HPAS 2023 Economy Topic-Wise Solutions
Which organization releases the SDG India-Index, which comprehensively documents the progress made by India’s States and Union Territories towards implementing the 2030 SDG targets?
Correct Answer is (b) NITI Aayog: The SDG India Index & Dashboard is a flagship initiative of NITI Aayog. First launched in 2018, it comprehensively documents and ranks the progress made by India’s States and Union Territories towards achieving the United Nations’ 2030 Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs).
| Organization | Core Focus | Important Publications / Reports |
|---|---|---|
| (b) NITI Aayog (Correct Answer) | Policy Think Tank & Cooperative Federalism |
• SDG India Index • National Multidimensional Poverty Index (MPI) • India Innovation Index • State Health Index • Composite Water Management Index • Export Preparedness Index |
| (a) RBI (Reserve Bank of India) | Monetary Policy & Banking Regulation |
• Financial Stability Report (FSR) – Published half-yearly • Monetary Policy Report • Report on Trend and Progress of Banking in India • State Finances: A Study of Budgets |
| (c) NIPFP (National Institute of Public Finance and Policy) | Economic Research (Under Finance Ministry) |
• India Public Finance and Policy Report • Various working papers on fiscal federalism, tax evasion, and macroeconomic policy. |
| (d) SEBI (Securities and Exchange Board of India) | Capital & Securities Market Regulation |
• SEBI Annual Report • SEBI Monthly Bulletin • Annual Report on the Corporate Bond Market |
NITI Aayog acts as the ultimate “Report Card” creator for Indian States. If an index ranks Indian States to foster “competitive federalism”, 90% of the time, it’s NITI Aayog.
Remember the acronym “WISH for Poverty Exports”:
- W → Water (Composite Water Management Index)
- I → Innovation (India Innovation Index)
- S → SDG India Index
- H → Health (State Health Index)
- Poverty → Multidimensional Poverty Index (MPI)
- Exports → Export Preparedness Index
Examiners frequently swap reports between the RBI and the Ministry of Finance (MoF).
- 🏦 “Stability & Banking” = RBI: The RBI is concerned with keeping the system stable. Hence, the Financial Stability Report and Trend and Progress of Banking belong to RBI.
- 🏛️ “Economy & Expenditure” = MoF: The Finance Ministry looks at the broader economy. Hence, the Economic Survey and Union Budget are released by the MoF (specifically, the Department of Economic Affairs).
UPSC CSE / State PSC (Similar PYQ): Which of the following bodies publishes the “Financial Stability Report” in India?
(A) NITI Aayog
(B) Ministry of Finance
(C) Reserve Bank of India
(D) Securities and Exchange Board of India
Exam Connection: This is a classic trap where students guess the Ministry of Finance because “Finance” is in the title, but maintaining the systemic stability of the financial sector is the core mandate of the RBI.
What is the correct ascending order of Indian States on the basis of the poverty headcount ratio (PHR) as per the National Multidimensional Poverty Index measured by NITI Aayog?
Correct Answer is (a) Rajasthan, Madhya Pradesh, Uttar Pradesh, Bihar: Based on the latest National Multidimensional Poverty Index (MPI) 2023 (A Progress Review based on NFHS-5 data) released by NITI Aayog, the ascending order of the Poverty Headcount Ratio (PHR) — meaning from the lowest percentage of poor to the highest — is perfectly reflected in Option (A).
| State | Poverty Headcount Ratio (PHR) % |
|---|---|
| 1. Rajasthan | 15.31% |
| 2. Madhya Pradesh | 20.63% |
| 3. Uttar Pradesh | 22.93% |
| 4. Bihar | 33.76% (Highest in India) |
| Category | States | Key Statistic (PHR) |
|---|---|---|
| States with HIGHEST Poverty (Bottom Performers) |
1. Bihar 2. Jharkhand 3. Meghalaya 4. Uttar Pradesh 5. Madhya Pradesh | Bihar remains the poorest state with 33.76% of its population being multidimensionally poor, though it saw the fastest absolute reduction in poverty since the last report. |
| States with LOWEST Poverty (Top Performers) |
1. Kerala 2. Goa 3. Tamil Nadu 4. Sikkim 5. Punjab | Kerala has virtually eradicated multidimensional poverty with a staggering low PHR of just 0.55%. |
India’s National MPI is based on the globally accepted Alkire-Foster methodology. It measures deprivations across 3 equally weighted dimensions, which are further divided into 12 specific indicators.
| Dimension (Weight: 1/3 each) | Specific Indicators |
|---|---|
| 1. Health | 1. Nutrition 2. Child & Adolescent Mortality 3. Maternal Health |
| 2. Education | 4. Years of Schooling 5. School Attendance |
| 3. Standard of Living | 6. Cooking Fuel 7. Sanitation 8. Drinking Water 9. Electricity 10. Housing 11. Assets 12. Bank Accounts |
Examiners love to confuse you between the Global MPI (released by UNDP & OPHI) and India’s National MPI (released by NITI Aayog).
- The Global MPI has only 10 indicators.
- NITI Aayog customized the index for India by adding 2 extra indicators to make it 12 indicators.
- The 2 extra Indian indicators are: Maternal Health (under Health) and Bank Accounts (under Standard of Living). If you see these two in an options list, they belong only to the NITI Aayog index!
To remember the states with the highest poverty (in descending order from worst to slightly better), remember the acronym: “B-J-M-U-M”
“Bihar Jharkhand Meghalaya Uttar pradesh Madhya pradesh.”
UPSC CSE / State PSC (Similar PYQ): Which of the following indicators is NOT a part of the National Multidimensional Poverty Index (MPI) formulated by NITI Aayog?
(A) Maternal Health
(B) Bank Accounts
(C) Per Capita Income
(D) Years of Schooling
Exam Connection: The whole purpose of the Multidimensional Poverty Index is to look beyond just money. Therefore, monetary metrics like “Per Capita Income” or “GDP” are strictly excluded from the index. It measures actual deprivations in health, education, and living standards.
First comprehensive population policy was announced by Government of India on:
Correct Answer is (c) 16 April, 1976: The Government of India announced its first comprehensive National Population Policy (NPP) on April 16, 1976. It was formulated by then Health Minister Dr. Karan Singh during the Emergency period. While India was the first country in the world to launch a family planning programme in 1952, the 1976 announcement was the first formal, comprehensive “policy” document integrating population control with overall national development.
| Year & Policy | Core Approach & Shift from Previous | Key Features & Mandates |
|---|---|---|
| 1952 National Family Planning Programme | Clinical Approach First in the world, but highly ad-hoc. Relied on clinics to distribute contraceptives. | Failed to achieve mass scale because it expected people to actively visit clinics. No strict demographic targets. |
| 1976 First National Population Policy | Target-Oriented & Coercive Shifted from voluntary clinical approach to aggressive state-led targets. |
• Raised legal marriage age (18 for girls, 21 for boys). • Froze political representation (Lok Sabha seats) based on the 1971 Census until 2001. • Higher financial incentives for sterilization. • Allowed state governments to introduce compulsory sterilization legislation (leading to Emergency-era excesses). |
| 1977 Revised Population Policy | Voluntary & Welfare-Oriented A direct backlash to the 1976 coercion. |
• Renamed the “Family Planning Programme” to “Family Welfare Programme”. • Compulsion and coercion were strictly ruled out. • Emphasized education and voluntary acceptance. |
| 2000 National Population Policy (NPP 2000) | Holistic & Rights-Based Based on the M.S. Swaminathan Committee Report (1994). Moved away from “targets” to “informed choice.” |
• Extended the freeze on Lok Sabha seats up to 2026. • Focus on reducing Infant Mortality Rate (IMR) to below 30 and Maternal Mortality Ratio (MMR) to below 100. • Promoted institutional deliveries and delayed marriage. |
Examiners frequently ask about the specific time-bound objectives set by the National Population Policy of 2000.
