Nepal’s Periodic Planning System: Historical Evolution, Institutional Framework, and the Sixteenth Periodic Plan (2081/82–2085/86)

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Periodic planning is a widely recognized framework of development strategy in which a country sets out clearly defined objectives, policies, and targets for a fixed time horizon to guide the process of economic and social transformation in a coordinated and systematic manner. The theoretical foundation of this approach can be traced to the Soviet Union’s Five-Year Plans introduced in 1928 under Joseph Stalin, which marked the beginning of structured, state-led economic planning aimed at rapid industrialization and structural transformation. Since then, periodic planning has evolved into an essential policy instrument used by many developing countries to organize resource allocation, prioritize development sectors, and achieve long-term national development goals.

From a theoretical perspective, development planning has been conceptualized by several prominent scholars. Arthur Lewis defines economic planning as a process of allocating scarce resources over time to achieve national economic objectives efficiently, highlighting the importance of optimal resource utilization. Ragnar Nurkse emphasizes planning as a coordinated effort to expand productive capacity and overcome structural constraints within a defined time framework, focusing on structural transformation in developing economies. Likewise, Todaro and Smith describe development planning as a deliberate governmental effort to influence and guide economic activity in order to achieve development objectives, underscoring the role of the state in steering development outcomes. In the context of Nepal, periodic planning was formally initiated with the First Five-Year Plan in 2013 B.S. during the tenure of Prime Minister Tanka Prasad Acharya under King Mahendra Bir Bikram Shah. Since its inception, Nepal has adopted successive periodic plans as a key policy instrument for promoting economic growth, reducing poverty, expanding infrastructure, and ensuring overall socio-economic development.Bottom of Form

Historical Development of Periodic Planning in Nepal

Particulars Description
First Periodic Plan of Nepal 2013 B.S.
Planning Commission Established 2013 B.S.
Planning Board Act 2014 B.S.
National Planning Council Established 2017 B.S.
National Planning Commission Formed 2025 B.S.
First Three-Year Plan 2019 B.S.
Total Five-Year Plans 11
Total Three-Year Plans 5
Plan Holidays Two Times(2018-19 BS, 2047-49 BS)
Successful Plans Second and Eighth Plans
Interim plan Eleventh plan

Nepal experienced plan holidays during 2018–2019 B.S. and 2047–2049 B.S. Altogether, three years were without periodic plans. The Second and Eighth Plans are considered the most successful plans in Nepal’s planning history.

National Planning Commission

The National Planning Commission (NPC) is the apex advisory body responsible for formulating and monitoring development plans and policies.

Composition of the National Planning Commission

Position Composition
Chairman Prime Minister
Vice-Chairman One Person
Members Six Members (At Least One Woman)
Ex-officio Members Chief Secretary and Finance Secretary
Member Secretary Secretary of NPC

The meetings of the National Planning Commission are generally held twice a year. The blueprint of development plans is prepared by the Commission and approved by the Council of Ministers.

Major Features of Nepal’s Periodic Plans

First Plan (2013/14 – 2017/18)

The First Plan marked the beginning of planned development in Nepal. Priority sectors included transportation, agriculture, irrigation, and electricity. Nepal also started receiving foreign grants during this period. About 89 percent of the investment came from India and the United States.

Second Plan (2019/20 – 2021/22)

The Second Plan was a Three-Year Preparatory Plan. Foreign loans were introduced for the first time and agricultural census activities began. Due to its successful implementation, it is regarded as one of Nepal’s most successful plans.

Third Plan (2022/23 – 2026/27)

Population issues were incorporated for the first time. Transportation and communication were given priority.

Fourth Plan (2027/28 – 2031/32)

The concept of sectoral development was introduced. Foreign investment was accepted as an important strategy for industrial development.

Fifth Plan (2032/33 – 2036/37)

Balanced development and trade diversification were introduced. Health programs were included for the first time.

Sixth Plan (2037/38 – 2041/42)

This plan emphasized decentralization, environmental conservation, eco-tourism, and women’s participation in development activities.

