NOTES
CLASS – XI
SUBJECT – ECONOMIC
CHAPTER 8 COMPARATIVE DEVELOPMENT EXPERIENCES OF
INDIA AND ITS NEIGHBOURS
8.1 Introduction
Context: Importance of understanding developmental strategies among neighboring
countries for globalized and shared economic spaces.
Countries compared: India, Pakistan, and China.
o India: Democracy with liberal constitution.
o Pakistan: Militarist structure.
o China: Command economy transitioning to liberal reforms.
8.2 Developmental Path – A Snapshot View
Similarities:
o All began developmental planning post-independence (India & Pakistan: 1947;
China: 1949).
o Initial focus on Five-Year Plans (India: 1951-56, Pakistan: 1956, China: 1953).
China:
Great Leap Forward (GLF) (1958): Industrialization focus but failed due to droughts and
conflicts with Russia.
Reforms (1978): Introduced phased reforms starting with agriculture, leading to
privatization and industrial growth.
Pakistan:
Mixed Economy Model: Coexistence of public and private sectors.
Policies evolved from Green Revolution (1960s) to nationalization (1970s) and
denationalization (1980s).
Challenges: Reliance on remittances and volatile agriculture output.
CLASS – XI
SUBJECT – ECONOMIC
CHAPTER 8 COMPARATIVE DEVELOPMENT EXPERIENCES OF
INDIA AND ITS NEIGHBOURS
8.1 Introduction
Context: Importance of understanding developmental strategies among neighboring
countries for globalized and shared economic spaces.
Countries compared: India, Pakistan, and China.
o India: Democracy with liberal constitution.
o Pakistan: Militarist structure.
o China: Command economy transitioning to liberal reforms.
8.2 Developmental Path – A Snapshot View
Similarities:
o All began developmental planning post-independence (India & Pakistan: 1947;
China: 1949).
o Initial focus on Five-Year Plans (India: 1951-56, Pakistan: 1956, China: 1953).
China:
Great Leap Forward (GLF) (1958): Industrialization focus but failed due to droughts and
conflicts with Russia.
Reforms (1978): Introduced phased reforms starting with agriculture, leading to
privatization and industrial growth.
Pakistan:
Mixed Economy Model: Coexistence of public and private sectors.
Policies evolved from Green Revolution (1960s) to nationalization (1970s) and
denationalization (1980s).
Challenges: Reliance on remittances and volatile agriculture output.