- ⚡ Immediate Objective: To address the unmet needs for contraception, healthcare infrastructure, and health personnel.
- 📅 Medium-Term Objective: To bring the Total Fertility Rate (TFR) down to replacement level (TFR = 2.1) by 2010.
- 🔭 Long-Term Objective: To achieve a stable population by the year 2045.
Current Affairs Update: Because population momentum is higher in certain states, the government has unofficially pushed this target year for population stabilization to 2070.
State PSCs love testing the constitutional amendments related to population policies and political seats. Don’t mix these two up:
- 42nd Amendment Act (1976): Implemented the NPP 1976 mandate. It froze the allocation of seats in the Lok Sabha and State Assemblies on the basis of the 1971 Census till the year 2000. It also moved “Population control and family planning” to the Concurrent List.
- 84th Amendment Act (2001): Implemented the NPP 2000 mandate. It extended the freeze on the total number of seats based on the 1971 Census for another 25 years, i.e., up to the year 2026.
UPSC CSE / State PSC (Similar PYQ): The National Population Policy 2000 was based on the draft report prepared by an expert group headed by:
(A) Dr. Karan Singh
(B) M.S. Swaminathan
(C) K. Kasturirangan
(D) C. Rangarajan
Exam Connection: While Dr. Karan Singh formulated the 1976 coercive policy, it was the legendary agricultural scientist M.S. Swaminathan who chaired the committee in 1994 that laid the holistic, rights-based groundwork for the NPP 2000.
Given below are two statements:
Statement I: Gati Shakti digital platform involves the creation of a common umbrella platform through which infrastructure projects can be planned and implemented.
Statement II: Gati Shakti Digital platform is based on twelve pillars.
In the light of the above statements, choose the most appropriate answer from the options given below:
Correct Answer is (c) Statement I is correct and Statement II is incorrect:
Statement I is CORRECT: The PM Gati Shakti National Master Plan is indeed a massive digital umbrella platform designed to break departmental silos, bringing 16 Ministries (including Railways and Roadways) together for integrated planning and coordinated implementation of infrastructure connectivity projects.
Statement II is INCORRECT: The PM Gati Shakti digital platform is based on 6 Pillars (not twelve). Furthermore, its infrastructural framework is driven by 7 Engines of growth. The number 12 is a factual trap set by the examiner.
Launched on October 13, 2021, it is a ₹100 Lakh Crore project aimed at transforming India’s infrastructure landscape through Multi-Modal Connectivity.
These are the foundational principles upon which the digital platform operates:
- Comprehensiveness: It incorporates all existing and planned initiatives of various Ministries and Departments into one centralized portal, allowing everyone to see the “big picture.”
- Prioritization: Through cross-sectoral interactions, different departments can prioritize their projects according to national strategic needs.
- Optimization: The National Master Plan assists different ministries in planning for projects after identifying critical gaps (e.g., finding the shortest, most cost-effective route to transport goods).
- Synchronization: Individual ministries and departments often work in silos causing delays. The platform ensures coordination in the execution of projects.
- Analytical: It provides the entire data in one place with Geographic Information System (GIS) based spatial planning and analytical tools having 200+ layers.
- Dynamic: All ministries can identify, review, and monitor the progress of cross-sectoral projects through a satellite imagery portal.
Remember the acronym: “COPS Are Dynamic”
- C → Comprehensiveness
- O → Optimization
- P → Prioritization
- S → Synchronization
- A → Analytical
- Dynamic → Dynamic
| The 7 Engines of PM Gati Shakti (The Physical Drivers) | |
|---|---|
| 1. Roads | 5. Mass Transport |
| 2. Railways | 6. Waterways |
| 3. Airports | 7. Logistics Infrastructure |
| 4. Ports | |
- Developed By: The Gati Shakti digital platform was developed by BISAG-N (Bhaskaracharya National Institute for Space Applications and Geoinformatics), Gandhinagar.
- Technology Used: It heavily relies on GIS (Geographic Information System) mapping and satellite imagery provided by ISRO to create over 200 spatial data layers (showing forests, rivers, existing roads, optical fiber networks, etc.).
- Core Objective: To drastically reduce Logistics Costs. Currently, India’s logistics cost is around 13-14% of GDP. The goal (aligned with the National Logistics Policy 2022) is to bring it down to global benchmark levels of 8-9%.
PM Gati Shakti specifically targets Multi-Modal Connectivity. This means integrating different modes of transport seamlessly.
Example: If coal needs to reach a power plant, the platform plans the route so it moves from a coal mine → by truck (Roadway) → to a cargo train (Railway) → to an inland port (Waterway) without logistical bottlenecks or waiting times.
UPSC CSE / State PSC (Similar PYQ): The ‘PM Gati Shakti’ scheme, recently in the news, is primarily associated with which of the following sectors?
(A) Harnessing renewable solar energy capacity
(B) Multi-modal infrastructure connectivity and logistics
(C) Direct cash transfers to marginal farmers
(D) Upgrading defense manufacturing corridors
Exam Connection: While the name “Gati Shakti” (Speed and Power) might trick students into guessing energy or defense, its sole focus is breaking down infrastructure silos to speed up multi-modal goods movement and lower logistics costs.
Given below are two statements:
Statement I: Honey Mission was launched in the year 2017.
Statement II: Sweet Revolution promotes the apiculture in India.
In the light of the above statements, choose the most appropriate answer from the options given below:
Correct Answer is (a) Both Statement I and Statement II are correct: (Note: The original official question paper contained a typographical error, printing “Money Mission” instead of “Honey Mission”.)
Statement I is CORRECT: The Honey Mission was officially launched in the financial year 2017-18 by the Khadi and Village Industries Commission (KVIC).
Statement II is CORRECT: The Sweet Revolution (Mithi Kranti) is a massive strategic initiative by the Government of India explicitly designed to promote apiculture (scientific beekeeping) to increase honey production and double farmers’ income.
| Initiative | Ministry / Implementing Body | Key Features & Objectives |
|---|---|---|
| Honey Mission (Launched 2017) | Ministry of MSME (Implemented by KVIC) |
• Provides direct assistance: bee boxes, live bee colonies, tool kits, and training. • Targets farmers, Adivasis (tribals), women, and unemployed youth. • Reduces human-elephant conflict in specific zones (using “Project RE-HAB” bee fences). |
| Sweet Revolution (Mithi Kranti) | Government of India (Visionary Umbrella Concept) |
• Focuses on moving beyond just honey to high-value hive products like royal jelly, beeswax, bee pollen, and propolis. • Aims to boost crop productivity; cross-pollination by bees increases agricultural yields by 15-20%. • Jharkhand was heavily targeted initially due to its 30% forest cover and ideal climate. |
- Ministry: Ministry of Agriculture and Farmers Welfare (Implemented by the National Bee Board – NBB).
