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Background to 1991 Reforms & Liberalisation

🎓 Class 11 Economics CBSE Theory Ch 3 — Liberalisation, Privatisation, Globalisation ⏱ ~25 min
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3.1 Introduction — Why India Needed New Policies

For four decades after independence, India ran a mixed economy that blended capitalist and socialist features. Over time, this framework produced thick rules and licences aimed at controlling industry and trade. Some scholars argue these controls hampered growth; others point to genuine achievements — diversified industry, food security and stronger savings. Yet by the late 1980s, the mixed model was visibly straining. In 1991, India faced a serious crisis on its external account, and the government rolled out a sweeping new package of reforms — the New Economic Policy?, popularly known as LPG? — Liberalisation, Privatisation and Globalisation.

📜 Voice from the Past
There is a consensus in the world today that economic development is not all and the GDP is not necessarily a measure of progress of a society.
— K. R. Narayanan, Former President of India
⚠ The Trigger Event
In 1991, India met an economic crisis tied to its external debt. The government could not repay foreign borrowings, and foreign exchange reserves? — used to import petroleum and other essentials — fell to a level too low to cover even two weeks of imports.

3.2 Background to the 1991 Crisis

The roots of the 1991 financial crisis can be traced to the inefficient management of the Indian economy in the 1980s. To run programmes and pay for general administration, the government raises money from taxation, profits of public sector enterprises and other sources. When spending exceeds income, it borrows from banks, citizens and international agencies — creating a fiscal deficit?. To buy imports such as petroleum, India must pay in dollars, which it earns from exports.

3.2.1 What Went Wrong in the 1980s

Several pressures pushed the system off balance:

💸
Spending Outran Revenue
Even though tax revenues were low, the government had to overshoot to address unemployment, poverty and population pressure. Continued spending on development did not generate matching new revenue.
🏭
Weak PSU Earnings
Public sector enterprises did not earn enough to cover the rising bill. A large slice of revenue went to social sector and defence — areas that do not yield immediate returns.
🛢
Imports >> Exports
Imports grew rapidly without matching export growth. Foreign exchange borrowings were sometimes used to fund consumption rather than investment — what NCERT calls "profligate spending".
📈
Inflation Crept In
Prices of many essential goods rose sharply, eroding purchasing power and adding pressure on the rupee.

By the late 1980s, government expenditure exceeded revenue by such large margins that financing the gap through borrowing became unsustainable. Foreign exchange reserves dwindled to a level inadequate to fund imports for more than two weeks, and the country could not even meet interest payments due to international lenders. Worse still, no country or international funder was willing to lend India fresh money.

3.2.2 The IMF–World Bank Loan Conditions

India turned to the International Bank for Reconstruction and Development (IBRD) — popularly the World Bank — and the International Monetary Fund (IMF). India received USD 7 billion as a loan to manage the crisis. In return, these international agencies expected India to:

  • Liberalise and open up the economy by removing restrictions on the private sector;
  • Reduce the role of the government in many areas;
  • Remove trade barriers between India and other countries.

India agreed to these conditionalities and announced the New Economic Policy (NEP). The NEP was a wide-ranging reform package whose thrust was to create a more competitive environment and remove barriers to entry and growth of firms. The policies fall into two layers:

Stabilisation Measures vs. Structural Reforms
TypeTime HorizonGoal
Stabilisation MeasuresShort-termCorrect weaknesses in the balance of payments? and bring inflation under control. Maintain enough forex reserves; check rising prices.
Structural ReformsLong-termImprove the efficiency of the economy and increase its international competitiveness by removing rigidities. Delivered through three heads — Liberalisation, Privatisation and Globalisation.
BoP Crisis 1991 Forex < 2 weeks of imports IMF + World Bank Loan USD 7 billion · Conditionalities New Economic Policy 1991 Stabilisation + Structural reforms LIBERALISATION PRIVATISATION GLOBALISATION
📌 Key Reform Architects
The 1991 reforms were piloted by Prime Minister P. V. Narasimha Rao and Finance Minister Dr. Manmohan Singh. The Industrial Policy Statement of 24 July 1991 formally launched the new direction.
Activity 3.1 — A Country with Empty Forex Pockets

Imagine you are a finance minister in 1991. India's foreign exchange reserves can pay for only two weeks of imports, no foreign lender is willing to lend, and inflation is biting. List three immediate steps you would take. Then list three long-term steps to ensure this never happens again.

  • Immediate (stabilisation): negotiate emergency loan with the IMF and World Bank; devalue the rupee to make exports cheaper and imports costlier; control fiscal deficit by cutting subsidies.
  • Long-term (structural): open industry to private investment by abolishing licensing; allow FDI to bring in technology and dollars; lower tariffs to make Indian firms compete globally.
  • Recognise the trade-off: cheap imports and tariff cuts protect consumers but hurt small domestic producers — a balance that critics still debate.

