C. D. Deshmukh Explained

Honorific-Prefix:Sir
C. D. Deshmukh
Office:10th Vice Chancellor of University of Delhi
Term:1962 - 1967
Predecessor:N.K. Sidhant
Successor:B.N. Ganguly
Office1:Chairman of University Grants Commission
Term1:1956 - 1961
Predecessor1:Pt. H.N. Kunzru
Successor1:Dr. V.S. Krishna
Office3:4th Minister of Finance
Primeminister3:Jawaharlal Nehru
Predecessor3:John Mathai
Successor3:T. T. Krishnamachari
Term3:29 May 1950[1] - 24 July 1956[2] [3]
Office4:Member of Parliament, Lok Sabha
Term4:1952 - 1957
Constituency4:Kolaba
Predecessor4:position established
Successor4:Rajaram Balkrishna Raut
Office5:3rd Governor of Reserve Bank of India
Predecessor5:Sir James Braid Taylor
Successor5:Sir Benegal Rama Rau
Term5:11 August 1943 - 30 June 1949[4]
Birth Place:Nate, Bombay Presidency, British India
Birth Date:1896 1, df=yes
Death Place:Hyderabad, Andhra Pradesh (now Telangana), India
Alma Mater:University of Cambridge
Spouse:
    Nationality:British Indian
    Indian
    Children:1 (daughter)
    Awards:Padma Vibushan (1975)
    Ramon Magsaysay Award (1959)
    Companion of the Order of the Indian Empire (1937)
    Signature:Sir C. D. Deshmukh - Signature.jpg

    Sir Chintaman Dwarakanath Deshmukh (14 January 1896 – 2 October 1982) was an Indian civil servant and the first Indian[5] to be appointed the Governor of the Reserve Bank of India in 1943 by the British Raj authorities. He subsequently served as the Finance Minister in the Union Cabinet (1950–1956). It was during this time that he also became a founding member of the Governing Body of NCAER, the National Council of Applied Economic Research in New Delhi, India's first independent economic policy institute established in 1956 at the behest of Prime Minister Jawaharlal Nehru. After resignation from Union Cabinet he worked as Chairman of UGC (1956–1961). He served as Vice-Chancellor of University of Delhi (1962–67). He was also President of Indian Statistical Institute from 1945 to 1964, Honorary Chairman of National Book Trust (1957–60).

    He founded India International Center in 1959 and served as Lifetime President of it. He was also chairman of Indian Institute of Public Administration.

    Early life and education

    Chintaman Deshmukh was born in a Marathi-speaking Chandraseniya Kayastha Prabhu (CKP) family[6] to Dwarakanath Raje-Deshmukh, a lawyer and Bhagirathibai Raje-Deshmukh (née Sule-Mahagaonkar family) on 14 January 1896 in Nategaon, near Fort Raigad, Maharashtra.[7] He was schooled at Roha and Tala and at the Elphinstone High School, Bombay.[8] In 1912, Deshmukh passed the Matriculation Examination of the University of Bombay with record marks and secured the first Jagannath Shankarseth Scholarship in Sanskrit.[9] In 1915 he went to England and graduated with a degree in Natural Sciences Tripos from Jesus College, Cambridge in 1917. He was awarded the Frank Smart Prize in Botany and was also president of the Majlis Society. In 1918 he sat for, and stood first in the Indian Civil Service Examination, then held only in London.[10] [11]

    Civil service career

    Deshmukh returned to India in 1920 and worked in the Central Provinces and Berar where he went on to hold several posts including as undersecretary to the government, Deputy Commissioner and Settlement Officer and as secretary to the Secretary-General at the Second Round Table Conference of 1931, later becoming secretary to the finance and public works department.[12] [13] He also served briefly as Joint Secretary to Government of India in the departments of education and health and was Custodian of Enemy Property.[14]