- Funding: A Central Sector Scheme with an allocation of ₹500 crore under the Atma Nirbhar Bharat Abhiyan.
- Goal: Overall promotion and holistic development of scientific beekeeping to achieve the goals of the Sweet Revolution.
- An initiative of the National Bee Board (NBB).
- It is a digital platform for online registration and traceability of honey.
- Objective: To check the quality, prevent adulteration, and trace the source of honey from the apiary (beekeeper) to the consumer.
- Launched by KVIC, this is India’s first mobile honey processing unit.
- It travels directly to farmers’ doorsteps, processes honey on-site, eliminates transport costs to distant processing plants, and saves farmers from distress sales.
State PSCs and UPSC love to swap the ministries associated with beekeeping initiatives because they span across two different domains. Memorize this distinction:
- If the question asks about the Honey Mission (2017) or KVIC → It falls under the Ministry of MSME (Micro, Small and Medium Enterprises).
- If the question asks about the National Beekeeping & Honey Mission (NBHM – 2020) or the National Bee Board → It falls under the Ministry of Agriculture.
State PSC (Similar PYQ): The “Madhukranti Portal”, recently launched by the Government of India, aims to achieve which of the following objectives?
(A) To provide direct cash transfers to traditional beekeepers.
(B) To ensure end-to-end traceability of honey and other beehive products.
(C) To export excess sugar production under the Sweet Revolution.
(D) To track the migration patterns of wild bees.
Exam Connection: A classic feature of the Sweet Revolution is ensuring the quality of Indian honey for international exports. The Madhukranti portal was built specifically to prevent adulteration and track honey back to its source apiary.
Given below are two statements:
Statement I: The theory of Unbalanced Growth was advocated by Prof. Hirschman.
Statement II: The theory of Unbalanced Growth states that investment should be first made in certain core sectors of the economy which have a high degree of complementarity. Once, the process of growth is initiated, it will spread to other sectors through forward and backward linkages.
In the light of the above statements, choose the most appropriate answer from the options given below:
Correct Answer is (a) Both Statement I and Statement II are correct:
Statement I is CORRECT: The Strategy of Unbalanced Growth was most prominently propounded by the American economist Albert O. Hirschman in his classic 1958 book, “The Strategy of Economic Development.” Other notable supporters of this theory include Hans Singer and Paul Streeten.
Statement II is CORRECT: Hirschman argued that Less Developed Countries (LDCs) simply do not have the massive capital, skilled labor, or administrative capacity required to invest in every sector simultaneously. Therefore, the best strategy is to deliberately “unbalance” the economy by heavily investing in a few strategic, core sectors. This deliberate imbalance creates shortages and surpluses that automatically induce investment in other sectors through Forward and Backward Linkages.
To understand Unbalanced Growth, you must understand how one strategic investment pulls the rest of the economy along. Hirschman divided these effects into two types of linkages:
- When a new industry is set up, it creates a massive demand for raw materials and inputs from supplier industries.
- Example: If the government invests heavily in building a massive Car Manufacturing Plant, it automatically creates a huge demand for steel, rubber, glass, and batteries. This forces investors to set up factories for those raw materials behind it in the supply chain.
- When a new industry is set up, its finished product acts as a raw material or catalyst for subsequent industries down the line.
- Example: If the government invests heavily in building a massive Steel Plant, cheap and abundant steel floods the market. This encourages private investors to set up car factories, utensil manufacturing, and construction businesses ahead of it in the supply chain.
You cannot master Unbalanced Growth without understanding the theory it was designed to defeat: Balanced Growth. State PSCs frequently ask you to distinguish between the two.
| Parameter | Balanced Growth Theory | Unbalanced Growth Theory |
|---|---|---|
| Main Propounders | Ragnar Nurkse, Paul Rosenstein-Rodan, W. Arthur Lewis. | Albert O. Hirschman, Hans Singer, Paul Streeten. |
| Core Philosophy | Invest in ALL sectors (agriculture, industry, consumer goods) simultaneously. | Invest in a FEW strategic leading sectors to trigger a chain reaction. |
| The Famous Analogy / Concept | The “Big Push” (Rosenstein-Rodan) and breaking the “Vicious Circle of Poverty” (Nurkse). | Deliberate unbalancing via SOC (Social Overhead Capital) or DPA (Directly Productive Activities). |
| The “Market” Problem | If you only build a shoe factory, workers will only buy shoes. You need to build shirt, food, and housing factories simultaneously so workers can buy from each other. | Developing countries are poor. They literally do not have the money or resources to build everything at once. Forced unbalance is the only realistic path. |
| Historical Example | Soviet Union’s early massive 5-Year Plans. | India’s Second 5-Year Plan (Mahalanobis Model) which heavily favored heavy industries over consumer goods. |
Hirschman stated you can unbalance the economy in two distinct ways. Don’t let examiners confuse you on these terms:
- Unbalance via SOC (Social Overhead Capital): Build massive infrastructure (roads, power plants) first. The excess capacity and cheap transport will tempt private businesses to build factories later.
- Unbalance via DPA (Directly Productive Activities): Build factories first despite bad roads. The factories will produce goods, make money, and create a massive traffic jam/bottleneck. The resulting political pressure will force the government to build the roads later!
UPSC CSE / State PSC (Similar PYQ): The concept of the “Vicious Circle of Poverty”, which forms the basis for the Balanced Growth Theory, was introduced by:
(A) Albert O. Hirschman
(B) Ragnar Nurkse
(C) Karl Marx
(D) Adam Smith
Exam Connection: Examiners frequently test the pioneers of these theories. Ragnar Nurkse famously stated, “A country is poor because it is poor,” meaning low income leads to low savings, leading to low investment, leading back to low income. This is the exact cycle the Unbalanced Growth theory tries to shatter!
Given below are two statements:
Statement I: The percentage of the population aged 65 years and above in India as of 2021, is around 6.2% of the Indian population.
Statement II: The population growth rate in India as of 2021 is around 0.98%.
In the light of the above statements, choose the most appropriate answer from the options given below:
Correct Answer is (b) Both Statement I and Statement II are incorrect:
Statement I is INCORRECT: According to the World Bank and MoSPI’s “Elderly in India 2021” report, the percentage of the population aged 65 years and above was approximately 6.8% in 2021 (not 6.2%). If we look at the broader “senior citizen” bracket of 60+ years, it stands at around 10.1% of the total population.
Statement II is INCORRECT: India’s annual population growth rate has been steadily declining. As of 2021, the World Bank recorded India’s population growth rate at 0.8% (a significant drop from the historical 1-2% bracket), making the 0.98% figure outdated or factually incorrect.
