reforms. Beginning with the U.P. Zamindari Abolition and Land Reforms Act of 1950, every state passed legislation abolishing the intermediaries who had stood between the state and the cultivator under colonial law. Roughly 200 lakh tenants were brought into a direct relationship with the state, and an enormous concentration of rural power was dismantled. Compensation was paid to the former zamindars, often through long-dated bonds, and many of them re-emerged as influential entrepreneurs, traders or politicians in the new India.

3.17.2 Tenancy Reform & Land Ceilings — Largely on Paper

Other reforms were less successful. Tenancy laws protecting the cultivator from eviction were widely evaded by registering land in fictitious names or by formally evicting tenants before the law took effect. Land ceilings? — a legal upper limit on land ownership — were enacted state by state, but landlords transferred holdings to relatives, deities, mistresses and even pet animals to evade the law. By 1990, only about 2 % of cultivated land in India had actually been redistributed under ceiling laws, and the majority of the rural poor were still landless.

3.17.3 Cooperative Farming — The Nagpur Resolution and Its Failure

At the Nagpur session of the Congress in 1959, Nehru pushed through a resolution favouring joint cooperative farming. The resolution faced strong opposition from rich peasants and from the conservative wing of the Congress led by people such as Charan Singh, who argued that small peasant proprietors were the natural form of Indian agriculture and that cooperative farming was a Soviet-style attack on private property. The opposition prevailed, and joint cooperative farming was quietly abandoned. Cooperative marketing and credit would, however, succeed handsomely later — in the form of the dairy cooperatives of the White Revolution.

📌 Why Land Reform Mattered Politically
Land reform was never simply a question of efficiency. It touched the foundation of rural power. Where it succeeded — as in Kerala, West Bengal and parts of Maharashtra — political mobilisation of the landless had been strong. Where it failed — as in Bihar, Madhya Pradesh and parts of Andhra Pradesh — the dominant landed castes managed to capture the state machinery itself. The patchwork outcome of land reform was therefore one of the deepest sources of regional political diversity in independent India.

3.18 The Green Revolution — Food Self-Sufficiency by 1971–72

The food crisis of 1965–66 was a turning point. India had to import millions of tonnes of wheat from the United States under the PL-480 programme. The political humiliation was acute — when President Lyndon Johnson held back wheat shipments to put pressure on Indian foreign policy, the leadership realised that food import dependence was a national security threat. India needed to feed itself.

The answer came from agricultural science. Under the leadership of agronomist M.S. Swaminathan? (often called the "Father of the Indian Green Revolution") and inspired by Norman Borlaug's wheat varieties developed in Mexico, India introduced high-yielding variety (HYV) seeds of wheat and rice in selected, well-irrigated districts from the mid-1960s. The new seeds responded dramatically to chemical fertilisers, assured irrigation and pesticides. Yields trebled within a few seasons.

📖 Definition — Green Revolution
The Green Revolution refers to the dramatic increase in food grain production in India from the mid-1960s, achieved by introducing high-yielding variety (HYV) seeds of wheat and rice along with chemical fertilisers, assured irrigation, pesticides and farm machinery. India was declared self-sufficient in food grains by 1971–72, ending decades of dependence on imports.

3.18.1 Where the Revolution Happened

The Green Revolution did not arrive everywhere at once. It was concentrated in regions that already had assured irrigation, credit and marketing networks — primarily Punjab, Haryana and Western Uttar Pradesh in the northern wheat belt, and in pockets of coastal Andhra Pradesh and Tamil Nadu for rice. By the early 1970s the country had moved from chronic shortage to a comfortable buffer stock; by the 1980s it was a net exporter of wheat and rice.

The Green Revolution — Where It Took Root Punjab Haryana Western UP Coastal AP Tamil Nadu 🌾 Wheat belt 🌾 Rice belt Intensity of Green Revolution Very high (Punjab/Haryana) Significant (W.UP, AP, TN) Limited / bypassed
Figure 3.5 — Schematic map of the regions that benefited most from the Green Revolution; large parts of eastern India and rainfed dryland regions were largely bypassed.