    At the Reserve Bank of India

    Deshmukh joined the Reserve Bank of India in 1939 and served successively as its Secretary to the Board, Deputy Governor and the Governor.[15] He was appointed Governor of the Reserve Bank of India in August 1943 and is one of the eight Deputy Governors of the Bank who have gone on to become its Governor.[16] [17] As Governor, Deshmukh helped establish the Industrial Finance Corporation and focused on the promotion of rural credit.[18] Deshmukh's tenure saw the RBI begin a Research and Statistics department, the demonetisation of bank notes of 500 and above, the ceasing of the RBI's role as the central banks of Burma and State Bank of Pakistan and the enactment of the Banking Companies Act, 1949 that laid down the framework for regulation of India's banking sector.[19] The RBI was nationalised on 1 January 1949 through the RBI Act, 1948.[20] Deshmukh opposed this proposal for nationalisation but agreed to continue as the chairman of the board of directors presiding over the transition of the bank from a private to a nationalised institution.[21] [22] [23] In July 1949 Benegal Rama Rau succeeded Deshmukh as the Governor of the RBI.[19]

    Bretton Woods Conference

    Deshmukh was a member of a five-member delegation representing India at the Bretton Woods Conference that established the International Monetary Fund (IMF) and International Bank for Reconstruction and Development (IBRD).[24] On the issue of quotas, Deshmukh suggested that India walk out of the conference since the original hierarchy would have excluded India from being automatically represented through an executive director at the IMF.[25] The delegation also succeeded in bringing the issues of poverty and development into the agenda of the IBRD.[26] It is said that John Maynard Keynes was so impressed by the "dignity, ability and reasonableness" of Deshmukh that he recommended Deshmukh head the IMF as its first managing director a suggestion that was however rejected by the United States.[27] [26] [28] [29]

    He was a member of the Board of Governors of both of these institutions from 1946 to 1956. In 1950, he was elected Chairman of the Joint Annual Meeting of the Boards of Governors of these institutions at its Paris Conference.[30]

    Deshmukh Award

    Following Partition, the division of income tax revenue and jute export duty between the Union government and the states of India had to be decided based on the changed geographical realities. The Government of India appointed Deshmukh to resolve this matter pending the establishment of a Finance Commission. The Deshmukh Award, which was effected in 1950, factored in population in deciding the division of revenue and recommended grants in aid for various states and remained in force until April 1952.[31] [32] [33] [34]

    Union Finance Minister

    Deshmukh was one of five members of the Planning Commission when it was constituted in 1950 by a cabinet resolution.[35] [36] Deshmukh succeeded John Mathai as the Union Finance Minister in 1950 after Mathai resigned in protest over the transfer of certain powers to the Planning Commission.[37] As Finance Minister, Deshmukh continued to remain a member of the Planning Commission.[38] His successors as Finance Minister were also made members of the Commission thus establishing a convention of the Finance Minister being an ex officio member of the Commission.[35] Deshmukh's term as Finance Minister covered the period of the First Five Year Plan. He employed deficit financing as a key tool in bringing about planned investment but inflation and revenue deficits became major challenges during this period.[39] Deshmukh was also chairman of a panel of economists that recommended the proposed Second Five Year Plan with its capital intensive model of development. He envisioned a significant role for the village and cottage industries in curbing unemployment and inflation caused by deficit financing and got the Congress Working Committee to approve the draft plan.[40] [41] [42]

    Deshmukh's first budget of 1951-52 proposed an overall rise in taxes.[43] The following year he presented an interim budget for 1952-53 and a full budget in the first elected Parliament of India to which he was elected from the Kolaba constituency of Bombay State.[44] [45] [46] In 1952 Deshmukh invited Paul Appleby to study Indian administration and Appleby's reports led to the establishment of the Organisation and Management Organisation in the Government of India and the establishment of the Indian Institute of Public Administration of which Deshmukh later became vice president and chairman.[47] [48] In 1955, the State Bank of India was formed through the nationalisation and amalgamation of the Imperial Bank with several smaller banks. This was undertaken on the recommendation of the All-India Rural Credit Survey Committee although Deshmukh had been opposed to plans for nationalising the bank when he was the RBI Governor.[49] [50] The nationalisation of insurance companies and the formation of the Life Insurance Corporation of India was accomplished by him through the Life Insurance Corporation of India Act, 1956.[51] [52] He resigned over the proposal of the Government of India to move a bill in Parliament bifurcating Bombay State into Gujarat and Maharashtra while designating the City of Bombay a Union Territory.[53] [54] Deshmukh's tenure - during which he delivered six budgets and an interim budget[55] - is noted for the effective management of the Indian economy and its steady growth which saw the economy recover from the impacts of the events of the 1940s.[56] [57]