3.3 Liberalisation — Untying the Indian Economy

Until 1991, the regulating hand of the state reached into almost every business decision. Liberalisation? was launched to end these restrictions and open various sectors to competition. Some liberalisation steps were tried in the 1980s in industrial licensing, export–import policy, technology upgradation, fiscal policy and foreign investment, but the post-1991 reforms were far more comprehensive. Five areas drew the heaviest action: industry, finance, taxes, foreign exchange, and trade & investment.

3.3.1 Deregulation of the Industrial Sector

Before reforms, regulatory mechanisms operated in four ways: (i) industrial licensing? required every entrepreneur to seek government permission to start a firm, close a firm or decide output volumes; (ii) the private sector was barred from many industries; (iii) some goods could only be made by small-scale industries; and (iv) prices and distribution of selected industrial products were directly controlled.

📘 What 1991 Changed
Industrial licensing was abolished for almost all industries, except a small list reserved on grounds of safety, strategy or environment: alcohol, cigarettes, hazardous chemicals, industrial explosives, electronics, aerospace, and drugs & pharmaceuticals. Only two strategic areas remain reserved for the public sector: part of atomic energy generation and some core activities in railway transport. Many goods previously reserved for small-scale industry have been dereserved, and prices in most industries are now set by the market.

3.3.2 Financial Sector Reforms

The financial sector — commercial banks, investment banks, stock exchanges and the foreign exchange market — is regulated by the Reserve Bank of India (RBI). Pre-1991, the RBI was a hard regulator: it controlled how much money banks could keep, set interest rates, and directed lending. A central aim of reform was to shift the RBI from regulator to facilitator, letting banks decide more matters on their own.

🏦
Private & Foreign Banks
Reform allowed private sector banks — Indian and foreign — to be set up. Foreign investment limit in banks was raised to about 74 per cent.
🏪
Branch Freedom
Banks meeting certain conditions can now open new branches and rationalise existing networks without RBI approval.
🌍
FII Entry
Foreign Institutional Investors? — merchant bankers, mutual funds, pension funds — are now allowed to invest in Indian financial markets.
🛡
RBI Safeguards
Some managerial aspects are still retained with the RBI to safeguard the interests of account-holders and the nation.

3.3.3 Tax Reforms

Tax reforms cover changes in the government's taxation and public expenditure policies — together called fiscal policy. Taxes are of two kinds: direct (on personal incomes and corporate profits) and indirect (on goods and services).

  • Direct taxes lowered: Since 1991, taxes on individual incomes have been continuously reduced. High rates were a major reason for tax evasion; moderate rates encourage savings and voluntary disclosure. The corporation tax rate, which was very high earlier, has also been gradually cut.
  • GST introduced (2016): The Constitution was amended in 2016 to empower both state and union governments to levy Goods and Services Tax. GST is expected to add government revenue, reduce tax evasion, and create "one nation, one tax and one market".
  • Simplification: Procedures have been simplified and rates lowered to encourage better compliance.

3.3.4 Foreign Exchange Reforms — The Devaluation Move

The first major reform in the external sector touched the foreign exchange market. In 1991, as an immediate measure to ease the BoP crisis, the rupee was devalued? against foreign currencies. This single step had two effects: it raised the inflow of foreign exchange (Indian exports became cheaper to foreigners), and it set the stage to free the rupee from direct government control. Today, markets determine exchange rates, based on the demand and supply of foreign exchange — although the RBI may intervene occasionally.

3.3.5 Trade and Investment Policy Reforms

The pre-1991 trade regime relied on tight import controls and very high tariffs meant to protect domestic industry. NCERT notes that this protection actually reduced efficiency and competitiveness and slowed manufacturing growth. The trade reforms aimed at three things:

Trade Reform — Three Pillars
PillarWhat Changed
1. Dismantling of Quantitative RestrictionsQRs on imports and exports were dismantled. Quantitative restrictions? on imports of manufactured consumer goods and agricultural products were fully removed from April 2001.
2. Reduction of Tariff RatesTariffs on imports were sharply lowered. Export duties were removed to make Indian goods more competitive abroad.
3. Removal of Import LicensingImport licensing was abolished — except for hazardous and environmentally sensitive industries.
🏛 NCERT Highlight — The Logic
Liberalisation of trade and investment was initiated to raise international competitiveness of industrial production and to bring in foreign investment and technology. The aim was to push local industries to adopt modern technologies and become more efficient — letting tariffs fall instead of using them as a permanent crutch.
Activity 3.2 — Visit a Bank, Find an FII

NCERT asks you to: (a) name a nationalised bank, a private bank, a private foreign bank, an FII and a mutual fund; (b) visit a bank in your locality with your parents and prepare a chart of its functions; (c) find out from your parents whether they pay taxes and why.