3.18.2 Political Consequences of the Green Revolution

The Green Revolution transformed Indian politics in three lasting ways. First, it produced a new class of prosperous middle peasants — owner-cultivators with 5 to 25 acres of HYV-irrigated land in Punjab, Haryana, Western UP and Maharashtra. These middle peasants soon became a powerful political constituency. Second, it generated regional disparities: irrigated India pulled ahead of rainfed India, deepening east–west and within-state inequalities. Third, it gave rise to new peasant-based political parties demanding higher procurement prices, cheap inputs and farm subsidies — most famously Charan Singh's Bharatiya Lok Dal, formed in 1974, which channelled middle-peasant grievances into a national political force.

👤 Personality — M.S. Swaminathan (1925–2023)
Mankombu Sambasivan Swaminathan, an Indian agricultural scientist often called the "Father of the Indian Green Revolution". Working with the Indian Agricultural Research Institute and the Indian Council of Agricultural Research, he led the introduction of HYV wheat seeds to Punjab and adapted them to Indian conditions in collaboration with Norman Borlaug. He later founded the M.S. Swaminathan Research Foundation (1988) and chaired the National Commission on Farmers (2004–06), whose recommendations on minimum support prices remain politically central even today.
📊 India's Food Grain Production, 1950–2024 (million tonnes)

3.19 The White Revolution — Operation Flood & the Anand Model

If the Green Revolution gave India self-sufficiency in food grains, the White Revolution made it the largest milk producer in the world. The story began in 1946 with a small dairy cooperative in Anand, Gujarat, founded by farmer-leaders to break the monopoly of private milk traders. Under the leadership of Verghese Kurien? — a young Kerala-born dairy engineer — the Kaira District Cooperative Milk Producers' Union (Amul) developed an extraordinary three-tier model.

📖 The "Anand Model"
A three-tier dairy cooperative structure: village-level milk-collection societies → district-level cooperative unions (which process and market the milk) → state-level federations (which handle large-scale marketing and exports). Producers own the cooperative, fix their own prices and elect the management. The model unites lakhs of small dairy farmers — most of them landless or marginal — into a large, market-facing enterprise without surrendering their independence.

In 1965, Prime Minister Lal Bahadur Shastri set up the National Dairy Development Board (NDDB) with Verghese Kurien as Chairman, and in 1970 the NDDB launched Operation Flood — a programme that replicated the Anand model across India. Operation Flood ran in three phases (1970–96) and made India the world's largest milk producer by the early 1990s. Today the AMUL brand is owned by lakhs of small dairy farmers in Gujarat, and the Anand model has inspired cooperatives in oilseeds, fruit, vegetables and even handlooms. Verghese Kurien is therefore remembered as the "Father of the White Revolution", and the cooperative principle is one of the great success stories of post-Independence development.

LET'S EXPLORE — Two Revolutions Compared
Bloom: L4 Analyse

The Green Revolution (M.S. Swaminathan) and the White Revolution (Verghese Kurien) both transformed Indian agriculture in the same decades. Compare them along the following dimensions.

  1. Who benefited the most — large farmers, middle peasants, or marginal producers? Why?
  2. Which revolution depended more on state subsidy? Which on cooperative organisation?
  3. Which produced more regional inequality? Which produced more regional integration?
✅ Pointers
The Green Revolution favoured the irrigation-rich regions and the middle and large farmers who could afford fertiliser and tube-well credit. The White Revolution, organised on cooperative lines from Anand, reached marginal and landless dairy producers — including women — across many regions including the dry Saurashtra and the eastern states. Greens depended heavily on state subsidies; Whites depended on member-owned cooperatives. The Green Revolution deepened regional inequality between irrigated and rainfed India; Operation Flood pulled scattered producers into a single national milk market — closer to regional integration than to fresh inequality.

3.20 Controversies and Limitations

For all its successes, the planned development era left a record of important limitations that shaped the politics of the next two decades.

3.20.1 Regional Inequality

Punjab, Haryana, Western UP and the urban industrial belts pulled ahead while Bihar, Odisha, Eastern UP, Madhya Pradesh and most rainfed dryland regions fell behind. Public-sector industries clustered around mineral resources — Bhilai, Rourkela, Bokaro — and the heavy industrial belt enriched a few districts while leaving large swathes of the country untouched. By the 1980s, regional inequality had become one of the major drivers of regional political parties demanding fairer treatment from the Centre.

