Economic Reforms

Economic Reforms in India – Complete Notes for Railway Exams

1. What are Economic Reforms?

Economic Reforms = Structural Adjustment Programmes (SAP) introduced in 1991 to tackle the Balance of Payments (BoP) crisis and push India from closed to market-oriented economy.

2. Why 1991 Reforms? – Trigger Points
Indicator1990-91 Value
Forex reserve↓ $1.2 bn (barely 2 weeks imports)
Fiscal deficit8.4 % of GDP
Current a/c deficit3.2 % of GDP
Inflation13 %
IMF loan$7 bn (pledged 67 t gold)
3. Three Pillars of 1991 Reforms
PillarTargetKey Measures
I. StabilisationBoP crisisRupee devaluation (July 1991), IMF loan, gold pledge
II. LiberalisationRed tapeAbolish industrial licensing, MRTP limit removed, reduce tariffs
III. PrivatisationPSU inefficiencyDisinvestment, MOU system, Navratna status
4. Chronology – Don’t Miss These Dates
DateEvent
24 July 1991Rupee devalued by 18-20 % (first step)
24 July 1991New Industrial Policy (Licence Raj ends)
1991-92LPG Mantra coined – Liberalisation, Privatisation, Globalisation
1992SEBI Act → stock market regulator
1992FERA → FEMA (Foreign Exchange Management Act)
1994Current account convertibility
1997-98Disinvestment Ministry (Arun Shourie)
1999NSE & Nifty 50 launched
2000GST first proposed (Atal task force)
2014Make in India launch
2016GST Constitutional Amendment
1 July 2017GST rolled out (midnight Parliament session)
5. Quick-Fire Tables

A. Tax Reform Milestones

YearReform
1991Peak customs duty slashed from 150 % → 110 %
1999MODVAT → CENVAT
2000Kelkar Committee – roadmap for direct tax reform
2005FRBM Act – fiscal deficit target 3 %
2016Income Disclosure Scheme – 45 % tax
2017GST slabs – 0, 5, 12, 18, 28 %

B. Disinvestment Receipts (₹ crore)

YearAmountHighlight
1991-923,038First disinvestment
2003-0415,547Maruti IPO
2017-181,00,056Highest ever
2020-2132,835BPCL, LIC pipeline

C. Forex Reserve Milestones ($ bn)

DateReserveRemark
June 19911.2Crisis level
March 2004100First 100
March 2021579All-time high
Oct 2023586Latest
6. One-Liner Facts (Last-Minute Revision)
  • 1991 reforms inspired by IMF’s Structural Adjustment Loan.
  • Manmohan Singh – Finance Minister, presented 1991-92 Budget.
  • “No licence required except 6 industries” – 1991 policy.
  • MRTP Act 1969 → MRTP limit ₹100 cr removed in 1991.
  • Hindustan Motors Contessa – first car produced after delicensing.
  • SEZ Policy 2000 – export hub, China-model.
  • Narasimham Committee – 1991 & 1998 banking reforms.
  • Basel-III norms implemented 2013-19.
  • Insolvency & Bankruptcy Code 2016 – 180-day resolution.
  • Demonetisation 2016 – part of parallel-economy reform.

15+ MCQs for Railway Exams

1. Who was the Prime Minister when economic reforms were launched in 1991?**Answer:** P. V. Narasimha Rao
2. The first step of 1991 reforms was:**Answer:** Devaluation of rupee on 24 July 1991
3. Maximum customs duty in India before 1991 was:**Answer:** 150 %
4. Which committee recommended banking sector reforms in 1991?**Answer:** Narasimham Committee-I
5. The MRTP limit of ₹100 cr was removed by which amendment?**Answer:** MRTP Amendment Act 1991
6. FERA was replaced by FEMA in the year:**Answer:** 1999 (effective 2000)
7. First disinvestment of PSU shares took place in:**Answer:** 1991-92
8. The GST was launched on:**Answer:** 1 July 2017
9. Which of the following is NOT a GST slab?**Answer:** 30 %
10. The FRBM Act mandates fiscal deficit target of:**Answer:** 3 % of GDP
11. Who headed the 13th Finance Commission that supported GST?**Answer:** Dr. Vijay Kelkar
12. The “Navratna” status was first given in:**Answer:** 1997
13. India’s forex reserve crossed $500 bn for the first time in:**Answer:** June 2020
14. The Insolvency & Bankruptcy Code was passed in:**Answer:** 2016
15. Which sector was first opened to private investment in 1991 reforms?**Answer:** Civil aviation (air taxi operators)
16. The peak GST rate on luxury goods is:**Answer:** 28 % + cess
17. The gold pledged in 1991 was shipped to:**Answer:** Bank of England & Union Bank of Switzerland

Last-minute mantra:
24-7-1991 → Devalue, 24-7-1991 → Delicense, LPG → Liberalise, Privatise, Globalise!