Bihar exceeds the target growth rate for 11th 5 year plan

Bihar has again stunned the national speculators by registering growth rates higher than predicted growth rate for the 11th 5 year plan.What more, only 4 other states including Chattisgarh, Maharashtra, Punjab and Uttar Pradesh have been able to perform this miracle. This was revealed in the Parliament by Mr. Ashiwani Kumar, Minister of State for Planning.
He was replying to a query on whether growth during the first four years of the 11th Five Year Plan (2007-12) in most of the 17 non-special category states have remained below the target set for the Plan period.
Bihar recorded a growth rate of 11.44 per cent in Gross State Domestic Product (GSDP) during 2007-08 to 2010-11, against the 11th Plan target of 7.60 per cent. Chhattisgarh achieved an average growth of 9.71 per cent during the four-year period, against a target of 8.60 per cent.
In case of Uttar Pradesh, the GSDP grew by 7.28 per cent during 2007-08 to 2010-11. The 11th Plan growth target for the state is 6.10 per cent.
“The hitherto low performing states such as Bihar, Orissa and Chhattisgarh have started growing faster than the national average and the state of Uttar Pradesh has achieved much higher than the target growth rate,” the minister said.
He added, “This trend reflects gradual movement towards convergence in economic attainment across states and reduction in economic disparities.”
Maharashtra”s economy expanded by 9.42 per cent, compared to the target of 9.10 per cent for the period, while Punjab registered a growth 7.50 per cent during the first four years of the Plan, against the set target of 5.90 per cent.
All other states have lagged behind their respective targets during the first four years of the 11th Five Year Plan.
Kumar attributed the failure of other states to reach their growth targets on factors like the global economic crisis and low agricultural productivity due to bad monsoon.
The All-India GDP growth during the four years stood at 8.15 per cent.
The 11th Plan had originally envisaged GDP growth to average 9 per cent during the 2007-12 period. It was, however, scaled down to around 8.1 per cent, on account of the global economic downturn of 2008-09. .