3.20.2 Ecological Costs

The Green Revolution's reliance on chemical fertilisers, pesticides and tube-well irrigation exhausted soils, contaminated groundwater and depleted aquifers, especially in Punjab. The narrow choice of HYV seeds reduced biodiversity in farming systems. Big dams displaced lakhs of people — particularly tribal populations — and submerged forests and farmland; movements such as the Narmada Bachao Andolan in the 1980s gave political voice to these concerns. Industrial pollution from steel, fertiliser and chemical plants degraded local environments. The Bhopal gas tragedy of 1984 was the most catastrophic example.

3.20.3 Social Tensions

The middle peasants who gained from the Green Revolution were often dominant-caste landowners; landless Dalit labourers benefited far less. In Punjab, this created social and religious tensions that fed into the politics of the 1980s. In other regions the failure of land reform left rural class structures intact, fuelling movements such as the naxalite uprising in Bihar, West Bengal and Andhra Pradesh from the late 1960s.

3.20.4 Inefficiency & the Licence-Permit Raj

The protected industrial sector developed a reputation for high prices, low quality and limited innovation. Government licences for production, expansion and import became more valuable than the products themselves, and a small group of well-connected industrialists captured them — what later commentators called "crony capitalism". Public-sector enterprises were often weighed down by political appointments, soft budget constraints and union politics. By the 1980s the case for reform — for reducing licences, opening to imports and disinvesting in non-strategic state enterprises — was widely accepted across the political spectrum.

3.21 The End of the Planning Era — Planning Commission to NITI Aayog

The crisis of 1991 — a balance-of-payments emergency that nearly bankrupted the country — forced India to undertake structural reforms. The new policy of liberalisation, privatisation and globalisation reduced the importance of central planning. The Planning Commission lived on into the 21st century but with diminished influence. Five Year Plans continued — the Twelfth and last Plan ran from 2012 to 2017 — but they no longer commanded the obedience of the 1950s.

On 1 January 2015, the Government of India formally replaced the Planning Commission with a new institution: NITI Aayog — the National Institution for Transforming India. NITI Aayog was conceived as a think-tank and convener rather than as an allocator of central funds. Its Governing Council includes the Chief Ministers of all states and the Lieutenant Governors of all union territories — built deliberately to give states a stronger voice in policy than the old Planning Commission had ever done.

Planning Commission (1950–2014) → NITI Aayog (2015–) Planning Commission (1950–2014) • Set up by a Cabinet resolution, March 1950 • PM as Chairperson; Deputy Chair is full-time • Drafts the Five Year Plans • Allocates Central plan funds to states • Top-down ("command-and-allocate") • Chairs of states meet through the NDC • 12 Five-Year Plans drafted (1951–2017) Strengths: heavy industry base, public-sector core, long-term project planning, statistics Weaknesses: centralisation, licence-raj 2015 NITI Aayog (1 Jan 2015 →) • "National Institution for Transforming India" • PM as Chairperson; Vice-Chair full-time • Acts as a think-tank, not an allocator • Governing Council: all CMs & LGs • Bottom-up: cooperative federalism • Three-Year, Seven-Year, Fifteen-Year docs • No fixed Five-Year Plans Strengths: stronger state voice, flexibility, faster policy innovation, cross-sector indices Limitation: no formal allocation power
Figure 3.6 — From "command-and-allocate" Planning Commission to "convene-and-advise" NITI Aayog: a structural change reflecting the move from a command economy to a federal market economy.
📊 Public vs Private Sector Share in Gross Capital Formation (illustrative %)

3.22 Conclusion — What Did Planning Achieve?

The achievements of the planned development era were real and durable. India built a heavy industrial base, dams and irrigation networks, public-sector institutions, IITs and IIMs, an atomic energy programme, the Indian Statistical Institute and a comprehensive system of Five Year Plans. Above all, India achieved food self-sufficiency by 1971–72 through the Green Revolution and became the world's largest milk producer through the White Revolution. These were not the achievements of one party or one Prime Minister; they were the achievements of an entire generation that took the third great challenge of post-Independence India — economic development — seriously.

The limitations were also real. India did not eliminate poverty in the planning era; it slowed but did not break inequality; it built protected industries that would later struggle in global competition; and it did not always weigh ecological and social costs adequately. The strategy was abandoned in later years not because planning had failed in the 1950s — it had been needed then — but because the conditions of the 21st century required a different mix of state, market and citizen action. The story that began in 1944 with the Bombay Plan and the resolution of March 1950 closed in 2015 with NITI Aayog.

Yet the political question with which the chapter began — "What kind of development does Orissa need? Whose need can be called Orissa's need?" — remains. The institutions of planning have changed; the politics of development has not. Every choice about steel, dams, mining, forests and farmers still weighs the interests of one social group against another, and every choice still has to be made through the processes of democratic politics. That is why the politics of planned development is not a closed chapter in our history, but a continuing chapter in our public life.

📝 Chapter Summary

Three challenges of independent India — nation-building, democracy-building, and economic development. This chapter focused on the third.

The development debate (1940s–50s): four models — Western liberal-capitalist, Soviet socialist, Gandhian decentralised, Nehruvian mixed economy. Bombay Plan (1944) showed that even Indian industrialists wanted state-led planning.

Planning Commission set up in March 1950 by a simple Cabinet resolution; PM as Chairperson. India followed the Soviet model of Five Year Plans. First Plan (1951–56) — agriculture, dams, K.N. Raj, Bhakra-Nangal, DVC. Second Plan (1956–61) — Mahalanobis model, heavy industry, Avadi resolution, Bhilai/Rourkela/Durgapur steel plants, Sindri, Chittaranjan. Third Plan (1961–66) — disrupted by the 1962 China and 1965 Pakistan wars and the 1965–66 droughts; plan holiday 1966–69.

Land reform — zamindari abolition partial success, ceilings & tenancy reforms largely on paper, cooperative farming abandoned. Green Revolution from mid-1960s — HYV seeds, M.S. Swaminathan, Punjab/Haryana/W. UP — food self-sufficiency by 1971–72; political consequences: middle-peasant class, regional inequality, Bharatiya Lok Dal. White Revolution / Operation Flood — Verghese Kurien, AMUL, Anand model, world's largest milk producer.

Limitations: regional inequality, ecological costs, social tensions, licence-permit Raj. End of planning era: Planning Commission replaced by NITI Aayog on 1 January 2015 — think-tank with stronger state voice.

⚠️ Memorise These Names & Dates
Bombay Plan — 1944 · Planning Commission — 15 March 1950 · First FYP — Dec 1951; 1951–56 · Avadi — 1955 · Second FYP — 1956–61 · Third FYP — 1961–66 · Plan Holiday — 1966–69 · Food self-sufficiency — 1971–72 · Operation Flood — 1970–96 · NITI Aayog — 1 Jan 2015. Remember: K.N. Raj, P.C. Mahalanobis, M.S. Swaminathan, Verghese Kurien, J.C. Kumarappa, Charan Singh.

3.23 Key Terms — Quick Reference

Planning CommissionAdvisory body set up in 1950 to draft Five Year Plans; PM as Chairperson; replaced by NITI Aayog in 2015.
Five Year Plan (FYP)A government document laying out income, expenditure and project priorities for five years at a time.
Bombay Plan (1944)A blueprint for state-led planned industrialisation drafted by India's leading industrialists.
Mahalanobis ModelStrategy underlying the Second Plan: invest first in capital goods (steel, machine tools) so that other sectors grow faster later.
Bhakra-NangalMulti-purpose dam complex on the Sutlej; flagship of the First Plan.
Damodar Valley CorporationIndia's first multi-purpose river-valley project (1948), modelled on the U.S. Tennessee Valley Authority.
Bhilai / Rourkela / DurgapurThree Second-Plan public-sector steel plants, built with Soviet, West German and British aid respectively.
Sindri FertilisersIndia's first big public-sector fertiliser factory in Jharkhand, started in the First Plan.
Chittaranjan LocomotivesPublic-sector locomotive works in West Bengal — symbol of self-reliance in railway equipment.
Import Substitution IndustrialisationStrategy of high tariffs and quotas so that domestic producers can replace imports.
Public Sector / "Commanding Heights"State-owned strategic industries — steel, banks, railways, electricity, atomic energy.
Licence-Permit RajSystem of pervasive government permits and quotas controlling industrial production until the 1991 reforms.
Plan Holiday (1966–69)Three annual plans replacing the Fourth FYP after wars, drought and economic crisis.
Land ReformsFour reforms: zamindari abolition, tenancy reform, land ceilings, cooperative farming.
Zamindari AbolitionThe abolition of intermediaries between the state and the cultivator, beginning in U.P. in 1950.
Land CeilingLegal upper limit on land ownership; surplus to be redistributed to the landless.
Green RevolutionSurge in food grain production from mid-1960s using HYV seeds, fertilisers and irrigation; food self-sufficiency by 1971–72.
HYV SeedsHigh-yielding variety seeds of wheat and rice, central to the Green Revolution.
M.S. SwaminathanFather of the Indian Green Revolution; led the introduction of HYV wheat to India.
White Revolution / Operation FloodThree-phase dairy-cooperative programme (1970–96) that made India the world's largest milk producer.
Verghese Kurien"Father of the White Revolution"; founder of AMUL and first Chairman of the National Dairy Development Board.
Anand ModelThree-tier dairy cooperative structure: village societies → district unions → state federations.
NITI AayogNational Institution for Transforming India; replaced the Planning Commission on 1 January 2015.
Bharatiya Lok DalCharan Singh's peasant party (1974), giving political voice to the middle peasants of the Green Revolution belt.