    Later career

    Shortly after his resignation from the Cabinet, Deshmukh was appointed Chairman of India's University Grants Commission in 1956, a post he held until 1961.[58] [59] [60] Deshmukh, who was the first chairman of the commission after it became a statutory body, played a key role in the development of university libraries during his tenure.[61] [62] He was also the founding chairman of the National Book Trust which was inaugurated in 1957 with the aim of making available books priced moderately to the general public and libraries.[63] From 1962 - 1967, Deshmukh served as the tenth Vice Chancellor of the University of Delhi. He invited the Ford Foundation to survey and finance the upgradation of the Delhi University Library through a grant of 1 million.[64]

    Deshmukh contested the Indian presidential election of 1969 as a candidate of the Swatantra Party and the Jana Sangh and won the third-highest number of first preference votes.[65] [66] [67] [68]

    Personal life

    Deshmukh married Rosina Arthur Wilcox in 1920 with whom he had a daughter, Primrose.[69] After Rosina's death in 1949, Deshmukh married Durgabai in 1953 and they were married until her death in 1981. Chintaman and I is her memoir published in 1980.[70]

    In 1974, he published his autobiography The Course of My Life.[71]

    Deshmukh died in Hyderabad on 2 October 1982.[72]

    Awards

    Deshmukh was appointed a Companion of the Order of the Indian Empire in 1937, and conferred a knighthood in 1944.[73] [74]

    He was awarded an honorary Doctor of Science by the University of Calcutta in 1957 and an honorary Doctor of Literature by the Panjab University in 1959.[75] [76]

    In 1959, Deshmukh was a co-recipient (along with Jose Aguilar of the Philippines[77]) of the Ramon Magsaysay Award for distinguished Government Service. Jesus College, Cambridge, Deshmukh's alma mater, elected him its Honorary Fellow in 1952 in recognition of his distinguished contribution in the areas of Indian and international finance and administration.

    In 1975, Sir Chintaman and Durgabai Deshmukh were awarded the Padma Vibhushan.[78]

    Legacy

    The Reserve Bank of India organises the annual lecture series called 'Chintaman Deshmukh Memorial Lectures', since 1984.[79] The National Council of Applied Economic Research also conducts the annual C.D. Deshmukh Memorial Lecture since 2013.[80] [81] [82]

    The Thane Municipal Corporation established the Chintamanrao Deshmukh Institute for Administrative Careers in 1987, to prepare the youth to enter the civil services.[83] A road in the Tilakwadi area of the city of Belgaum has been named as 'C. D. Deshmukh Road'. The India International Centre in New Delhi has an auditorium named after Deshmukh.[84] [85]

    In 2004, a commemorative postage stamp was released in his honour.[86]

    The National Insurance Academy organises the annual seminar called "CD Deshmukh Memorial Seminar" since the last 22 years.

