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Twelfth Five-Year Plan of Bhutan (2018–2023)
The Twelfth Five-Year Plan (2018–2023) guided Bhutan through its final years as a Least Developed Country and through the severe economic disruption of the COVID-19 pandemic. Built around seventeen National Key Result Areas, it placed decentralisation, environmental sustainability, and inclusive development at the centre of national policy.
The Twelfth Five-Year Plan (12th FYP), covering the period July 2018 to June 2023, was Bhutan's final development plan as a member of the United Nations' Least Developed Country (LDC) group. Formulated by the Gross National Happiness Commission (GNHC) under the governing objective of creating a "just, harmonious, and sustainable society through enhanced decentralisation," the plan identified seventeen National Key Result Areas (NKRAs) encompassing economic growth, environmental conservation, social equity, and democratic governance. With a total indicative outlay of approximately Nu 310 billion — including Nu 116 billion in capital expenditure allocated across central agencies, local governments, flagship programmes, and the Bhutan Economic Stabilisation Fund — the 12th FYP was the most financially ambitious plan Bhutan had yet undertaken.
Objectives and Guiding Philosophy
The three adjectives at the heart of the plan's governing objective — just, harmonious, and sustainable — were carefully defined. A just society was one in which citizens enjoy equitable access to resources and opportunities regardless of geography, gender, or socio-economic background. A harmonious society was characterised by individuals living in balance with themselves, their communities, nature, culture, and tradition — a framing that anchors the social dimension firmly within the Gross National Happiness philosophy. A sustainable society maintained the capacity for future generations to meet their own needs, encompassing fiscal prudence, environmental conservation, and cultural continuity. The plan reaffirmed the constitutional commitments to maintaining at least 60 per cent forest cover and remaining carbon neutral throughout the plan period and beyond.
Enhanced decentralisation was positioned as the principal mechanism for achieving these objectives, with a substantial increase in block grants to dzongkhags (districts) and gewogs (village blocks) and an expansion of local government authority over planning and public service delivery. The plan deliberately aligned its period with Bhutan's five-year electoral cycle, enabling the incoming elected government to own and implement the plan from the outset — a governance lesson drawn from earlier plans.
The Seventeen National Key Result Areas
The 17 NKRAs covered the full spectrum of national development concerns. Key areas included:
- Macroeconomic stability and fiscal sustainability, including current account and fiscal deficit management;
- Carbon neutrality, climate resilience, and disaster risk reduction, reinforcing Bhutan's status as a carbon sink and preparing for glacial lake outburst flood risks;
- Healthy ecosystems and biodiversity conservation, through an expanded protected area network;
- Quality and relevant education at all levels, with particular emphasis on vocational and technical training;
- Adequate, affordable, and clean energy, centred on expanded hydropower export capacity;
- Gender equality, women's empowerment, and child protection;
- Corruption reduction and promotion of democratic governance;
- Effective and affordable justice services.
Hydropower and Economic Diversification
A centrepiece of the 12th FYP was a dramatic expansion of hydropower export capacity. Three new major hydroelectric projects — Punatsangchhu I, Punatsangchhu II, and Mangdechhu — were planned to increase total installed capacity from approximately 1,500 MW to 4,500 MW, and to raise firm power exports from an estimated 300 MW to nearly 900 MW. Hydropower revenues provide the primary source of foreign exchange earnings and government revenues, and the expansion was intended to create fiscal space for the social and infrastructure investments elsewhere in the plan. However, the Punatsangchhu projects experienced significant geological complications, causing delays and cost overruns that constrained revenue projections.
Beyond hydropower, the plan identified agriculture, tourism, information and communications technology (ICT), and small industries as priority sectors for economic diversification. The organic farming transition, begun earlier, was accelerated, with a target of converting all agricultural land to organic production — a goal that reflected both market opportunity and alignment with Bhutan's conservation principles.
COVID-19 and Plan Revision
The 12th FYP was severely disrupted by the COVID-19 pandemic, which hit Bhutan in 2020 and forced a fundamental revision of priorities. GDP contracted by 2.4 per cent in FY2019–20 and 3.7 per cent in FY2020–21 — unprecedented in Bhutan's post-1961 economic history. The Royal Government responded with two rounds of an Economic Contingency Plan, reprioritising Nu 3.7 billion within the existing plan to fund emergency employment, food security, and tourism resilience measures. The 12th FYP's capital budget was subsequently revised upwards to Nu 117.234 billion to accommodate these pandemic-related expenditures.
LDC Graduation
Despite the pandemic disruption, the 12th FYP period culminated in Bhutan achieving graduation from LDC status, formally confirmed by the UN General Assembly and taking effect in December 2023. The Committee for Development Policy had first recommended Bhutan's graduation in 2018, having found that the country met the graduation thresholds for both the Human Assets Index and per-capita gross national income. Bhutan was granted a five-year transition period deliberately aligned with the 12th FYP cycle, giving the government time to diversify financing arrangements and prepare for the loss of LDC-specific preferential access.
References
- Royal Government of Bhutan. Twelfth Five-Year Plan 2018–2023, Volume I: Main Document. GNHC, 2018. https://faolex.fao.org/docs/pdf/bhu198117.pdf
- ADB Law and Policy Reform. "Twelfth Five-Year Plan 2018–2023." https://lpr.adb.org/resource/twelfth-five-year-plan-2018-2023-volume-i-ii-bhutan
- UNCDF. "Bhutan Embraces Graduation from LDC Status Amidst Global Crises." https://www.uncdf.org/article/8620/btngraduation
- Climate Laws. "12th Five Year Plan (2018–2023): Climate Change Laws of the World." https://www.climate-laws.org/geographies/bhutan/policies/12th-five-year-plan-2018-2023
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