3.24 NCERT Exercises — Full Model Answers

📚 NCERT Exercises — Chapter 3: Politics of Planned Development
Q1. Which of these statements about the Bombay Plan is incorrect?
(a) It was a blueprint for India's economic future.
(b) It supported state-ownership of industry.
(c) It was made by some leading industrialists.
(d) It supported strongly the idea of planning.
Answer: (b) — incorrect. The Bombay Plan was a blueprint for India's economic future (a — correct), it was made by leading industrialists like J.R.D. Tata and G.D. Birla (c — correct), and it strongly supported the idea of planning (d — correct). However, the Bombay Plan called for major state initiatives in industry, not for full state ownership of industry. The industrialists wanted a strong state role alongside private enterprise, not a Soviet-style nationalisation.
Q2. Which of the following ideas did not form part of the early phase of India's development policy?
(a) Planning (c) Cooperative Farming
(b) Liberalisation (d) Self-sufficiency
Answer: (b) Liberalisation. The early phase of India's development policy (1950s–60s) emphasised planning, self-sufficiency through import-substitution industrialisation, and cooperative farming (pushed at the Nagpur session of 1959). Liberalisation — opening the economy to free trade and private enterprise — is the opposite of the planning approach and only became central to Indian policy after the 1991 reforms.
Q3. The idea of planning in India was drawn from
(a) the Bombay plan (c) Gandhian vision of society
(b) experiences of the Soviet bloc countries (d) Demand by peasant organisations
Options: i. b and d only · ii. d and c only · iii. a and b only · iv. all the above
Answer: (iii) a and b only. The idea of planning in India drew on two main sources: (a) the Bombay Plan of 1944 drafted by Indian industrialists, and (b) the experiences of the Soviet bloc — especially the rapid industrialisation of the USSR in the 1930s and 1940s. The Gandhian vision (c) actually opposed centralised planning in favour of decentralised village industries, and there was no specific demand from peasant organisations (d) for centralised national planning.
Q4. Match the following.
(a) Charan Singh — i. Industrialisation
(b) P.C. Mahalanobis — ii. Zoning
(c) Bihar Famine — iii. Farmers
(d) Verghese Kurien — iv. Milk Cooperatives
Answer:
(a) Charan Singh — iii. Farmers — Charan Singh, who founded the Bharatiya Lok Dal, was the leading political voice of small and middle farmers in northern India in the 1960s and 1970s.
(b) P.C. Mahalanobis — i. Industrialisation — Mahalanobis was the architect of the Second Five Year Plan and an active supporter of rapid industrialisation and the public sector.
(c) Bihar Famine — ii. Zoning — During the Bihar famine of 1966–67, the government tried zoning — restricting the inter-state movement of food grains so that grains stayed within producing states or could be procured for distribution. Zoning is generally associated with the food crisis of that period.
(d) Verghese Kurien — iv. Milk Cooperatives — Kurien founded the Anand Milk Cooperative (AMUL), launched Operation Flood and led the National Dairy Development Board.
Q5. What were the major differences in the approach towards development at the time of Independence? Has the debate been resolved?
Model Answer: At the time of Independence there were four major approaches to development. (i) The Western / liberal-capitalist model — free market, private capital, capital-intensive industrialisation; few supporters in India. (ii) The Soviet / socialist model — heavy industry, central planning, state ownership of key sectors; impressed CPI, the Socialists and Nehru. (iii) The Gandhian model — decentralised village economy, small-scale handicrafts, the charkha; J.C. Kumarappa called it the "Economy of Permanence". (iv) The Nehruvian / mixed-economy model — modern science, central planning, heavy public-sector industry coexisting with a regulated private sector; codified at the Avadi session in 1955 as the "socialist pattern of society". The Nehruvian model became India's official choice. Has the debate been resolved? Not entirely. After 1991, India shifted towards a more market-oriented strategy, but the question of how to balance growth and justice, industry and agriculture, central planning and federal autonomy, big projects and tribal/environmental rights — as the POSCO case in Orissa shows — continues to generate political contestation. The institutions have changed; the underlying debate has not.
Q6. What was the major thrust of the First Five Year Plan? In which ways did the Second Plan differ from the first one?
