Hi FRiends Here u Find, Latest Update for Gujarat Goverment Job Related, and Other Semi-goverment and Private job vacancy update, latest

Sunday, January 15, 2017

PANCHVARSIY YOJANA ALLDETAIN SINGLE PDF FOR ALL EXAM

PANCHVARSIY YOJANA ALLDETAIN SINGLE PDF FOR ALL EXAM
GPSSB Junior Clerk, Talati cum Mantri, MPHW, FHW Recruitment 2016-17 District Wise
Various News Papers Like divyabhaskar, Gujaratsamachar, Sandesh Today Published Advt. of Talati cum Mantri Bharti. Gujarat Panchayat Seva Pasandgi Samiti Board which is Part of Gujarat Panchayat Seva Pasandgi Board (GPSSB) Invites Online Job Application for Filling Up 1500+ Various Vacancies Junior Clerk, Ojas Talati cum Mantri, Multi Purpose Health worker (MPHW) Male & Female, Gram Sevek in Various Districts of Panchayat Department. You can Find Ojas Panchayat Talati info. 
Five-Year Plans (FYPs) are centralized and integrated national economic programs. Joseph Stalin implemented the first Five Year Plan in the Soviet Union in the late 1920s. Most communist states and several capitalist countries subsequently have adopted them. China and India both continue to use FYPs, although China renamed its Eleventh FYP, from 2006 to 2010, a guideline (guihua), rather than a plan (jihua), to signify the central government’s more hands-off approach to development. India launched its First FYP in 1951, immediately after independence under socialist influence of first Prime Minister Jawaharlal Nehru.
The First Five-Year Plan was one of the most important because it had a great role in the launching of Indian development after the Independence. Thus, it strongly supported agriculture production and it also launched the industrialization of the country (but less than the Second Plan, which focused on heavy industries). It built a particular system of mixed economy, with a great role for the public sector (with an emerging welfare state), as well as a growing private sector (represented by some personalities as those who published the Bombay Plan).
The Third Five-year Plan stressed agriculture and improvement in the production of wheat, but the brief Sino-Indian War of 1962 exposed weaknesses in the economy and shifted the focus towards the defence industry and the Indian Army. In 1965–1966, India fought a War with Pakistan. There was also a severe drought in 1965. The war led to inflation and the priority was shifted to price stabilisation. The construction of dams continued. Many cement and fertilizer plants were also built. Punjab began producing an abundance of wheat.
Many primary schools were started in rural areas. In an effort to bring democracy to the grass-root level, Panchayat elections were started and the states were given more development responsibilities.
State electricity boards and state secondary education boards were formed. States were made responsible for secondary and higher education. State road transportation corporations were formed and local road building became a state responsibility.
The target growth rate was 5.6%, but the actual growth rate was 2.4%. Due to miserable failure of the Third Plan the government was forced to declare "plan holidays" (from 1966–67, 1967–68, and 1968–69). Three annual plans were drawn during this intervening period. During 1966–67 there was again the problem of drought. Equal priority was given to agriculture, its allied activities, and industrial sector. The government of India declared "Devaluation of Rupee" to increase the exports of the country. The main reasons for plan holidays were the war, lack of resources, and increase in inflation after that plan holiday was created.

0 comments:

Post a Comment

Advertisement

Popular Posts

Categories

Total Pageviews

Menu :
Powered by Blogger.

What they says

    About Us

    Latest Updates