    Notes and References

    1. https://web.archive.org/web/20150922002549/http://photodivision.gov.in/waterMarkdetails.asp?id=14554.jpg Dr. Rajendra Prasad swearing in Shri C.D. Deshmukh as Finance Minister at the ceremony held at Government House on May 29, 1950
    2. Book: Federation of India and States' Reorganisation: Reconstruction and Consolidation . Deep & Deep Publications . Ranjana Arora . Verinder Grover . 1994 . New Delhi . 8. 9788171005413 .
    3. Book: India Since 1947: The Independent Years . 89 . Penguin UK . Gopa Sabharwal . 2007. 9789352140893 .
    4. Web site: Political Economy of Central Banking in India . IGIDR . 17 November 2014 . 25 July 2016 . Partha Ray . 16.
    5. Web site: Chintaman Deshmukh Memorial Lectures. 8 December 2006. Reserve Bank of India. https://web.archive.org/web/20061230044744/http://www.rbi.org.in/Content/Annual_CDMemorial.aspx. 30 December 2006. dead. dmy-all.
    6. Book: 1981. the University of Michigan. South Asian intellectuals and social change: a study of the role of vernacular-speaking intelligentsia. Yogendra K. Malik. 63. CD. Deshmukh (1896-), a C.K.P., served as a civil servant, becoming nationally known as a financial expert only after the independence..
    7. Book: Great Administrators Of India . Kalpaz Publications . M.L. Ahuja . 2009 . Delhi . 33. 9788178357294 .
    8. Book: Barons of Banking . Random House India . Bakhtiar Dadabhoy . 2013 . Noida. 9788184004762 .
    9. Book: The Cloister's Pale: A Biography of the University of Mumbai . Popular Prakashan . Aruṇa Ṭikekara . 2006 . Mumbai . 105. 9788179912935 .
    10. Book: Nationalism, Education and Migrant Identities: The England-returned . Routledge . Sumita Mukherjee . 2010 . Oxon . 129. 9781135271138 .
    11. Web site: Chintaman Deshmukh Memorial Lectures . Reserve Bank of India . 4 July 2016.
    12. Web site: TREASURY CODE VOL- II. 4 July 2016. 5.
    13. Central Provinces & Berar Gazette. Central Provinces & Berar Gazette. October 1937. 1301.
    14. Web site: Deshmukh, Chintaman. Ramon Magsaysay Award Foundation. August 1959. 13 July 2016. https://web.archive.org/web/20160828013506/http://www.rmaf.org.ph/newrmaf/main/awardees/awardee/biography/84. 28 August 2016. dead.
    15. Book: Essays on Econometrics and Planning . Elsevier . C R Rao . 2014 . New Delhi . 2. 9781483225616 .
    16. Book: The Cambridge Economic History of India: Volume 2, C.1751-c.1970 . Cambridge University Press . Tapan Raychaudhuri . Dharma Kumar . Irfan Habib . Meghnad Desai . 1983 . Cambridge . 795–796. 9780521228022 .
    17. Book: Money, Banking, and Economic Reforms . Deep & Deep Publications . Alok Ghosh . Raj Kumar Sen . 2002 . New Delhi . 89. 9788176293907 .
    18. Book: Forgotten Foundations of Bretton Woods: International Development and the ... . Cornell University Press . Eric Helleiner . 2014 . 251. 9780801470608 .
    19. Book: Indian Financial System & Markets . Tata McGraw Hill . Siddhartha Shankar Saha . 2013 . New Delhi . 67. 9781259051159 .
    20. Book: Credit Risk Management for Indian Banks . SAGE . K. Vaidyanathan . 2013 . New Delhi . 265. 9788132116516 .
    21. Book: The Domestic Abroad: Diasporas in International Relations . Oxford University Press . Latha Varadarajan . 2010 . New York. 9780199889877 .
    22. Book: Bank Management . Discovery Publishing House . V.S.P. Rao . 1999 . New Delhi . 338. 9788171415106 .
    23. Book: Financial Terms Simplified . SAGE . Gautam Majumdar . 2013 . New Delhi . 252. 9788132117797 .
    24. News: A page from history: 70 years before the Brics bank . Live Mint . 23 July 2014 . 11 July 2016 . Niranjan Rajadhyaksha.
