To The Point

This was a period of instability. The Janata Party government rejected the fifth five-year Plan and introduced a new Sixth Five-Year Plan. This, in turn, was rejected by the Indian National Congress in 1980 upon Indira Gandhi's re-election.

A rolling plan is one in which the effectiveness of the plan is evaluated annually and a new plan is created the following year based on this evaluation. As a result, throughout this plan, both the allocation and the targets are updated.

Annual Plans (1990-92)

The Eight Five Year Plan was not introduced in 1990 and the following years 1990-91 and 1991-92 were treated as Annual Plans. This was largely because of the economic instability. India faced a crisis of foreign exchange reserves during this time. Liberalisation, Privatisation, Globalisation (LPG) was introduced in India to grapple with the problem of the economy under prime minister P.V Narasimha Rao.