Model Answer: The major thrust of the First Five Year Plan (1951–1956) was on the agrarian sector. K.N. Raj, the young economist drafting the plan, argued that India should "hasten slowly" so that fast development would not endanger democracy. The First Plan therefore set modest growth targets, channelled resources into dams, irrigation and electrification (Bhakra-Nangal, Hirakud, Damodar Valley Corporation), and identified land reforms as the key to agricultural growth.
The Second Five Year Plan (1956–1961), drafted by P.C. Mahalanobis, differed in three ways. (i) Its thrust was heavy industry, not agriculture — the Avadi resolution of 1955 had committed the Congress to a "socialist pattern of society". (ii) It abandoned the "hasten slowly" advice in favour of quick structural transformation in all directions at once; investment was raised sharply. (iii) The government imposed substantial tariffs on imports to protect domestic industries, channelling investment into the public-sector "commanding heights" — electricity, railways, steel, machineries and communication — and building three major steel plants (Bhilai, Rourkela, Durgapur), the Sindri fertiliser plant and the Chittaranjan locomotives works.
Q7. Read the following passage and answer the questions below:
"In the early years of Independence, two contradictory tendencies were already well advanced inside the Congress party. On the one hand, the national party executive endorsed socialist principles of state ownership, regulation and control over key sectors of the economy in order to improve productivity and at the same time curb economic concentration. On the other hand, the national Congress government pursued liberal economic policies and incentives to private investment that was justified in terms of the sole criterion of achieving maximum increase in production." — Francine Frankel
(a) What is the contradiction that the author is talking about? What would be the political implications of a contradiction like this?
(b) If the author is correct, why is it that the Congress was pursuing this policy? Was it related to the nature of the opposition parties?
(c) Was there also a contradiction between the central leadership of the Congress party and its State level leaders?
Model Answer (a): Francine Frankel describes a contradiction at the heart of the Nehruvian Congress: at the level of party doctrine, the Congress executive endorsed socialist principles — state ownership, regulation and control of key sectors, the "socialist pattern of society" — to curb the concentration of wealth. At the level of government policy, however, the same Congress was pursuing liberal policies — incentives, licences and protection for private investment — judged solely by whether they increased production. Political implications: this dual stance allowed the Congress to retain support from both the urban industrialists (who benefited from licences and protection) and the urban poor and rural reformers (who responded to socialist rhetoric). It also opened the door to "crony capitalism" in which permits and licences became the most valuable assets in the economy, and to policy drift in which neither real socialism nor real liberalism was achieved.
Model Answer (b): The Congress pursued this dual policy partly because the opposition was weak and divided. The Communists and Socialists on the Left criticised the government for being too pro-capitalist; the Swatantra Party and Jana Sangh on the Right criticised it for being too socialist. The Congress could absorb both criticisms by holding the middle ground — calling itself socialist in rhetoric while remaining business-friendly in practice. With no opposition able to defeat it nationally before 1977, the Congress had little incentive to choose between the two tendencies. This was, in Frankel's reading, a successful electoral strategy but a costly economic one.
Model Answer (c): Yes — there was an additional contradiction within the Congress between the central leadership (Nehru and the planning establishment in Delhi) and the state leadership (the regional party bosses who controlled state governments). The central leadership pushed land reform, cooperative farming and central planning. State leaders — most of whom belonged to dominant landed castes — diluted these reforms in implementation. The 1959 Nagpur resolution on cooperative farming was effectively buried by state-level opposition led by Charan Singh and others. This Centre–state contradiction became a structural feature of Indian politics: ambitious reform at the Centre, modest delivery at the state level.