    25. Book: Wartime Origins and the Future United Nations . Routledge . Pallavi Roy . Financing gaps, competitiveness and capabilities: why Bretton Woods needs a rqadical rethink . 2015 . New York . 168. 9781134668731 .
    26. News: How India shaped international monetary policy at Bretton Woods . Live Mint . 11 July 2016 . 11 July 2016 . Ankit Mital.
    27. Book: Indian Economy: Reviews And Commentaries - Volume 3 . ICFAI University Press . Venkitaramanan S . 2005 . Hyderabad . 98. 9788178815732 .
    28. News: That job at the IMF . Live Mint . 24 May 2011 . 11 July 2016 . Niranjan Rajadhyaksha.
    29. News: World Bank or elite club? . Live Mint . 22 May 2007 . 11 July 2016.
    30. Book: THE BALANCE BETWEEN MONETARY POLICY AND OTHER INSTRUMENTS OF ECONOMIC POLICY IN A MODERN SOCIETY . Per Jacobsson Foundation . 1965 . Washington D C . 66.
    31. Book: Encyclopaedic Dictionary of Economics, Volume 1 . Mittal Publications . N. B. Ghodke . 1985 . Delhi . 311.
    32. Book: Economic History of India: 1857-1956 . Allied Publishers . V B Singh . Inter Governmental Fiscal Relations . Shailendra Singh. 2002 . New Delhi . 559.
    33. Book: Financial Administration in India . PHI Learning . Sanjeev Kumar Mahajan . Anupama Puri Mahajan . 2014 . Delhi . 16. 9788120349360 .
    34. Book: Chand, S.N. . Public Finance, Volume 2 . Atlantic Publishers . 2008. 9788126908820 .
    35. Book: Vision and Strategy in Indian Politics: Jawaharlal Nehru's Policy Choices and the Designing of Political Institutions . Routledge . Jivanta Schoettli . 2012 . Oxon . 106. 9781136627873 .
    36. Book: Development Administration . PHI Learning . S. A. PALEKAR . 2012 . New Delhi . 74. 9788120345829 .
    37. News: Once upon a plan . The Indian Express . 26 September 2014 . 11 July 2016 . Inder Malhotra.
    38. Web site: Reference Material 2010 Notes on the Functioning of Various Divisions . Planning Commission of India . 2010 . 11 July 2016.
    39. Book: K.S. Ramachandran. Economic Environment of India. 1 January 2007. Northern Book Centre. 978-81-7211-227-1. 5–.
    40. Book: G. S. Monga. Madan Mohan Goel. Wage Goods Approach to Development. 1 January 2001. Deep & Deep. 978-81-7629-269-6. 140–.
    41. Book: Stanley A. Kochanek. The Congress Party of India: The Dynamics of a One-Party Democracy. 8 December 2015. Princeton University Press. 978-1-4008-7576-4. 179–.
    42. Book: Chanda Rai. Indian Economic Planning: Analysis and Relevance of Economic Ideas of Dr. D.R. Gadgil. 1 January 2007. Deep & Deep Publications. 978-81-7629-925-1. 32–.
    43. Web site: Speech of Shri C.D. Deshmukh, Minister of Finance Introducing the Budget for the Year 1951-52 . 25 July 2016 . https://web.archive.org/web/20160411082937/http://www.indiabudget.nic.in/bspeech/bs195253.pdf . 11 April 2016 . dead .
    44. The Central Budgets in Retrospect . Press Information Bureau . 24 February 2003 . 11 July 2016.
    45. Web site: Speech of Shri C.D. Deshmukh, Minister of Finance Introducing the Budget for the Year 1952-53 (Final) . 13 July 2016 . https://web.archive.org/web/20160411082937/http://www.indiabudget.nic.in/bspeech/bs195253.pdf . 11 April 2016 . dead .
    46. Book: Statistical Report on General Elections, 1951 to the First Lok Sabha Volume I . Election Commission of India . NEW DELHI . 81 . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20141008191615/http://eci.nic.in/eci_main/StatisticalReports/LS_1951/VOL_1_51_LS.PDF . 8 October 2014 . dmy-all .
    47. Book: Indian Administration 2 Vols. Set . Atlantic Publishers . N. Jayapalan . 2001 . New Delhi . 270. 9788171569212 .