  • Nationalised bank: State Bank of India, Punjab National Bank, Bank of Baroda — owned majority by Government of India.
  • Private bank: HDFC Bank, ICICI Bank, Axis Bank — Indian private ownership.
  • Private foreign bank: Citibank, HSBC, Standard Chartered — foreign-incorporated, operating branches in India.
  • FII example: a global mutual fund such as Vanguard or BlackRock buying Indian listed equities; Mutual fund: SBI Mutual Fund, HDFC Mutual Fund.
  • Bank functions chart: accept deposits, advance loans, issue debit/credit cards, facilitate payments, handle forex, sell insurance and mutual funds.
  • Why parents pay taxes: it is a citizen's contribution to public services — roads, schools, defence, healthcare; non-payment is a legal offence.
Activity 3.3 — Forex Reserves and Exchange Rates

Long ago countries kept silver and gold as reserves. In what form do we keep our foreign exchange reserves today? Find from newspapers and the Economic Survey how much forex India had last year. Also find the latest rupee exchange rate against the currencies of USA, UK, Japan, China, Korea, Singapore and Germany.

  • Form of reserves today: mostly foreign currency assets (USD, EUR, GBP, JPY) held as treasury bills and bonds; gold; SDRs with the IMF; and India's reserve position with the IMF.
  • India's forex reserves crossed USD 646 billion in 2023–24, making India one of the largest reserve holders in the world.
  • Currencies (illustrative): USA — US Dollar, UK — Pound Sterling, Japan — Yen, China — Yuan/Renminbi, Korea — Won, Singapore — Singapore Dollar, Germany — Euro. Check the day's RBI reference rate for the latest INR value of one unit of each.

📝 Competency-Based Questions — Background & Liberalisation

Source-based scenario: By 1991, India's foreign exchange reserves had dropped to a level that could not finance imports for more than two weeks. The government turned to the IMF and World Bank for a USD 7 billion loan and announced the New Economic Policy. The rupee was devalued; industrial licensing was abolished for most industries; the FDI ceiling in banks was raised to about 74 per cent; QRs on manufactured consumer and agricultural imports were lifted from April 2001. Use these facts to answer:
Q1. The 1991 crisis was triggered by which immediate situation?
L3 Apply
  • (a) A natural disaster wiping out India's exports.
  • (b) Forex reserves enough for less than two weeks of imports, with no lender willing to lend more.
  • (c) A complete collapse of the agricultural sector.
  • (d) The dissolution of the Planning Commission.
Answer: (b) — NCERT specifically notes that reserves had dropped to a level not sufficient even for a fortnight of imports, and that no country or international funder was willing to lend further.
Q2. The IMF and World Bank lent USD 7 billion subject to which type of conditions?
L4 Analyse
Answer: The lenders required India to (i) liberalise — remove restrictions on the private sector, (ii) reduce the role of the government, and (iii) remove trade restrictions with other countries. These conditionalities matched the larger shift toward LPG: stabilisation in the short run and structural reform for the long run.
Q3. Why does NCERT call high tariffs and quantitative restrictions a cause of low manufacturing growth?
L5 Evaluate
Answer: Heavy protection sheltered domestic firms from foreign competition. With assured markets, firms had little incentive to upgrade technology, control costs or improve quality. The result was inefficiency and slow growth in manufacturing. The trade reforms — dismantling QRs, cutting tariffs, removing import licensing (except for hazardous goods) — aimed to push Indian firms to be globally competitive.
Q4. (HOT) If you were Finance Minister in 1991, would you have devalued the rupee? Justify with two reasons and acknowledge one risk.
L6 Create
Answer: A defensible answer: Yes, I would have devalued the rupee. Reason 1 — devaluation makes Indian exports cheaper for foreigners, attracting an inflow of foreign exchange to plug the BoP gap. Reason 2 — it sets the stage for a market-determined exchange rate, ending an unsustainable peg. Risk acknowledged — devaluation makes imports (oil, machinery, fertilisers) costlier in rupees, fuelling inflation in the short run and squeezing import-dependent firms. The student must show recognition of the trade-off.
🔗 Assertion–Reason Questions

Options: (A) Both A & R true, R correctly explains A · (B) Both true, R does not explain A · (C) A true, R false · (D) A false, R true.

Assertion (A): In 1991, the rupee was devalued against major foreign currencies.
Reason (R): Devaluation increases the inflow of foreign exchange because Indian exports become cheaper for foreigners.
Answer: (A) — Both true; the inflow effect of devaluation is precisely why the government chose this step amid a forex crunch.
Assertion (A): Industrial licensing was abolished for almost all industries in 1991.
Reason (R): A few categories — alcohol, cigarettes, hazardous chemicals, industrial explosives, electronics, aerospace and drugs & pharmaceuticals — still need a licence.
Answer: (B) — Both true, but R lists the residual exceptions; it does not explain the abolition. They are independent facts.
Assertion (A): The aim of financial sector reforms was to make the RBI a regulator with stricter control over banks.
Reason (R): Reforms also raised the foreign investment limit in Indian banks to about 74 per cent.
Answer: (D) — A is false: the aim was to shift the RBI from regulator to facilitator, giving banks more freedom. R is true.
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