This MCQ module is based on: Target Area Programmes & Aspirational Districts
Target Area Programmes & Aspirational Districts
This assessment will be based on: Target Area Programmes & Aspirational Districts
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Target Area Planning — DPAP, DDP, HADP, Tribal Sub-Plan, Aspirational Districts & More
NCERT India: People and Economy — Unit III, Chapter 6 (Part 2)
Why ‘Target Area’ Planning?
Economic development depends on a region’s resource base, technology and investment. But India’s experience of about one-and-a-half decades of planning revealed an uncomfortable fact — even resource-rich regions sometimes remained backward, while well-endowed pockets surged ahead. Regional imbalances were not only persisting; they were getting accentuated.
To check this growing inequality between regions and social groups, the Planning Commission introduced two new approaches alongside ordinary sectoral planning — the target area? approach and the target group? approach. Together these are referred to in this chapter as target area planning.
The Family of Target Area Programmes
Some of the most prominent programmes directed at target areas are listed below.
| Programme | Year started | Focus area |
|---|---|---|
| Drought-Prone Areas Programme (DPAP) | 1973–74 (Fourth FYP) | Drought-affected districts — employment, productive assets, watershed management. |
| Desert Development Programme (DDP) | 1977–78 | Hot & cold desert areas of Rajasthan, Gujarat, Haryana, J&K, HP, Karnataka. |
| Hill Area Development Programme (HADP) | 1975–76 (Fifth FYP) | 15 designated hill districts — horticulture, plantations, small industry. |
| Tribal Sub-Plan (TSP) | 1974 | Tribal-majority blocks — education, health, infrastructure, livelihoods. |
| Command Area Development (CAD) | 1974–75 | Command area of major irrigation projects — field channels, levelling, warabandi. |
| Integrated Tribal Development Project (ITDP) | 1974 | Designated tribal blocks — e.g. Bharmaur (Himachal Pradesh). |
| Small & Marginal Farmer Agencies (SFDA, MFDA) | Earlier — target group programmes | Credit, inputs & services for small/marginal farmers. |
| Aspirational Districts Programme | 2018 | 112 most underdeveloped districts identified for accelerated transformation. |
| MGNREGA | 2005 | Demand-driven rural wage employment + asset creation in every rural district. |
| Sansad Adarsh Gram Yojana (SAGY) | 2014 | Each MP develops one model village by 2019, two more by 2024. |
| PM Gram Sadak Yojana (PMGSY) | 2000 | All-weather rural roads connecting unconnected habitations. |
NCERT observes that “sometimes resource-rich regions also remain backward.” List three reasons why a region rich in minerals or forests may still record low per-capita income.
Answer guide: (i) Lack of investment & technology — ore needs smelters, forests need processing units; without them, the rent goes outside. (ii) Outflow of value-added — raw mineral leaves the State, finished steel comes back at a higher price. (iii) Poor connectivity & social infrastructure — tribal districts in Jharkhand or Odisha rich in iron ore still have low literacy and poor roads, so people cannot capture the benefits. NCERT’s answer: economic development requires technology, investment and resources together — not resources alone.
Drought-Prone Area Programme (DPAP)
The Drought Prone Area Programme was initiated during the Fourth Five Year Plan (1969–74), in 1973–74. Its twin objectives were to provide employment to people in drought-prone areas and to create productive assets.
Initially DPAP relied on labour-intensive civil works. Later the programme broadened its base — placing emphasis on irrigation projects, land development, afforestation, grassland development, and the creation of basic rural infrastructure such as electricity, roads, markets, credit and services.
Identifying Drought-Prone Districts
Where are India’s Drought-Prone Areas?
Broadly, the drought-prone tracts of India spread over the semi-arid and arid belts of:
- Rajasthan, Gujarat and western Madhya Pradesh;
- Marathwada region of Maharashtra;
- Rayalseema and Telangana plateaus of Andhra Pradesh;
- Karnataka plateau and highlands; and
- Interior parts of Tamil Nadu.
The drought-prone tracts of Punjab, Haryana and northern Rajasthan are largely protected by the spread of canal irrigation, especially the Indira Gandhi Canal command (covered in Part 3).
Fig 6.4 — Target Area Programme Zones of India (Schematic)
Desert Development Programme (DDP)
Launched in 1977–78, the Desert Development Programme? covered the hot desert areas of Rajasthan, Gujarat, Haryana, the western dry tracts of Madhya Pradesh and Andhra Pradesh, plus the cold desert areas of Jammu & Kashmir, Ladakh and Himachal Pradesh.
Its main thrusts are controlling desertification, restoring ecological balance and raising productivity through afforestation, sand-dune stabilisation, pasture development, water-harvesting structures, drought-proofing of agriculture and livestock-based livelihoods.