Since the 2021 Census was delayed, State PSCs and UPSC heavily rely on the National Family Health Survey-5 (NFHS-5, 2019-21) and MoSPI reports for current demographic data. Memorize these exact figures:
| Demographic Indicator | Latest Figure (NFHS-5 / World Bank) | Exam Significance & Trend |
|---|---|---|
| Total Fertility Rate (TFR) | 2.0 | India has officially fallen below the Replacement Level of 2.1. (Only 5 states are still above 2.1: Bihar, Meghalaya, UP, Jharkhand, Manipur). |
| Overall Sex Ratio | 1,020 females per 1,000 males | For the first time in recorded history, NFHS-5 showed there are more women than men in India. |
| Sex Ratio at Birth (SRB) | 929 females per 1,000 males | Still skewed toward males, indicating persistent son-meta preference, but it has improved from 919 in NFHS-4. |
| Median Age | ~ 28 Years | India is currently one of the youngest large economies in the world, deep inside its “Demographic Dividend” window. |
| Institutional Births | 88.6% | A massive jump (up from 78.9% in NFHS-4), heavily driven by schemes like Janani Suraksha Yojana (JSY). |
Every economy goes through a standard demographic transition. Examiners frequently ask which stage India is currently in. Here is the master breakdown:
| Stage | Birth Rate (BR) & Death Rate (DR) | Population Growth Status | India’s Historical Timeline |
|---|---|---|---|
| First Stage | High BR + High DR | Stationary / Very Slow Growth | Before 1921 (Famines, epidemics like the 1918 Spanish Flu kept DR high). |
| Second Stage | High BR + Falling DR | Rapid Growth (Population Explosion) | 1921 to 1981 (Medical advances lowered DR, but people still had many children). |
| Third Stage | Falling BR + Low DR | Slowing Down (Decelerating Growth) | 1981 to Present (India is currently in the late Third Stage. Growth is happening, but at a declining rate). |
| Fourth Stage | Low BR + Low DR | Stable / Zero Population Growth | Projected for India around 2070 (Currently seen in developed countries like Japan, Germany). |
- Examiners love asking about the 1921 Census.
- Why? It is known as the “Year of Great Demographic Divide” because it was the only census in India’s history that recorded a negative growth rate (-0.31%) due to the massive mortality from the 1918 influenza pandemic and famines. After 1921, India’s population has grown continuously.
The Demographic Dividend occurs when the proportion of working people in the total population is high. The United Nations Population Fund (UNFPA) defines it as the economic growth potential resulting from shifts in a population’s age structure.
- Working-Age Population: Usually defined as 15 to 59 years (or 15-64 years internationally). In India, this bracket constitutes nearly 62.5% of the total population.
- Dependency Ratio: The ratio of dependents (kids 0-14 + elderly 65+) to the working-age population (15-64).
- The Golden Window: India’s demographic dividend window opened around 2005-06 and is expected to last until 2055-56.
UPSC CSE / State PSC (Similar PYQ): In the context of demography, “Demographic Dividend” refers to:
(A) An increase in the share of the elderly population.
(B) An increase in the rate of population growth.
(C) A rise in the rate of economic growth due to an increasing share of working-age people in the population.
(D) A decline in the overall total fertility rate.
Exam Connection: A declining TFR (Option D) is what causes the demographic dividend (because fewer children means a lower dependency ratio), but the dividend itself is defined by the economic boom created by the bulging working-age bracket (Option C).
Given below are two statements:
Statement I: The percentage of the population that is employed in service sector in India as of 2021 is around 32% of the Indian population.
Statement II: The percentage of the population that is employed in the industrial sector in India as of 2021 is around 30% of the Indian population.
In the light of the above statements, choose the most appropriate answer from the options given below:
Correct Answer is (b) Both Statement I and Statement II are incorrect:
There are two massive errors in these statements. First, the data represents the percentage of the Workforce/Labour Force, NOT the entire “Indian population” (which includes children and the elderly). Second, according to the Periodic Labour Force Survey (PLFS) 2020-21 data, the employment share of the Services sector was roughly 27.6% (not 32%) and the Industrial sector was roughly 25.9% (not 30%). Agriculture still dominated at ~46.5%.
India’s economic growth bypassed the traditional manufacturing phase, jumping straight from agriculture to services. This created a massive mismatch between GDP contribution and employment generation. Memorize this comparative table for statement-based questions:
| Sector | Share in Employment (Workforce %) | Share in GDP/GVA (%) | The Indian Reality (Exam Trap) |
|---|---|---|---|
| Agriculture (Primary) | ~ 45 – 46% (Highest) | ~ 18% (Lowest) | It employs almost half the country but produces less than one-fifth of the wealth. This causes massive Disguised Unemployment. |
| Industry (Secondary) | ~ 25 – 26% | ~ 28% | India has struggled to create a labor-intensive manufacturing base (unlike China), leading to “jobless growth”. |
| Services (Tertiary) | ~ 28 – 29% | ~ 54% (Highest) | The engine of India’s GDP. It generates more than half of the wealth but employs less than one-third of the workforce (highly skill-intensive). |
Unemployment in India is officially measured by the National Sample Survey Office (NSSO), which is now merged under the National Statistical Office (NSO) within the Ministry of Statistics and Programme Implementation (MoSPI). Since 2017, they capture this data through the Periodic Labour Force Survey (PLFS).
- 📅 1. Usual Principal and Subsidiary Status (UPSS) – The 1 Year Approach:
A person is considered employed if they worked for a relatively long time (usually 183 days or more) during the preceding 365 days. This yields the lowest unemployment rate because finding work for a few months qualifies you as “employed”. - 🗓️ 2. Current Weekly Status (CWS) – The 7 Day Approach:
A person is considered employed if they worked for at least 1 hour on any day during the preceding 7 days. - ⏱️ 3. Current Daily Status (CDS) – The Most Accurate Approach:
The activity status is recorded for each day of the preceding 7 days. A person is considered unemployed if they didn’t find work on a day or some days of the week. This captures under-employment and is the most comprehensive/accurate measure of unemployment in India.
| Type of Unemployment | Definition & Exam Keywords | Classic Indian Example |
|---|---|---|
| 1. Disguised Unemployment | When more people are employed in a job than actually required. Marginal Productivity is ZERO (or negative). If you remove them, total output doesn’t drop. | Indian Agriculture (A family of 6 working on a 1-acre farm that only requires 2 people). |
| 2. Structural Unemployment | Arises due to a mismatch between skills of the workers and the jobs available, or due to a drastic change in the economy’s structure/technology. | A typist losing their job because computers were introduced and they don’t know how to use MS Word. |
| 3. Frictional Unemployment | Temporary “Search” unemployment. The time gap when a worker is transitioning between jobs or searching for a new one. | An IT engineer quits Infosys to look for a better paying job at TCS. The 2 months in between is frictional. |
| 4. Cyclical Unemployment | Caused by the business cycle (recessions, depressions). Demand for goods falls, so companies fire workers. | Massive layoffs during the 2008 global financial crisis or the 2020 COVID-19 pandemic. (More common in capitalist economies). |
| 5. Seasonal Unemployment | Unemployment that occurs during certain seasons of the year when demand for labor drops. | Agricultural laborers who have no work during the non-harvesting/sowing seasons; ice-cream vendors in winter. |
| 6. Educated Unemployment | When educated youth (matriculation, graduation, and above) fail to find suitable jobs. | Engineers driving cabs due to a lack of core technical manufacturing jobs. |
- FRICtional = FRICtion of moving. It is voluntary and temporary (you quit to find a better job).
- STRUCtural = The STRUCture of the economy left you behind. It is involuntary and permanent (your skill is now useless).
UPSC CSE / State PSC (Similar PYQ): Disguised unemployment generally means:
(A) large number of people remain unemployed
(B) alternative employment is not available
(C) marginal productivity of labour is zero
(D) productivity of workers is low
Exam Connection: This is the absolute favorite question of every State PSC examiner. Always look for the exact phrase “Marginal Productivity is Zero” when you see “Disguised Unemployment.”
