Pitamber Pant completed a master's degree in physics during which time he was involved in the Quit India Movement and imprisoned by the British.[1] This allowed him to get acquainted with Jawaharlal Nehru, J. B. Kripalani and several other independence activists and he worked as a secretary to Nehru, while in jail. After the Indian independence, Nehru, who had been impressed by Pant's preoccupation with economic planning, asked him to meet Prasanta Chandra Mahalanobis, an applied statistician of repute, and the two became friends and long-time associates.[2][3] Pant accompanied Mahalanobis on the latter's overseas trips.[4] Later, he joined Indian civil service and was entrusted with the task of studying the system of measurement. After a detailed study, he submitted a report, proposing the metric system which was reported to have influenced the government's decision to adopt metric system. Later, he was entrusted with a study on statistical systems; the report Pant prepared along with N. T. Mathew under the title Report on the Present Statistical Organization in Provinces and States in 1949 served as the blueprint for the establishment of the Central Statistical Unit, which, over time, evolved into the present-day Central Statistics Office.[5][6]
In 1956, Pant joined the Planning Commission of India as a staff member, taking up the position to the secretary of the Chairman, (Nehru, as the prime minister, was the chairman)[7] and headed the Manpower Planning Division of the commission.[4] In this position, he prepared several reports concerning the Indian labor force, utilization of professional manpower, and forecasting of manpower requirement and also headed the Indian Statistical Institute.[8] In 1958, he moved to the newly created Perspective Planning Division as its head and held the position till he retired from official service in 1970.[1] During this period, he served as a member of the Fourth Five Year Plan.[9] After retirement, he was selected as the chairman of the National Committee on Environmental Planning and Coordination (NCEPC) but his tenure was short-lived due to his death[10] on February 26, 1973, succumbing to prolonged illness.[4]
Pant was the author of a number of books, including Memorandum on the introduction of metric system in India,[11]Manpower and educational development in India, 1961–1968[12] and Urbanization and the long-range strategy of economic development.[13] The Government of India awarded him the Padma Bhushan, the fourth highest civilian honor, in 1973, shortly before his death.[14] The Ministry of Environment and Forests have instituted an annual award, the Pitambar Pant National Environment Fellowship Award, in his honor.[15][16][17] The Economic Survey of India (FY 2020–21) has mentioned his advocacy for the idea of "minimum needs".[18]
Bibliography
Pant, Pitambar (1954). Survey of Faridabad Township, March–April: 1954. New Delhi?: Dept. of Economic Affairs, Ministry of Finance, Govt. of India. OCLC24191023.
Pant, Pitambar; Mahalanobis, Prasanta Chandra; Inde; Ministry of finance; Department of economic affairs (1954). The national sample survey. 6, Survey of Faridabad township, March-April 1954. Calcutta: Eka Press. OCLC492677362.
Pant, Pitambar; India; Planning Commission (1955). Memorandum on the introduction of metric system in India. Delhi: Planning Commission, Gov't of India. OCLC3469677.
Pant, Pitambar (1957). Planning in China: approach, organisationl and method. Place of publication not identified: Planning Commission, Perspective Planning Division. OCLC22531518.
Pant, Pitambar; Chaudhuri, T. P; India; Planning Commission; Perspective Planning Division; Indian Statistical Institute (1959). Educated persons in India 1955. India]; Delhi: Scientific & Technical Manpower and Perspective Planning Division, Planning Commission, Government of India ; Manager of Publications. OCLC15143401.
PANT, Pitambar (1962). Some thoughts on perspective planning. (Lecture given at a conference ... in Istanbul ... in August 1962.). Istanbul. OCLC503849766.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
Pant, Pitambar (1962). Urbanization and the long-range strategy of economic development. OCLC83815583.
Burgess, Tyrrell; Layard, Richard; Pant, Pitambar (1968). Manpower and educational development in India, 1961-1968. Toronto: U.P. OCLC503187935.
^ abcVaidyanathan, A.; Rao, C. R.; Srinivasan, T. N.; Bhagwati, J. N. (1973). "Pitambar Pant: An Appreciation". Economic and Political Weekly. 8 (17): 774–777. JSTOR4362570.
^"Indian Statistical Institute: Thirty-First Annual Report: April 1962-March 1963". Sankhyā: The Indian Journal of Statistics, Series B (1960-2002). 26 (3/4): 357–406. 1964. JSTOR25051528.
^Rao, C. R (1973). Prasantha Chandra Mahalanobis. 1893–1972. Vol. 19. Biographical Memoirs of Fellows of the Royal Society. pp. 454–492.
^Pant, Pitambar; India; Planning Commission (1955). Memorandum on the introduction of metric system in India. Delhi: Planning Commission, Gov't of India. OCLC3469677.
^Burgess, Tyrrell; Layard, Richard; Pant, Pitambar (1968). Manpower and educational development in India, 1961-1968. Toronto: U.P. OCLC503187935.
^Pant, Pitambar (1962). Urbanization and the long-range strategy of economic development. OCLC83815583.
^"Padma Awards". Padma Awards. Government of India. 2018-05-17. Retrieved 2018-05-17.
Ramachandra., Guha (2011-02-10). India after Gandhi : the history of the world's largest democracy. London. ISBN9780330540209. OCLC970602799.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
Menon, Nikhil (2018). "'Fancy Calculating Machine': Computers and planning in independent India". Modern Asian Studies. 52 (2): 421–457. doi:10.1017/S0026749X16000135. S2CID148820998.