Hill Area Development Programme (HADP)
The Hill Area Development Programme was initiated during the Fifth Five Year Plan (1974–79) in 1975–76. It originally covered 15 districts? identified as ‘backward hill areas’ — namely:
- All hilly districts of Uttar Pradesh (today’s Uttarakhand);
- Mikir Hill and North Cachar hills of Assam;
- Darjeeling district of West Bengal;
- Nilgiri district of Tamil Nadu;
- and similar pockets in Kerala and Madhya Pradesh.
The National Committee on the Development of Backward Areas, in 1981, recommended that all hill areas in the country having a height above 600 m and not covered under the tribal sub-plan be treated as backward hill areas.
Strategy of HADP
HADP plans were drawn keeping in view the topographical, ecological, social and economic conditions of each hill region. The programme aimed to harness indigenous resources through:
The HADP launched in 1975–76 covered 15 districts in five states. Match each of the following to its state and identify the principal hill resource being developed there.
- (a) Darjeeling (b) Nilgiri (c) North Cachar (d) Almora (e) Idukki
Answer:
- Darjeeling (West Bengal) — tea plantations, tourism.
- Nilgiri (Tamil Nadu) — tea, eucalyptus, hill tourism (Ooty, Coonoor).
- North Cachar (Assam) — bamboo, ginger, citrus, jhum-to-settled agriculture transition.
- Almora (Uttar Pradesh / Uttarakhand) — horticulture (apple, plum), wool, medicinal plants.
- Idukki (Kerala) — cardamom, pepper, hydro-electricity, plantations.
Tribal Sub-Plan (TSP) & ITDP
The Tribal Sub-Plan? approach was introduced in 1974, alongside the Fifth Five Year Plan. The idea is simple but powerful: at least the same proportion of Plan outlay as the tribal share of population must be earmarked for tribal-development schemes, and pooled into an exclusive sub-plan for tribal-majority blocks.
Within the TSP framework, Integrated Tribal Development Projects (ITDPs) were carved out for clusters of contiguous tribal-majority blocks. Bharmaur in Chamba district of Himachal Pradesh — a notified tribal area since 21 November 1975 — was designated as one of the five ITDPs in Himachal Pradesh. (We study Bharmaur in detail in Part 3.)
Aspirational Districts Programme (2018)
The Aspirational Districts Programme? was launched by the NITI Aayog in January 2018. It identifies 112 of the most underdeveloped districts in India and seeks their rapid transformation through a three-pronged strategy — convergence of central and state schemes, collaboration of central, state and district functionaries, and competition between districts on a published Aspirational Districts Index.
Five Themes, 49 Indicators
Districts are ranked on five thematic groups of indicators:
Chart — Aspirational Districts (2018) by State (Top 10)
MGNREGA, SAGY & PMGSY — Three Other Big Programmes
MGNREGA — Mahatma Gandhi National Rural Employment Guarantee Act, 2005
Enacted in 2005, MGNREGA legally guarantees 100 days of wage employment per financial year to every rural household whose adult members volunteer to do unskilled manual work. It is the world’s largest demand-driven employment programme. It serves a dual purpose:
- Employment — income support during agricultural lean seasons; women receive at least one-third of person-days.
- Asset creation — durable rural assets, especially water conservation, drought proofing, irrigation channels, plantations, rural connectivity, flood control.
SAGY — Sansad Adarsh Gram Yojana, 2014
Launched in October 2014, SAGY asks every Member of Parliament to develop one model village (Adarsh Gram) by 2019, and two more by 2024, in his/her constituency. The MP is required to motivate the Gram Sabha, mobilise convergence of existing schemes (housing, sanitation, drinking water, electrification, schools, roads), and identify gap-filling investments through a Village Development Plan. The aim is to make these villages models that surrounding panchayats can emulate.
PMGSY — Pradhan Mantri Gram Sadak Yojana, 2000
Launched in December 2000, PMGSY is India’s flagship rural roads programme. Its target was to provide all-weather road connectivity to every unconnected habitation with a population of 500 or more in plains and 250 or more in hilly, tribal and desert areas. The programme has constructed lakhs of kilometres of roads and is widely credited with reducing transport costs, raising school attendance, and improving access to markets and health centres in rural India.
Q. Explain how the integrated watershed development approach addresses each of the four elements above — water, soil, plants, and population — at the micro-level.
Answer guide: A watershed treats a small drainage unit as the planning unit. Water is harvested through check-dams and percolation tanks; soil is conserved through contour bunding and gully plugging; plants are restored through afforestation and pasture development on degraded common lands; the human and animal population benefits through higher productivity, fodder availability and assured drinking water. Famous Indian examples: Ralegan Siddhi (Maharashtra) and Hiware Bazar (Maharashtra).
Competency-Based Questions — Target Area Programmes
Reason (R): The Planning Commission realised that resource-rich regions could still remain backward and that regional imbalances were getting accentuated.
Reason (R): The 1981 National Committee on Backward Areas had recommended that all areas above 600 m be treated as backward.
Reason (R): The NITI Aayog had no power to allocate Plan funds and therefore needed a competition-based approach to drive change in the most backward 112 districts.