Arrange the following schemes in chronological order from the year of launch:
(1) Make in India
(2) National Skill Development Mission
(3) Startup India
(4) Prime Minister’s Employment Generation Programme.
Choose the correct answer from the options given below:
Correct Answer is (a) 4, 1, 2, 3: The chronological sequence from earliest to latest is accurately represented by Option (A). State PSCs and UPSC consistently test the launch years of major flagship programs. Let’s break down the exact timeline of these four schemes before jumping into the master list.
| Order | Scheme | Launch Year | Core Objective |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1st | (4) Prime Minister’s Employment Generation Programme (PMEGP) | 2008 | Credit-linked subsidy program under MSME to generate self-employment in rural/urban areas. |
| 2nd | (1) Make in India | 2014 (Sept) | To transform India into a global design and manufacturing hub. |
| 3rd | (2) National Skill Development Mission | 2015 (July) | To consolidate and coordinate skilling efforts across ministries (Skill India). |
| 4th | (3) Startup India | 2016 (Jan) | To build a strong ecosystem for nurturing innovation and startups. |
To conquer any chronology question, you must compartmentalize schemes by sector and year. Memorize these tables; they contain the most frequently tested initiatives in Indian administrative exams.
💰 1. Financial Inclusion, Insurance & Pensions
| Scheme Name | Launch | Target / Objective |
|---|---|---|
| PM Jan Dhan Yojana (PMJDY) | 2014 | Universal access to banking facilities with zero balance. |
| PM Jeevan Jyoti Bima Yojana (PMJJBY) | 2015 | Life insurance of ₹2 lakh (Age 18-50). |
| PM Suraksha Bima Yojana (PMSBY) | 2015 | Accidental death/disability insurance of ₹2 lakh (Age 18-70). |
| Atal Pension Yojana (APY) | 2015 | Guaranteed minimum pension for unorganized sector. |
| PM MUDRA Yojana | 2015 | Loans up to ₹10 Lakhs for non-corporate micro-enterprises (Shishu, Kishore, Tarun). |
| Sukanya Samriddhi Yojana | 2015 | Small deposit scheme for the girl child under ‘Beti Bachao Beti Padhao’. |
| Gold Monetization Scheme | 2015 | Mobilize idle gold held by households and institutions. |
| Stand-Up India | 2016 | Loans (₹10L to ₹1Cr) for SC/ST and Women entrepreneurs. |
| PM Vaya Vandana Yojana (PMVVY) | 2017 | Pension scheme exclusively for senior citizens (60+ years). |
| PM Shram Yogi Maan-dhan (PM-SYM) | 2019 | Voluntary pension scheme for unorganized workers. |
🌾 2. Agriculture & Rural Development
| Scheme Name | Launch | Target / Objective |
|---|---|---|
| MGNREGA | 2005 | 100 days of guaranteed wage employment to rural households. |
| National Rural Livelihood Mission (NRLM) | 2011 | Poverty reduction through self-help groups (SHGs). |
| Soil Health Card Scheme | 2015 | Provide farmers with crop-wise nutrient recommendations. |
| PM Krishi Sinchayee Yojana (PMKSY) | 2015 | “Har Khet Ko Pani” – improved water use efficiency. |
| Paramparagat Krishi Vikas Yojana (PKVY) | 2015 | Promotion of commercial organic farming. |
| PM Fasal Bima Yojana (PMFBY) | 2016 | Comprehensive crop insurance against non-preventable natural risks. |
| e-NAM (National Agriculture Market) | 2016 | Pan-India electronic trading portal for agricultural commodities. |
| PM-AASHA | 2018 | Ensure remunerative prices (MSP) to farmers. |
| PM-KISAN | 2019 | Direct income support of ₹6,000 per year to landholding farmers. |
| PM KUSUM | 2019 | Solarization of agricultural pumps. |
| PM Matsya Sampada Yojana | 2020 | Sustainable development of the fisheries sector. |
🏥 3. Health, Sanitation & Welfare
| Scheme Name | Launch | Target / Objective |
|---|---|---|
| Swachh Bharat Mission | 2014 | Eradicate open defecation and improve solid waste management. |
| Mission Indradhanush | 2014 | Boost routine immunization coverage for children and pregnant women. |
| Beti Bachao Beti Padhao | 2015 | Address declining Child Sex Ratio and empower the girl child. |
| PM Ujjwala Yojana | 2016 | Deposit-free LPG connections to women from BPL households. |
| PM Matru Vandana Yojana | 2017 | Maternity benefit program (conditional cash transfer of ₹5,000). |
| Poshan Abhiyaan (National Nutrition Mission) | 2018 | Reduce stunting, under-nutrition, and anemia. |
| Ayushman Bharat – PMJAY | 2018 | Health cover of ₹5 lakhs per family per year for secondary/tertiary care. |
| Jal Jeevan Mission | 2019 | “Har Ghar Jal” – Tap water supply to every rural household by 2024. |
| PM Garib Kalyan Anna Yojana (PMGKAY) | 2020 | Free food grains (5 kg per person/month) during COVID & beyond. |
| Ayushman Bharat Digital Mission | 2021 | Create a seamless online platform for digital health IDs. |
🏭 4. Infrastructure, Business & Urban Development
| Scheme Name | Launch | Target / Objective |
|---|---|---|
| PM Gram Sadak Yojana (PMGSY) | 2000 | All-weather road connectivity to unconnected rural habitations. |
| Digital India | 2015 | Transform India into a digitally empowered society. |
| Smart Cities Mission | 2015 | Develop 100 cities with core infra and ‘smart’ solutions. |
| AMRUT | 2015 | Water supply and sewerage infra in 500 cities. |
| HRIDAY | 2015 | Heritage City Development and Augmentation Yojana. |
| Sagarmala | 2015 | Port-led development and logistics efficiency. |
| Bharatmala Pariyojana | 2015 | Umbrella program for the highways sector. |
| UDAN (Ude Desh ka Aam Naagrik) | 2016 | Regional Connectivity Scheme making air travel affordable. |
| PM Awas Yojana (PMAY – U & G) | 2015/16 | “Housing for All” in urban and rural areas. |
| PM SVANidhi | 2020 | Micro-credit facility (up to ₹10,000) for street vendors. |
| PLI Scheme (Production Linked Incentive) | 2020 | Incentives on incremental sales to boost domestic manufacturing. |
| PM Gati Shakti | 2021 | National Master Plan for Multi-modal Connectivity. |
| PM Vishwakarma | 2023 | Support and skill upgrade for traditional artisans and craftspeople. |
| PM Surya Ghar Muft Bijli Yojana | 2024 | Rooftop solar scheme to provide up to 300 units of free electricity. |
The new government assumed power in May 2014 and immediately launched foundational schemes focusing on bank accounts, cleanliness, and manufacturing.
“Clean Bank Accounts Make Money.”
- Clean → Swachh Bharat Mission (Oct 2014)
- Bank Accounts → PM Jan Dhan Yojana (Aug 2014)
- Make → Make in India (Sept 2014)
2015 saw the highest volume of scheme launches. Divide them into two baskets:
- The Security Basket: “Insure your life, secure your pension, save your daughter, and build a skill.”
→ PMJJBY (Life), PMSBY (Accident), APY (Pension), Sukanya Samriddhi (Daughter), Skill India (Skill). - The Urban Basket: “Smart cities need water (AMRUT) and heritage (HRIDAY) to house everyone (PMAY).”