Seventh Plan (2042/43 – 2046/47)

Environmental Impact Assessment (EIA) was initiated. Political instability affected implementation.

Eighth Plan (2049/50 – 2053/54)

The Eighth Plan introduced sustainable development and adopted a bottom-up planning approach. Poverty alleviation became a major objective for the first time. The target growth rate of 5.15 percent was achieved, making it a successful plan.

Ninth Plan (2054/55 – 2058/59)

The Ninth Plan emphasized good governance and poverty alleviation.

Tenth Plan (2059/60 – 2063/64)

Poverty alleviation became the sole objective. Medium-Term Expenditure Framework (MTEF) and expenditure prioritization mechanisms were introduced.

Eleventh Plan (2064/65 – 2066/67)

The First Interim Plan introduced the concept of electronic governance (e-governance).

Twelfth Plan (2067/68 – 2069/70)

The plan adopted the “Send Home a Friend” policy and aimed to transform Nepal into a developing country within two decades.

Thirteenth Plan (2070/71 – 2072/73)

The vision was to upgrade Nepal from a Least Developed Country (LDC) to a Developing Country by 2022 A.D.

Fourteenth Plan (2073/74 – 2075/76)

The plan focused on achieving Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) by 2030 and became the first plan after the promulgation of the Constitution of Nepal 2072.

Fifteenth Plan (2076/77 – 2080/81)

The Fifteenth Plan adopted the long-term national vision of “Prosperous Nepal, Happy Nepali.”

Sixteenth Plan (2081/82 – 2085/86)

The Sixteenth Plan is guided by the motto “Good Governance, Social Justice, and Prosperity.”

Sixteenth Periodic Plan (2081/82 – 2085/86)

The Sixteenth Plan is Nepal’s current development plan and the eleventh five-year plan in the country’s planning history.

Vision

Good Governance, Social Justice, and Prosperity

  • Ensure effective governance
  • Promote social justice and inclusion
  • Achieve sustainable and equitable prosperity

Goals

  1. Strengthen good governance across political, administrative, judicial, private, and non-government sectors
  2. Ensure social justice through better health, education, employment, security, and public services
  3. Improve living standards and national economic prosperity

 

Major Strategies

  • Remove structural barriers to development
  • Increase production, productivity, and competitiveness
  • Strengthen coordination among federal, provincial, and local governments
  • Promote partnership among public, private, cooperative, and development sectors
  • Mainstream gender equality, technology, environmental protection, and disaster risk reduction
  • Base policies on research and scientific evidence

 

Transformative (Structural) Areas

  1. Macroeconomic stability and high growth
  2. Production, productivity, and competitiveness
  3. Productive employment and decent jobs
  4. Skilled, healthy, and educated human capital
  5. Quality infrastructure and connectivity
  6. Sustainable urbanization and settlements
  7. Gender equality and inclusive society
  8. Strong provincial and local economies
  9. Poverty and inequality reduction
  10. Effective financial management and capital expenditure
  11. Governance reforms and good governance
  12. Biodiversity, climate action, and green economy
  13. LDC graduation and SDG implementation

 

Basic Information

Particulars Description
Plan Period 2081/82 – 2085/86
Motto Good Governance, Social Justice, and Prosperity
Concept Paper Approved 2080 Shrawan 17
Approved by Council of Ministers 2081 Jestha 1
Total Goals 40
Good Governance Goals 10
Social Justice Goals 10
Prosperity Goals 20
Purposes 3
Overall Strategies 4
Structural Transformation Areas 13
Top Priority Digital Database and E-Governance

 

Investment Framework of the Sixteenth Plan

The total estimated investment required for the implementation of the Sixteenth Plan is NPR 111.84 trillion.

