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An Evaluation of Indian Planning Models and Alternative Design Structures:Theoretical Foundations and Technical Implications


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1 Department of Economics, University of Bombay, Bombay-400098, India
     

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This paper amounts to a comprehensive evaluation of Indian planning models and alternative design structures with special reference to their theoretical foundations and technical implications. It reviews the evolutionary changes that have taken place in the systems approach to macroeconomic modelling of the Indian economy over the last forty years. Considering that models have been used both at the official level, for planning purposes, as well as at the academic level, for providing inputs to the planning process, the paper covers both these aspects in a thematic manner. Commencing from the initial official efforts with their emphasis on designing aggregate growth models through the intermediate phases of developing consistency models and finally to the current academic interest in optimizing and non-optimizing systems, this evolution is primarily considered against the backdrop of the changing perspectives vis-a-vis economic problems, development strategies and policy choices.
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  • An Evaluation of Indian Planning Models and Alternative Design Structures:Theoretical Foundations and Technical Implications

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Authors

M.J. Manohar Rao
Department of Economics, University of Bombay, Bombay-400098, India
Ajit V. Karnik
Department of Economics, University of Bombay, Bombay-400098, India

Abstract


This paper amounts to a comprehensive evaluation of Indian planning models and alternative design structures with special reference to their theoretical foundations and technical implications. It reviews the evolutionary changes that have taken place in the systems approach to macroeconomic modelling of the Indian economy over the last forty years. Considering that models have been used both at the official level, for planning purposes, as well as at the academic level, for providing inputs to the planning process, the paper covers both these aspects in a thematic manner. Commencing from the initial official efforts with their emphasis on designing aggregate growth models through the intermediate phases of developing consistency models and finally to the current academic interest in optimizing and non-optimizing systems, this evolution is primarily considered against the backdrop of the changing perspectives vis-a-vis economic problems, development strategies and policy choices.