→ All these urban infra schemes launched in 2015.
In 2016, the focus shifted to crop safety, LPG, and new businesses.
“Startups cook with Ujjwala while insuring Fasal.”
- Startups → Startup India (Jan 2016) & Stand-Up India (April 2016)
- Ujjwala → PM Ujjwala Yojana (May 2016)
- Fasal → PM Fasal Bima Yojana (Jan 2016)
State PSC (Similar PYQ): Match the following flagship schemes with their launch years:
(1) PM Jan Dhan Yojana
(2) PM Ujjwala Yojana
(3) PM-KISAN
(4) Ayushman Bharat
(A) 2016, (B) 2014, (C) 2018, (D) 2019
Exam Connection: Examiners frequently use 2014 (Jan Dhan), 2016 (Ujjwala), 2018 (Ayushman), and 2019 (PM-KISAN) as the four distinct anchoring dates to test an aspirant’s timeline clarity.
Arrange the following Schemes in proper chronological order of their implementation:
(1) Ayushman Bharat-PMJAY
(2) Pradhan Mantri Ujjwala Yojna
(3) Pradhan Mantri Gati Shakti Yojana
(4) Pradhan Mantri Garib Kalyan Anna Yojana.
Choose the correct answer from the options given below:
Correct Answer is (b) 2, 1, 4, 3: The chronological sequence from earliest to latest is accurately represented by Option (B). This question builds perfectly on our previous timeline analysis, testing your knowledge of massive, flagship welfare and infrastructure programs.
| Order | Scheme | Launch Year | Core Objective |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1st | (2) Pradhan Mantri Ujjwala Yojana | 2016 (May) | Providing deposit-free LPG connections to women from BPL families to reduce indoor air pollution. |
| 2nd | (1) Ayushman Bharat – PMJAY | 2018 (Sept) | World’s largest state-sponsored health insurance scheme (₹5 lakhs/family/year). |
| 3rd | (4) PM Garib Kalyan Anna Yojana (PMGKAY) | 2020 (March) | Launched as a COVID-19 relief measure to provide 5kg free food grains per person per month. |
| 4th | (3) PM Gati Shakti Yojana | 2021 (Oct) | National Master Plan for multi-modal connectivity to reduce logistics costs. |
As promised, here are 40 completely different but equally important schemes. This list covers the foundational “Classic” pre-2014 schemes, as well as the latest environmental, social justice, and economic policies from 2020-2024.
🏛️ 1. The Classics: Foundational Poverty & Rural Schemes (Pre-2014)
| Scheme Name | Launch | Target / Objective |
|---|---|---|
| ICDS (Integrated Child Development Services) | 1975 | Tackle malnutrition and provide pre-school education (Anganwadi system). |
| IRDP (Integrated Rural Development Programme) | 1978 | First major self-employment program for the rural poor. |
| DWCRA | 1982 | Development of Women and Children in Rural Areas (sub-scheme of IRDP). |
| JRY (Jawahar Rozgar Yojana) | 1989 | First major wage employment program merging NREP and RLEGP. |
| MDMS (Mid-Day Meal Scheme) | 1995 | Boost primary school attendance and child nutrition (now PM POSHAN). |
| KCC (Kisan Credit Card Scheme) | 1998 | Provide adequate and timely credit to farmers. |
| SGSY (Swarnajayanti Gram Swarozgar Yojana) | 1999 | Holistic rural self-employment (later revamped as NRLM). |
| Antyodaya Anna Yojana (AAY) | 2000 | Highly subsidized food grains to the “poorest of the poor”. |
| JNNURM | 2005 | Jawaharlal Nehru National Urban Renewal Mission for urban infra upgrades. |
| NRHM (National Rural Health Mission) | 2005 | Provide accessible, affordable healthcare to rural populations (introduced ASHAs). |
| RKVY (Rashtriya Krishi Vikas Yojana) | 2007 | Incentivize states to increase public investment in agriculture. |
| RTE Act Implementation | 2010 | Right to Education made a fundamental right (Act passed in 2009). |
| NULM (National Urban Livelihoods Mission) | 2013 | Reduce poverty and vulnerability of urban poor households. |
| NFSA (National Food Security Act) | 2013 | Legal entitlement to subsidized food grains for 75% rural and 50% urban population. |
🌍 2. Environment, Energy & Modern Tech (Post-2014)
| Scheme Name | Launch | Target / Objective |
|---|---|---|
| DDU-GJY (Deen Dayal Upadhyaya Gram Jyoti Yojana) | 2014 | Feeder separation and rural electrification. |
| UJALA Scheme | 2015 | Distribution of highly subsidized LED bulbs to promote energy efficiency. |
| FAME India (Phase I & II) | 2015/19 | Faster Adoption and Manufacturing of Hybrid & Electric Vehicles. |
| SAUBHAGYA | 2017 | Pradhan Mantri Sahaj Bijli Har Ghar Yojana for universal household electrification. |
| NIP (National Infrastructure Pipeline) | 2019 | ₹111 Lakh Crore investment plan for world-class infrastructure. |
| SVAMITVA Scheme | 2020 | Mapping of village inhabited areas using drones to issue property cards. |
| PM-WANI | 2020 | Provide public Wi-Fi networks through Public Data Offices (PDOs). |
| NMP (National Monetisation Pipeline) | 2021 | Monetizing core brownfield infrastructure assets to fund new infra. |
| MISHTI | 2023 | Mangrove Initiative for Shoreline Habitats & Tangible Incomes. |
| PM PRANAM | 2023 | Promote alternative fertilizers to reduce the subsidy burden and save soil. |
| Amrit Dharohar | 2023 | Promote optimal use of wetlands and enhance biodiversity/eco-tourism. |
🤝 3. Social Justice, Marginalized Welfare & Commerce (Recent)
| Scheme Name | Launch | Target / Objective |
|---|---|---|
| PM FME Scheme | 2020 | Formalisation of Micro food processing Enterprises (Vocal for Local). |
| RoDTEP | 2021 | Remission of Duties and Taxes on Exported Products (replaced MEIS). |
| PM MITRA | 2021 | Set up 7 Mega Integrated Textile Region and Apparel parks. |
| PM-DAKSH | 2021 | Skilling program for SC, OBC, De-notified tribes, and sanitation workers. |
| SHRESHTA | 2021 | Residential education for SC students in high-quality private schools. |
| SMILE Scheme | 2022 | Support for Marginalized Individuals (Transgenders & Beggars). |
| NAMASTE Scheme | 2022 | National Action for Mechanised Sanitation Ecosystem (zero manual scavenging deaths). |
| RAMP | 2022 | Raising and Accelerating MSME Performance (World Bank assisted). |
| PM-DevINE | 2022 | Prime Minister’s Development Initiative for the North-East Region. |
| PM-JANMAN | 2023 | Janjati Adivasi Nyaya Maha Abhiyan (focused entirely on PVTGs – Vulnerable Tribes). |
| Lakhpati Didi Scheme | 2023 | Skill training for 2 crore women SHG members to earn ₹1 Lakh+ annually. |
The latest exams heavily target the “Green Growth” and “Inclusive Development” acronyms. Use these linguistic decoding tricks:
- MISHTI (Mangroves): “Mishti” means sweet in Bengali. Where are the famous mangroves? The Sundarbans in Bengal!
- PM PRANAM (Fertilizers): “Pranam” means to bow down with respect. We must Pranam to Mother Earth (soil) by not destroying her with chemical fertilizers.
- Amrit Dharohar (Wetlands): “Amrit” means nectar/water, and “Dharohar” means heritage. It protects our heritage water bodies (Wetlands/Ramsar sites).
- SMILE (Transgenders & Beggars): Designed to bring a SMILE back to the faces of the most marginalized outcasts on the streets.
- NAMASTE (Sanitation Workers): Instead of making them clean sewers manually, we fold our hands and say NAMASTE, providing machines so they work with dignity.
- SHRESHTA (SC Students): “Shreshta” means the best/excellent. It puts bright SC students into the best private residential schools.
- PM-JANMAN (PVTGs): Stands for Janjati (Tribes) + Man (Honor). It focuses exclusively on the 75 Particularly Vulnerable Tribal Groups.
State PSC (Similar PYQ): The “PM PRANAM” scheme, recently announced by the Government of India, is related to which of the following sectors?
(A) Digitization of land records
(B) Reduction of chemical fertilizers and promotion of alternative fertilizers
(C) Skill development for tribal youth
(D) Subsidized credit for street vendors
Exam Connection: This perfectly aligns with the trick above—respecting Mother Earth by reducing chemical fertilizer subsidies. Notice how quickly you can eliminate the other options!
With reference to the World Development Report 1993, improved health contributes to economic growth in four ways, consider the following statements:
(1) It reduces production losses caused by worker illness
(2) It decreases the enrolment of children in schools and makes them worse in learning
(3) It permits the use of natural resources that had been totally or nearly inaccessible because of disease
(4) It decreases for alternative uses resources that would otherwise have to be spent on treating illness.
Choose the correct answer from the options given below:
Official Key Answer: (a) 1 and 4 only
🚨 HPAS Official Error Alert: This is another classic example of a State PSC blunder in translation or answer key formulation. According to the verbatim text of the World Bank’s World Development Report 1993, Statements 1 and 3 are absolutely correct, meaning the correct option should have been (b) 1 and 3 only. Let’s break down exactly what the original report says so you are armed with the factual truth for future exams.
The World Development Report (WDR) 1993 was a landmark document globally. On page 17, it explicitly states that improved health contributes to economic growth in the following four specific ways:
- 1. Reduces production losses: It reduces production losses caused by worker illness. (Matches Statement 1 – CORRECT)
- 2. Permits resource use: It permits the use of natural resources that had been totally or nearly inaccessible because of disease (e.g., clearing malaria from fertile lands). (Matches Statement 3 – CORRECT)
- 3. Increases enrolment & learning: It increases the enrolment of children in schools and makes them better able to learn. (Contradicts Statement 2, which says “decreases”)
- 4. Frees resources: It frees for alternative uses resources that would otherwise have to be spent on treating illness. (Contradicts Statement 4, which poorly states it “decreases for alternative uses”)
Note for Aspirants: Always mark the official key answer in mocks, but know the truth so you can challenge a future provisional answer key!
Questions asking “Which organization publishes X report?” are guaranteed in the Prelims. Memorize this master table separating the big three: World Bank, IMF, and WEF.
| Publishing Organization | Major Flagship Reports (Highly Tested) |
|---|---|
| 1. World Bank (WB) |
• World Development Report (WDR) • Global Economic Prospects (GEP) • Poverty and Shared Prosperity Report • Logistics Performance Index (LPI) • Ease of Doing Business (Discontinued in 2021, but still tested) |
| 2. International Monetary Fund (IMF) |
• World Economic Outlook (WEO) • Global Financial Stability Report (GFSR) • Fiscal Monitor |
| 3. World Economic Forum (WEF) |
• Global Competitiveness Report • Global Gender Gap Report • Global Risks Report • Energy Transition Index |
| 4. UN Development Programme (UNDP) |
• Human Development Report (HDR) • Global Multidimensional Poverty Index (with OPHI) • Gender Inequality Index |
| 5. Other Key UN Agencies |
• World Investment Report → UNCTAD • Global Wage Report → ILO • State of World Population → UNFPA • World Employment and Social Outlook → ILO |
- IMF is the Global CA: The IMF acts like an accountant looking at the math and financial stability. Hence, they publish the World Economic Outlook (looking at GDP projections), Fiscal Monitor, and Financial Stability Report.
- World Bank is the Global Builder: The WB funds long-term physical projects. Builders look at Prospects (Global Economic Prospects) and Development (World Development Report).
The World Economic Forum is essentially a massive networking event for global corporations and billionaires in Davos. What do corporations care about?
- They want to beat their rivals → Global Competitiveness Report.
- They care about corporate HR diversity → Global Gender Gap Report.
- They fear threats to their businesses → Global Risks Report.
UPSC CSE / State PSC (Similar PYQ): The “Global Financial Stability Report” is prepared by the:
(A) European Central Bank
(B) International Monetary Fund
(C) International Bank for Reconstruction and Development
(D) Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development
Exam Connection: Apply Trick 1! “Financial Stability” is the core mathematical and monetary mandate of the IMF (the world’s central accountant), not the development-focused World Bank (IBRD).
Match List I with List II:
List-I: a. Critical Minimum Effort Hypothesis, b. Theory of social dualism, c. Low-level Equilibrium Trap, d. Theory of Technological Dualism.
List-II: i. Boeke, ii. Leibenstein, iii. Higgins, iv. Nelson.
Choose the correct answer from the options given below:
Correct Matching is (a) ii i iv iii:
- Critical Minimum Effort Hypothesis: Propounded by Harvey Leibenstein. It argues that underdeveloped economies need a massive, critical minimum level of investment to break out of the vicious circle of poverty.
- Theory of Social Dualism: Propounded by J.H. Boeke. Based on his studies in Indonesia, he observed the simultaneous existence of an imported Western capitalist sector alongside an indigenous, traditional pre-capitalist sector.
- Low-Level Equilibrium Trap: Propounded by R.R. Nelson. It explains how population growth absorbs any small increase in per capita income, trapping the economy at a low level of subsistence.
- Theory of Technological Dualism: Propounded by Benjamin Higgins. It focuses on the dualism in resource endowments and technologies used in different sectors (capital-intensive modern sector vs. labor-intensive traditional sector).
State PSCs love “Match the Following” questions for economic theories. Memorize this master list, and you will never miss a question of this type again.
