The most cited NCERT textbook in UPSC economics preparation. Nine chapters across three units take the reader from colonial India's economic inheritance (1947), through Nehruvian planning and the 1991 liberalisation, to the contemporary structure of Indian poverty, employment, infrastructure, and the sustainable-development frontier. The textbook anchors GS-3 (economy, agriculture, infrastructure, environment) for the UPSC Mains and powers half the Prelims economy questions every year. Chapter summaries, all NCERT exercise Q&A answered with explanations, PYQ tagging, and links to deep-dive UPSC topic explainers.
The book is organised in three units: Development Experience (1947-90), Economic Reforms since 1991, and Current Challenges. Each chapter page has full summary, NCERT exercise Q&A, PYQ tagging, and cross-links to companion UPSC topic deep-dives.
Colonial economic policies — drain of wealth (Dadabhai Naoroji); deindustrialisation; agricultural stagnation (zamindari/ryotwari/mahalwari); commercialisation; foreign trade; demographic and occupational structure; infrastructure for British not Indian benefit.
Goals of planning (growth, equity, modernisation, self-reliance); Five Year Plans (P.C. Mahalanobis model); agricultural reforms; Green Revolution; industrial policy 1948/1956; foreign trade; assessment of planning era.
1991 BoP crisis; New Economic Policy; stabilisation + structural reforms; industrial policy 1991; trade policy reforms; financial sector reforms (Narasimham Committee); FDI; WTO; appraisal — growth vs employment vs inequality.
Concept of poverty; absolute vs relative poverty; poverty line (Tendulkar, Rangarajan, recent NITI Aayog Multidimensional Poverty Index); poverty trends; causes and policy responses; MGNREGA; rural poverty.
Human capital concept; sources (education, health, training); human capital vs human development; education sector; rural-urban / male-female gaps; future of human capital.
Rural credit (formal/informal, NABARD, Kisan Credit Card); agricultural marketing (APMC, eNAM); diversification (horticulture, dairy, fisheries); MSME; PURA; sustainable agriculture.
Workforce, labour force, unemployment; self-employed vs casual vs regular; informal sector (~90% of workforce); jobless growth; PLFS data; gender employment; recent policy.
Economic infrastructure (transport, power, communication, banking) vs social infrastructure (health, education); energy mix; power sector (electricity acts); health infrastructure; PPP model; Gati Shakti; Bharatmala; Sagarmala.
Environment-economy interaction; functions of environment; sustainable development (Brundtland 1987); climate change and India's NDCs; National Action Plan on Climate Change; LiFE Mission; SDGs; circular economy.