🧠 Competency-Based Questions — Part 3

Scenario: It is January 2015. The Government of India has just announced that the Planning Commission, which served the country for 65 years, will be replaced by a new institution called NITI Aayog. As a young IAS officer in the Ministry of Rural Development, you have been asked to brief a delegation of farmer-leaders from Punjab, Bihar and Maharashtra on what the change means for them — and what it owes to the legacies of the Green Revolution, the Anand model and the unfinished business of land reform.
Q1. State three major land reforms attempted in independent India and the year in which each was first enacted at the central level.
L1 Remember
Model Answer: (i) Zamindari abolition — first enacted in Uttar Pradesh in 1950 (U.P. Zamindari Abolition and Land Reforms Act); spread to most states by the late 1950s. (ii) Tenancy reforms — laws giving tenants security of tenure and fair rents — passed by states from the 1950s onwards. (iii) Land ceilings — legal upper limits on land ownership — enacted by states from the late 1950s, strengthened nationally after the 1972 Chief Ministers' Conference. (iv) Cooperative farming — pushed at the Congress Nagpur session of 1959; later abandoned because of opposition within the Congress.
Q2. Apply the idea of "regional inequality" to the Green Revolution. Why did Punjab and Haryana benefit more than Bihar?
L3 Apply
Model Answer: The Green Revolution required three preconditions: assured irrigation, access to credit, and a marketing-procurement network. Punjab and Haryana already had these — Bhakra-Nangal canal irrigation, well-functioning cooperative banks, an active Food Corporation of India procurement system. Bihar lacked all three: poor irrigation outside small pockets, weak rural credit, an exploitative agrarian structure where landlords blocked land reform, and limited procurement infrastructure. As a result, Punjab and Haryana's HYV seeds responded with three- to four-fold yield increases; Bihar's farmers could not afford or apply the package on the scale required. The result was a sharp regional divergence within Indian agriculture from the late 1960s onwards.
Q3. Analyse the political consequences of the Green Revolution for India's party system in the 1970s.
L4 Analyse
Model Answer: The Green Revolution created a new political class: middle peasants with 5–25 acres of HYV-irrigated land in Punjab, Haryana, Western UP and Maharashtra. They were prosperous enough to become a market force, but not powerful enough to dominate the Congress. Their political consequences were threefold. (i) They formed the social base of new peasant-based parties — most importantly Charan Singh's Bharatiya Lok Dal (1974) — that demanded higher procurement prices and farm subsidies. (ii) They contributed decisively to the Congress's defeat in 1977 and to the Janata coalition's victory. (iii) They cemented the politicisation of minimum support prices, fertiliser subsidies and electricity tariffs, which remain central political issues today. The Green Revolution thereby pushed Indian party politics from a "Congress vs. Left vs. Right" axis into a more regional, peasant-driven structure.
Q4. Evaluate the replacement of the Planning Commission by NITI Aayog. Was it a step forward, a step backward, or a sideways move? Justify with three points.
L5 Evaluate
Model Answer: Three points. (i) Federalism — step forward. NITI Aayog's Governing Council includes all chief ministers as full members; it was designed to embody cooperative federalism, giving states a stronger voice than the old Planning Commission ever did. (ii) Allocation power — step backward. The old Planning Commission allocated central plan funds to the states, which gave it real bargaining power; NITI Aayog has no allocation function — that has shifted to the Finance Commission and to centrally sponsored schemes. (iii) Fit with the economy — step forward. Five Year Plans were designed for a command economy with a dominant public sector; in a federal market economy where most investment comes from the private sector, a think-tank model is more appropriate. Conclusion: NITI Aayog is broadly a step forward in adapting central institutions to the actual structure of the 21st-century Indian economy, though it has lost some of the planning capacity of the old Commission.
HOT Q. Imagine you are advising the Prime Minister in 2026 on whether to start a "Thirteenth Five Year Plan" focused on climate change and AI. Drawing on the lessons of the first three Five Year Plans, write a 6-point design brief for such a plan.
L6 Create
Hint: A strong design brief would borrow lessons from the first three plans: (1) Constitutional anchoring — root the plan in the Directive Principles, as the 1950 Resolution did. (2) State partnership — design it through the NITI Aayog Governing Council, not from Yojana Bhavan alone. (3) Capital-goods logic — invest first in the long-lived public goods (renewable grids, AI compute, climate research labs) that crowd in private investment. (4) Avoid urban bias — distribute climate finance and digital infrastructure equitably between rural and urban India. (5) Build in feedback loops — annual reviews like the "annual plans" of 1966–69, but as features rather than emergency responses. (6) Justice as a design constraint — ensure that displaced workers (e.g. coal-mining districts) are protected, learning from the Narmada and POSCO controversies. The Thirteenth Plan would not be a "command-and-allocate" plan; it would be a convene-and-coordinate plan, fit for a federal market democracy.
⚖️ Assertion–Reason Questions — Part 3
Options:
(A) Both A and R are true, and R is the correct explanation of A.
(B) Both A and R are true, but R is NOT the correct explanation of A.
(C) A is true, but R is false.
(D) A is false, but R is true.
Assertion (A): India achieved self-sufficiency in food grains by 1971–72.
Reason (R): The Green Revolution introduced high-yielding variety seeds of wheat and rice, along with chemical fertilisers and assured irrigation, in selected districts of Punjab, Haryana and Western Uttar Pradesh from the mid-1960s.
Answer: (A) — Both true, and R is the correct explanation of A. The HYV-seed package, applied to the irrigated wheat belt, raised yields steeply and ended India's chronic dependence on PL-480 wheat imports.
Assertion (A): Operation Flood made India the world's largest milk producer.
Reason (R): Operation Flood was a centralised state-run milk-procurement scheme directly operated by the Government of India through the Food Corporation of India.
Answer: (C) — A is true; R is false. Operation Flood was run by the National Dairy Development Board under Verghese Kurien, and it was based on the Anand model of three-tier dairy cooperatives — village societies, district unions and state federations — owned by the milk producers themselves. It was not a Food Corporation of India scheme.
Assertion (A): The Government of India replaced the Planning Commission with NITI Aayog on 1 January 2015.
Reason (R): The Planning Commission's allocation-driven model had become misaligned with India's federal market economy, and a more state-friendly think-tank was needed.
Answer: (A) — Both true, and R correctly explains A. NITI Aayog's Governing Council includes all chief ministers as full members and the institution acts as a convener and think-tank rather than as an allocator of central plan funds.

