New Economic Policy 1991 — Liberalisation & Privatisation
SECTION 1 — PRE-1991 CRISIS: WHY NEP WAS NEEDED
The Indian Economy Before 1991
• After independence in 1947, India adopted a mixed economy model — both public
and private sectors coexisted, but the government had dominant control.
• Economic planning was done through Five Year Plans under the Planning
Commission.
• The government followed an inward-looking, import-substitution strategy —
meaning India tried to produce everything domestically rather than importing.
• This led to the creation of a massive public sector in steel, coal, railways, banking,
insurance, oil, etc.
The Problem — "Licence Raj"
• Any business that wanted to set up a factory, expand capacity, or change its product
line needed multiple licences and approvals from the government.
• This system was called the Industrial Licensing System or Licence Raj.
• It created massive red tape, corruption, delays, and inefficiency.
• Businesses spent more time getting approvals than actually producing goods.
• Competition was restricted — favoured businesses got licences, others were kept
out.
• Innovation suffered because firms had no incentive to improve when competition
was absent.
The Crisis of 1991
• By 1990–91, India was facing a full-blown Balance of Payments (BoP) crisis.
• Foreign exchange reserves fell to just $1.2 billion — enough to cover only about 2–3
weeks of imports.
• India was on the verge of sovereign default (failing to repay international loans).
• Inflation was running at around 13%.
• Fiscal deficit (the gap between government spending and revenue) had become
unsustainable — it was over 8% of GDP.
• The Gulf War (1990–91) made things worse — oil prices shot up and remittances
from Indians working in Gulf countries dried up.
• India had to pledge 67 tonnes of gold with the Bank of England and Bank of Japan as
collateral to get emergency foreign exchange.
• India approached the IMF (International Monetary Fund) for a $2.2 billion loan.
IMF Conditionalities — Why Reforms Were Imposed
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• The IMF did not give the loan for free — it attached structural adjustment conditions.
• India had to commit to reducing fiscal deficit, removing trade barriers, devaluing the
rupee, and freeing markets.
• This is what gave birth to the New Economic Policy (NEP) of 1991.
• The policy was designed by Finance Minister Dr. Manmohan Singh under PM P.V.
Narasimha Rao.
• Dr. Singh's 1991 Budget speech famously quoted Victor Hugo: "No power on earth
can stop an idea whose time has come."
SECTION 2 — WHAT IS THE NEW ECONOMIC POLICY (NEP)?
• NEP 1991 was a comprehensive package of economic reforms aimed at stabilising
the economy in the short run and structurally transforming it in the long run.
• It shifted India from a controlled, government-directed economy to a market-
oriented, open economy.
The NEP was built on three interconnected pillars known as LPG:
• L — Liberalisation
• P — Privatisation
• G — Globalisation
THREE PILLARS OF NEP — LPG
Liberalisation — removing government controls, deregulating industries, freeing trade and
financial markets, allowing market forces to operate freely.
Privatisation — transferring ownership, management, and control of Public Sector
Undertakings (PSUs) to private hands; allowing private players into sectors previously
monopolised by the government.
Globalisation — integrating the Indian economy with the world economy through free
trade, foreign investment, and participation in international economic institutions like WTO.
TOPIC 1 — LIBERALISATION
WHAT IS LIBERALISATION?
• Liberalisation means the process of freeing the economy from excessive government
control, regulations, and restrictions.
• It means allowing market forces — demand and supply — to take decisions about
what to produce, how much to produce, and at what price, instead of the
government deciding everything.
• The government steps back from being a controller and becomes a facilitator.
• The word comes from "liberty" — giving freedom to businesses and individuals to
make their own economic decisions.
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• In the Indian context, liberalisation specifically refers to the reforms introduced as
part of the New Economic Policy (NEP) of 1991.
WHY WAS LIBERALISATION NEEDED IN INDIA?
• After independence, India followed a heavily controlled, government-directed
economy.
• A system called the Licence Raj existed — every business needed dozens of licences
and government approvals just to operate, expand, or change products.
• This created massive red tape, corruption, inefficiency, and delay.
• Businesses spent more time obtaining approvals than actually producing anything.
• Competition was absent — without competition, firms had no pressure to improve
quality, reduce prices, or innovate.
• The public sector dominated all major industries — steel, coal, oil, banking,
insurance, railways, telecom — leaving little room for private enterprise.
By 1990–91, India was in a deep economic crisis:
• Foreign exchange reserves fell to just $1.2 billion — enough for only 2–3 weeks of
imports.
• Inflation was around 13%.
• Fiscal deficit exceeded 8% of GDP.
• India had to pledge 67 tonnes of gold as collateral to get emergency foreign
exchange.
• India approached the IMF for a $2.2 billion loan — IMF imposed conditions of
structural reforms.
• These conditions forced India to liberalise its economy — remove controls, open
markets, and reduce government interference.
MEASURES OF LIBERALISATION
A — INDUSTRIAL LIBERALISATION
Industrial Licensing Abolished:
• Under the Industries (Development and Regulation) Act, 1951, every business
needed a licence from the government to set up a factory, decide what to produce,
how much to produce, and where to locate it.
• In 1991, industrial licensing was scrapped for almost all industries.
• Only a small list of strategically sensitive industries retained licensing — defence,
atomic energy, hazardous chemicals, alcohol (spirits), tobacco.
• Businesses could now freely set up, expand, diversify, or shut down without
government permission.
MRTP Act Diluted: