Third Five Year Plan (1961-1966)
INTRODUCTION This report sets out the objectives, policies and programmes of development for the Third Five Year Plan. Two Five Year Plans have helped strengthen the foundations of economic and social life and stimulated industrial and economic growth and scientific and technological advance. The Third Five Year Plan seeks to give a more precise content to the social objectives of the Constitution and represents a large advance towards their realisation. It takes account of the successes and the failures in the first two Plans and sets the tasks to be fulfilled in the perspective of development over the next fifteen years and more. Work on the preparation of the Third Plan commenced towards the end of 1958 and was carried out in three main stages. The first, leading to the publication of the Draft Outline early in July, 1960, comprised detailed studies by working groups set up at the Centre and in the States. Parliament gave its general approval to the Draft Outline in August, 1960. The Draft Outline was discussed throughout the country and served as the basis for the preparation of the plans of States. These were considered with the Chief Ministers of States between September and November, 1960. In January, 1961, the National Development Council made its recommendations concerning the overall size and the structure of the Third Plan; the Council also set up a Committee on Savings to suggest ways of securing the maximum mobilisation of resources for the Third Plan. Finally, on May 31 and June 1, 1961, the National Development Council considered the Draft Report on the Third Plan and generally approved it. The objectives and priorities of the Third Plan were considered carefully by five Parliamentary Committees in November, 1960, and every effort has been made in this Report to avail of the suggestions and comments offered by these Committees. Several aspects of the Plan were placed from time to time before the Committee of Members of Parliament from different political parties presided over by the Prime Minister. The Consultative Committee of Members of Parliament associated with the Planning Commission also reviewed the Plan at various stages. Throughout the preparation of the Plan, leading public men and scholars, professional associations, organisations representing industry and labour, and independent experts generously gave of their time and experience. The Planning Commission had the benefit of advice and suggestions from its Panel of Economists, Panel of Scientists, and Panels on Land Reform, Agriculture, Education, Health and Housing. It was also helped by studies initiated by the Programme Evaluation Organisation, the Research Programmes Committee, the Committee on Plan Projects, the Central Statistical Organisation, the Indian Statistical Institute and other leading organisations engaged in research. Efforts to prepare plans at the district, block and village level, specially for the development of agriculture, cooperation, education and rural industries, were an integral part of the process of drawing up the plans of States as well as the National Plan. These local plans are a vital element in the success of Panchayati Raj, which places in the hands of the people of each area the initiative and responsibility for their own development and the means and resources for rapid advance. The preparation of the Third Plan has been, thus, a vast national undertaking in which valuable contributions have come from many sources, and at every stage there has been the closest collaboration with the State Governments and the Central Ministries.
The Third Plan represents the first phase in a scheme of long-term development extending over the next fifteen years or so, the preparation of which will now be taken in hand. In the course of this period, India's economy must not only expand rapidly but must, at the same time, become self-reliant and self-generating. This' long-term approach is intended to provide a general design of development for the country's natural resources, agricultural and industrial advance, changes in the social structure and an integrated scheme of regional and national development. The Plan sets large objectives and targets for the five-year period. They are large only in comparison with the past, not in relation to needs or to the nation's capacity to achieve. They constitute a minimum which must be assured, but their true purpose is to open the way to a still more intensive endeavour and a deeper sense of urgency. The size of the task and the many-sided challenge should not be underestimated. The greatest stress in the Plan has to be on implementation, on speed and thoroughness in seeking practical results, and on creating conditions for the maximum production and employment and the development of human resources. Discipline and national unity are the very basis of social and economic progress and the achievement of socialism. At each step, the Third Plan will demand dedicated leadership at all levels, the highest standards of devotion and efficiency from the public services, widespread understanding and participation by the people, and willingness on their part to take their full share of responsibility and to bear larger burdens for the future.
Chapter 32:
HEALTH AND FAMILY PLANNING The broad objective of the health and family planning programmes in the Third Plan is to expand health services, to bring about progressive improvement in the health of the people by ensuring a certain minimum of physical well-being and to create conditions favourable to greater efficiency and productivity. Increased emphasis will be laid on preventive public health services. As in the Second Plan, specific programmes have been formulated for the Third Plan for improvement of environmental sanitation, specially rural and urban water supply. control of communicable diseases, organisation of institutional facilities for providing health services and for the training of medical and health personnel, and provision of services such as maternal and child welfare, health education and nutrition. The Third Plan also accords very high priority to family planning. 2. As against outlays of Rs. 140 and Rs. 225 crores in the First and Second Plans respectively, programmes in the Third Plan involve a total outlay of about Rs. 342 crores, about Rs. 297 crores being in the States and the rest at the Centre. These amounts are distributed undei-difl'erent heads as follows : Table 1 : Distribution of outlay (Rs. crores.) Programme health water supply and sanitatioo Crural and urban) primary hcalib units, hospitals and dispensaries
First Plan
Second Plan
Thild Plan
49-0
76
105-3
25
36.0
61 -7
control of communicitble diseases education, tr«unitig and research indigenous systems of medicin, homoeopathy and nature cure other schemes , family planning total
23-1 21 04
64-0 36.0 4-0
70-5 56.3 9-8
20-2 0-7 140-0
6-0 3-0 225 .0@
11-2 27-0 341 .8
HEALTH Progress And Programmes 3. During the past ten years, substantial progress has been made in various health programmes, and in several directions there have been notable advances. Measures adopted for ihe control of malaria have resulted in marked decline in the incidence of the disease. In 1958, in place of control, the programme of complete eradication of malaria was adopted. In controlling other communicable diseases like filaria, tuberculosis, leprosy and venereal diseases also appreciable progress has been made. The number of hospitals and dispensaries has increased from 8600 in 1950-51 to 12,600 in 1960-61 and of beds from 113,000 to 185,600. A basic type of health organisation providing an integrated preventive and curative service hw been established in 2800 development blocks with a population of about 200 million. At the end of the Second Plan, there were 78 institutions teaching indigenous systems of medicine, their annual intake being 1375. Facilities according to the indigenous systems arc at present available in 98 hospitals and 5372 dispensaries with a total bed strength of 2462. About 664 schemes of urban water supply and drainage entailing a total cost of Rs. 112 crores have been completed or are in progress. In addition to schemes of rural water supply implemented under the programmes for community development, locsil development works and welfare of backward classes, about 228 schemes with an estimated cost of Rs. 20 crores have been taken up under the Hcahh programme. 4. Statistics concerning birth and death rates arc subject to serious limitations, and for the period subsequent to 1951 only rough estimates can be made. Nevertheless, the following Table indicates in broad terms steady improvernent in Ihc health of the population: Table 2 : Birth rates, death rates and expectation of life—1941-61 period
birth rate death rate
1941-51 1951-56 1956-61
19-9 41 -7 40'7
27-4 25 9 21 -6
infant mortality ratemate female 190-0 175-0 16- 4 146-7 142 -1 127 9
expectation of at birth male female 32-45 31 66 37 -76 37 -49 41 -68 42- 00
5. Although there has been considerable development in the field of health and in the related services, at the end of the Second Plan, certain dencicndcs were specially marked. Thus. in relation to needs the institutional facilities were quite inadequate, specially in the rural areas. Doctors were not evenly distributed HEALTH: FIRST AND SECOND PLAN ACHIEVEMENTS AND THIRD PLAN TARGETS
between urban and rural areas and, as against concentration in many urban areas, in the rural areas generally there were shortages, and the existing institutions did not have their full complement of personnel. Progress in the control of communicable diseases was hampered in several parts of the country on account of shortages of trained personnel and to some extent also
of supplies of the equipment. Despite a measure of progress in rural water supply, there were large rural tracts which lacked safe drinking water. In many urban areas problems of drainage have been accentuated on account of the rapid growth of population. 6. The broad aim in the Third Plan will he to remove the shortages and deficiencies mentioned above. A major objective is that, to a-' large an extent as possible, supplies of good drinking water should be available in most villages in the country by the end of the Third Plan. Institutional facilities will be expanded so that medical and health services reach progressively larger numbers of persons, specially in the rural areas. The programme for the eradication of malaria will be completed and efforts will be made to eradicate siLall pox and to control filaria, cholera, tuberculosis, leprosy and other communicable diseases. Drainage programmes will be undertaken on a larger scale in the urban areas. The specific physical targets proposed for the Third Plan along with statistics of progress in the First and the Second Plans are given in summary form in the Table below : Table 3: Achievements and targets Catagories/units 1950-51 hospitals and dispensaries institutions 8600 beds 113000 primary health units medical education medical 30 colleges annual 2500 admissions dental education dental colleges 4 annual 150 admissions training 56000 programmes doctors® nurses® 15000 auxiliary nurse-midwives and 8000 midwives health visitors® 521 . nurse1800 dais/dais® sanitary 3500 inspectors® pharmacists . N.A control of communicable
1955-56
196061
1965-66
10000 125000 725
12600 14600 185600 240100 2800 5000
42
57
75
3500
5800
8000
7 231
10 281
14 400
65000
70000 81000
18500
27000 45000
12780
19900 48500
800
1500
3500
6400 11500 40000 4000
6000
19200
N.A
N.A
48000
diseases malaria units '. population covered (millions) filaria— units
390
390*
107
438
497
11
48
48
15-1
24-6
NA.
15 110
119 160 3
167 220 10
167 420 15
10371
22000 33
26500 135
30000 235
83
189
4500
10000
population covered (millions) tuberculosis— B.C.G. teams T.B. clinics T.B. demonstration and training centres beds leprosy— subsidiary centres
133
venereal diseases -V.D. clinics maternity and child health centies 1651
1856
@ Number indicates the number in practice or in service. N.A.—Not available.