Frequently Asked Questions

What is the Green Revolution in India?

The Green Revolution was the agricultural transformation of the late 1960s–1970s. Using High-Yielding Variety (HYV) seeds, fertilisers, assured irrigation and credit, India's wheat and rice output rose sharply, ending dependence on PL-480 food imports. M.S. Swaminathan led the scientific effort.

Who is M.S. Swaminathan?

M.S. Swaminathan is widely known as the 'father of the Green Revolution in India'. As an agricultural scientist and administrator, he led the introduction of HYV wheat varieties developed with Norman Borlaug, transforming Indian food security.

What was Operation Flood?

Operation Flood, launched in 1970 by the National Dairy Development Board (NDDB) under Verghese Kurien, was India's White Revolution. By linking village dairy cooperatives (Anand Pattern) to urban markets, it made India the world's largest milk producer.

What were the main land reforms in India?

Main land reforms included abolition of zamindari, tenancy reforms, land ceilings and consolidation of holdings. Implementation varied widely — relatively successful in West Bengal and Kerala, weaker elsewhere — limiting the success of agrarian transformation.

What is the licence-permit raj?

The 'licence-permit raj' was the system of elaborate licences, permits and quotas required to start or expand a business in pre-1991 India. While intended to direct investment, it caused delays, corruption and slow growth — the so-called 'Hindu rate of growth'.

When did the Planning Commission end?

The Planning Commission was replaced by the NITI Aayog (National Institution for Transforming India) on 1 January 2015. NITI Aayog functions as a policy think-tank rather than a centralised plan-making body, reflecting India's shift to a market-led economy after the 1991 reforms.

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Class 12 Political Science — Politics in India Since Independence
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