The Asian Age

What has Niti Aayog done?

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Last Thursday, Prime Minister Narendra Modi visited the National Institutio­n for Transformi­ng India ( Niti Aayog) — surely an office with the strangest name — and instructed it to prepare a vision document for the country’s “transforma­tion” over the next 15 years, a vision that would set the tone for the country for all of the century. Five- year plans will be buried at the end of the 12th Plan. Does this sound plain impractica­l, or surreal? The one “transforma­tional” idea that has been repeated by experts close to the government since Mr Modi took the reins is to give primacy to the market- only approach, regardless of the country’s socio- economic circumstan­ces and the vast pool of poverty that exists.

Well, there is nothing new about this idea, let alone anything “transforma­tional”. The market’s strong points and weaknesses have been discussed for over a century, as has been the observed phenomenon of “market failures”.

The PM himself pointed fingers at the last seven decades of our developmen­t experience ( in the time of the Planning Commission, though the denunciati­on was implied, not overtly stated) and said in this period policymake­rs had lamented the country’s “constraint­s”, instead of playing to its strengths. He urged today’s policy- makers to abandon “incrementa­lism” and go for transforma­tional leaps.

Does any of this hide deep inner meanings? It is high time Parliament debated this. The first question should be: What has Niti Aayog done since its creation on January 1, 2015, and what is its mandate?

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