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The Planning Commission is likely to bring out a supplementary document detailing the possible scenarios if average annual growth in gross domestic product in the 12th five-year Plan stood at 6-6.5 per cent or 5-5.5 per cent, against 7.9 per cent in the 11th Plan.
The 12th Plan document describes three different average annual growth scenarios – eight per cent, 6-6.5 per cent and 5-5.5 per cent.
Planning Commission Deputy Chairman Montek Singh Ahluwalia told Business Standard an average annual growth of eight per cent in the 12th Plan was possible if difficult steps were taken.
“The reason for my optimism is the production side.
The economy really has the capacity to grow at eight per cent, provided we can take care of some critical constraints, especially in infrastructure, energy, transport, etc,” he said.
In the event of partial implementation of some steps (when policies move in the right direction but action is partial), growth would be 6-6.5 per cent.
“The third scenario is a policy logjam, when, for one reason or another, nothing much can be done.
“This would yield 5-5.5 per cent growth,” he said.
“We are separately bringing out a more detailed scenario exercise.
“The Plan really focuses on scenario one (eight per cent growth) as the only scenario that would be acceptable, considering the people’s ambitions.
So, we are not laying down the details of what the second scenario would be.
From a technical point of view, it merits to say ‘that is what we mean’. There is another document that would come soon,”