| Economic Theory / Hypothesis / Curve | Economist(s) Associated |
|---|---|
| 1. Growth & Development Models | |
| 1. Big Push Theory | Paul Rosenstein-Rodan |
| 2. Balanced Growth Theory | Ragnar Nurkse & Rosenstein-Rodan |
| 3. Unbalanced Growth Theory | Albert O. Hirschman |
| 4. Vicious Circle of Poverty | Ragnar Nurkse |
| 5. Circular and Cumulative Causation | Gunnar Myrdal |
| 6. Backwash and Spread Effects | Gunnar Myrdal |
| 7. Unlimited Supply of Labour (Dual Economy) | W. Arthur Lewis |
| 8. Stages of Economic Growth (5 Stages) | W.W. Rostow |
| 9. Creative Destruction & Innovation Theory | Joseph Schumpeter |
| 10. Harrod-Domar Growth Model | Roy Harrod & Evsey Domar |
| 11. Endogenous Growth Theory | Paul Romer & Robert Lucas |
| 2. Income & Consumption Hypotheses | |
| 12. Absolute Income Hypothesis | John Maynard Keynes |
| 13. Relative Income Hypothesis | James Duesenberry |
| 14. Permanent Income Hypothesis | Milton Friedman |
| 15. Life Cycle Hypothesis | Franco Modigliani & Richard Brumberg |
| 16. Demonstration Effect & Ratchet Effect | James Duesenberry |
| 17. Paradox of Thrift | John Maynard Keynes |
| 3. Famous Economic Curves & Laws | |
| 18. Kuznets Curve (Inequality vs. Income) | Simon Kuznets |
| 19. Phillips Curve (Inflation vs. Unemployment) | A.W. Phillips |
| 20. Laffer Curve (Tax Rates vs. Tax Revenue) | Arthur Laffer |
| 21. Lorenz Curve (Wealth/Income Distribution) | Max O. Lorenz |
| 22. Gini Coefficient (Measure of Inequality) | Corrado Gini |
| 23. Engel’s Law (Income vs. Food Expenditure) | Ernst Engel |
| 24. Say’s Law (“Supply creates its own demand”) | J.B. Say |
| 25. Gresham’s Law (“Bad money drives out good”) | Sir Thomas Gresham |
| 26. Wagner’s Law (Increasing state activity/spending) | Adolph Wagner |
| 4. International Trade & General Theories | |
| 27. Absolute Advantage (Trade) | Adam Smith |
| 28. Comparative Advantage (Trade) | David Ricardo |
| 29. Factor Endowment Theory (H-O Model) | Eli Heckscher & Bertil Ohlin |
| 30. Immiserizing Growth | Jagdish Bhagwati |
| 31. Liquidity Preference Theory | John Maynard Keynes |
| 32. Theory of Surplus Value | Karl Marx |
| 33. Population Theory (Malthusian Trap) | Thomas Robert Malthus |
| 34. Natural Rate of Unemployment | Milton Friedman & Edmund Phelps |
| 35. Invisible Hand | Adam Smith |
There are three “Dualism” theories that examiners mix up. Use word association:
- Social Dualism → Boeke: People read Books (Boeke) to learn about Society.
- Technological Dualism → Higgins: High-end technology requires High (Higgins) skills.
- Dual Economy (Unlimited Labour) → Lewis: Arthur Lewis wanted to give Less (Lewis) wages to the unlimited labour.
- Big Push → Rosenstein-Rodan: You need a “Rod” (Rodan) to give a massive physical “Push”.
- Critical Minimum Effort → Leibenstein: “Leiben” sounds like “Leben” (Life in German). You need a critical minimum effort just to sustain Life.
- Low-Level Equilibrium Trap → Nelson: Think of the famous wrestling hold, the “Full Nelson.” When you are caught in a Nelson, you are Trapped at a low level and cannot escape.
Match the lifestyle to the economist:
- Permanent → Friedman: A Fried man (like KFC) wants his fried chicken to be a Permanent fixture in his diet.
- Relative → Duesenberry: You compare your wealth Relative to others to see who has more “Dues” (Duesenberry) to pay.
- Life Cycle → Modigliani: “Modigliani” sounds like an expensive Italian sports car. You buy one during your mid-Life Cycle crisis!
State PSC (Similar PYQ): Match the following curves with their core relationships:
(1) Lorenz Curve (2) Phillips Curve (3) Laffer Curve
(A) Tax Rates & Tax Revenue
(B) Income Inequality
(C) Inflation & Unemployment
Exam Connection: Once you memorize the master table above, these matching questions take less than 10 seconds to solve, saving you massive time for analytical questions.
Match List I with List II:
List-I: a. “Development as Freedom”, b. “Fault Lines: How Hidden Fractures Still Threaten the World Economy”, c. “India: the Emerging Giant”, d. “The Making of India: Economic Policy and Nationalism, 1947-2017”.
List-II: i. Amartya Sen, ii. Raghuram Rajan, iii. Montek Singh Ahluwalia, iv. C. Rangarajan.
Choose the correct answer from the options given below:
Correct Matching is (d) i ii iv iii:
🚨 HPAS Official Error Alert: This question contained major factual errors in the official paper regarding the book titles and authors for options (c) and (d). However, it can be easily solved using the Elimination Method based on the first two famous books.
- We know for a fact that Nobel Laureate Amartya Sen wrote “Development as Freedom”. So, a → i.
- We know former RBI Governor Raghuram Rajan wrote “Fault Lines”. So, b → ii.
- Looking at the options, only Option (d) starts with (i) and (ii). You don’t even need to know the rest to secure your marks!
- “India: The Emerging Giant” was actually written by Arvind Panagariya (the first Vice-Chairman of NITI Aayog), NOT C. Rangarajan.
- Montek Singh Ahluwalia’s famous insider memoir of the Indian economy is actually titled “Backstage: The Story Behind India’s High Growth Years”.
- C. Rangarajan’s actual famous memoir about his time at the RBI and the 1991 reforms is titled “Forks in the Road: My Days at RBI and Beyond”.
| Economist / Policymaker | Famous Books (Highly Tested) |
|---|---|
| Amartya Sen |
• Development as Freedom • The Argumentative Indian • Poverty and Famines • The Idea of Justice |
| Raghuram Rajan |
• Fault Lines: How Hidden Fractures Still Threaten the World Economy • I Do What I Do • The Third Pillar |
| Arvind Panagariya |
• India: The Emerging Giant • Free Trade and Prosperity |
| Montek Singh Ahluwalia | • Backstage: The Story Behind India’s High Growth Years |
| C. Rangarajan | • Forks in the Road: My Days at RBI and Beyond |
| Duvvuri Subbarao | • Who Moved My Interest Rate? |
| Urjit Patel | • Overdraft: Saving the Indian Saver |
| Y.V. Reddy | • Advice and Dissent: My Life in Public Service |
| Bimal Jalan |
• From Dependence to Self-Reliance • India Then and Now |
State PSCs love testing books written by former RBI Governors. Use these logical links to never forget them:
- Raghuram Rajan (“I Do What I Do” & “Fault Lines”): He was the outspoken, rockstar governor who warned about the 2008 housing crash (“Fault Lines”) and famously stated he does what he believes is right (“I Do What I Do”).
- Urjit Patel (“Overdraft”): He had to deal with the massive NPA (Non-Performing Assets) banking crisis where banks had given too many bad loans and “Overdrafts”.
- Duvvuri Subbarao (“Who Moved My Interest Rate?”): He constantly faced intense political pressure from the UPA government’s Finance Ministers (Chidambaram/Pranab) to lower rates, leading him to ask, “Who Moved My Interest Rate?”
- Y.V. Reddy (“Advice and Dissent”): He famously gave strict “Advice” and dissented against global banking trends, which ultimately saved Indian banks from the 2008 global financial crash.
- C. Rangarajan (“Forks in the Road”): As a key architect of the 1991 LPG reforms alongside Manmohan Singh, he was standing at the historical “Forks in the Road” for the Indian economy.
- Montek Singh Ahluwalia (“Backstage”): As the Deputy Chairman of the Planning Commission, he wasn’t the Prime Minister, but he was working “Backstage” pulling the strings during India’s high-growth years.
- Arvind Panagariya (“India: The Emerging Giant”): As the first Vice-Chairman of the newly formed NITI Aayog, his job was to help transform India into an “Emerging Giant”.