Sector Investment
Public Sector NPR 33 trillion 77 billion
Private Sector NPR 75 trillion 15 billion
Cooperative Sector NPR 2 trillion 90 billion
Total NPR 111 trillion 84 billion

 

Key National Targets of the Sixteenth Plan

Indicator Target
Economic Growth Rate 7.3%
Per Capita Income US$ 2,351
Population Below Poverty Line 12%
Consumer Inflation 5%
Human Development Index 0.650
Human Assets Index 78
Life Expectancy 73 Years
Literacy Rate 85%
Unemployment Rate 5%
Labour Productivity 275
Power Generation 11,769 MW
Electricity Access 100%
Internet Access 90%

 

Long-Term Vision: Prosperous Nepal, Happy Nepali

The long-term vision covers a period of 25 years and includes the Fifteenth to Nineteenth Plans. Nepal aims to graduate from a Least Developed Country to a Developing Country by 2083 B.S. and become a Middle-Income Country by 2087 B.S.

Major Long-Term Targets

Indicator Target
Economic Growth Rate 10.5%
Per Capita GNI US$ 12,100
Absolute Poverty 0%
Multidimensional Poverty 3%
Agriculture & Forestry Share in GDP 9%
Industrial Sector Share in GDP 30%
Service Sector Share in GDP 61%
Unemployment Rate 3%
Hydropower Capacity 40,000 MW
Railway Length 2,200 Km
Highway Network 36,000 Km
Life Expectancy 80 Years
Human Development Index 0.760

 

 

Fundamental Issues and Challenges in Development Efforts under Periodic Planning

 

A. Economic and Industrial Issues

  • Persistent low economic growth and structural weaknesses in the economy
  • Contraction of the productive industrial (secondary) sector
  • Expansion of the tertiary sector without strong base in primary and secondary sectors
  • Low productivity and rising production costs
  • Weak national competitiveness in domestic and international markets
  • Increasing dependence on basic food imports and declining agricultural self-sufficiency
  • Consumption-driven import structure and weak export performance leading to trade deficit
  • High level of youth migration due to lack of domestic employment opportunities

B. Social and Infrastructure Issues

  • Fragmented social security programs with rising liabilities and weak management
  • Mismatch between education system and labor market demands
  • Quality and relevance problems in higher education and weak human resource management
  • Inefficiencies in public health system and limited access to basic health services
  • Infrastructure gaps and weak management of sustainable infrastructure development
  • Poor quality of constructed infrastructure projects
  • Inadequate adoption of modern information technology
  • Increasing digital and physical security challenges
  • Unplanned urbanization and weak settlement development programs

 

C. Social Justice and Equality Issues

  • Continued violence against women, children, elderly, and marginalized groups
  • Persistent discrimination and traditional cultural mindset barriers
  • Gap between policy formulation, implementation, and results in social inclusion
  • Weak federal system performance
  • Slow progress toward inclusive and balanced regional development
  • Weak coordination among federal, provincial, and local levels of government

D. Financial Management and Governance Issues

  • Gap between public expenditure needs and resource utilization capacity
  • Heavy reliance on imports for revenue generation and weak fiscal structure
  • Weak implementation of financial federalism
  • Low capital expenditure and weak execution capacity
  • Delays in infrastructure projects with high cost and low return
  • Limited mobilization of financial resources for production and employment generation
  • Weak market competition and rising informal trade
  • Revenue leakage, capital outflows, and price and liquidity instability
  • Public dissatisfaction with quality of public services and security
  • Corruption issues and delays in justice delivery affecting governance

 

E. Environmental and Sustainability Issues

  • High environmental pressure and increasing climate change risks
  • Weak adoption of sustainable development practices and green economy approach
  • Difficulties in resource management during transition toward developing country status
  • Challenges in effective implementation of Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs)

Conclusion

Nepal’s periodic planning system has evolved significantly from focusing on infrastructure and agriculture to emphasizing poverty alleviation, sustainable development, good governance, social justice, and digital transformation. The Sixteenth Periodic Plan seeks to accelerate economic growth through good governance, social inclusion, and technological advancement while contributing to the long-term national vision of “Prosperous Nepal, Happy Nepali.” Successful implementation of the plan is expected to strengthen Nepal’s journey toward sustainable and inclusive development.

Author : Hom Shrestha

Political Economy Analyst

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