    48. Web site: Indian Institute of Public Administration NEW DELHI . Indian Institute of Public Administration . 26 July 2016.
    49. News: dated December 21, 1954: State Bank of India . https://web.archive.org/web/20161221085824/http://www.thehindu.com/2004/12/21/stories/2004122100050902.htm . dead . 21 December 2016 . 21 December 2004 . . 12 July 2016.
    50. News: Tracing history of the SBI . The Tribune . 20 April 2003 . 12 July 2016 . B S Thaur.
    51. Book: India: The Emerging Giant . Oxford University Press . Arvind Panagariya . 2008 . New York. 9780199890149 .
    52. Book: Insurance in India: Changing Policies and Emerging Opportunities . Response Books . P S Palande . R S Shah . 2003 . New Delhi . 31. 9780761997474 .
    53. Book: Dr. Zakir Hussain, Quest for Truth . APH Publishing . Ziaul Hasan Faruqi . 1999 . Delhi . 280. 9788176480567 .
    54. News: The anxiety that lingers . Live Mint . 7 December 2012 . 11 July 2016 . Niranjan Rajadhyaksha.
    55. Web site: India: Central Government Budgets - 1947-48 to 2003-04 . New Century Publications . 2003 . 20 July 2016 . M M Sury.
    56. News: North Block Mavericks . Business Standard . 1 March 1997 . 11 July 2016.
    57. Book: The Politics of Poverty: Planning India's Development . SAGE Publications . D K Rangnekar . 2012 . New Delhi . 134. 9788132109020 .
    58. Web site: List of Former Chairpersons . University Grants Commission . 11 July 2016.
    59. Book: Higher Education in India Since Independence: UGC and Its Approach . Concept Publishing Company . Om Prakash Gupta . 1993 . New Delhi . 79. 9788170224471 .
    60. Book: A K Hota. Encyclopaedia of New Media and Educational Planning. 1 January 2000. Sarup & Sons. 978-81-7625-170-9. 88–.
    61. Book: Development of University Libraries in India After Independence . Concept Publishing Company . Om Prakash Gupta . 1992 . New Delhi . 37. 9788170224099 .
    62. Book: Fifty Years of Higher Education in India: The Role of the University Grants Commission . SAGE Publications . Amrik Singh . 2004 . New Delhi . 202–203. 9780761932161 .
    63. News: dated August 3, 1957: National Book Trust . The Hindu . 3 August 2007 . 11 July 2016.
    64. Book: Libraries and Information Studies in Retrospect and Prospect: Volume 2 . Concept Publishers . M L Saini . The Making of Delhi University Library System . 2002 . New Delhi . 499–500. 9788170229308 .
    65. Book: Split in a Predominant Party: The Indian National Congress in 1969 . Abhinav Publications . Mahendra Prasad Singh . 1981 . New Delhi . 81. 9788170171409 .
    66. Book: Constitutional Government in India . S Chand & Co. . M V Pylee . 2012 . New Delhi . 229. 9788121922036 .
    67. Web site: PRESIDENTIAL ELECTION FROM 1952 TO 1997 BRIEF NOTES . Election Commission of India . 4 July 2016 . 22.
    68. Book: India Since Independence . Penguin Books . Bipan Chandra . Aditya Mukherjee . Mridula Mukherjee . 2008 . New Delhi . 298. 9780143104094 .
    69. Web site: Deshmukh, Chintaman. Ramon Magsaysay Award Foundation. August 1959. 13 July 2016. https://web.archive.org/web/20160828013506/http://www.rmaf.org.ph/newrmaf/main/awardees/awardee/biography/84. 28 August 2016. dead.
    70. Book: The Oxford Encyclopedia of Women in World History: Volume 2. Oxford University Press. Prachi Deshpande. Deshmukh, Durgabai. 2008 . New York. 42. 9780195148909.
    71. Book: Deshmukh. I.C.S.. Course Of My Life, The- Centenary Edn.. 1996. Orient Blackswan. 978-81-250-0824-8. 8–.
    72. Book: Bakhtiar K. Dadabhoy. Barons of Banking. Random Business. 2013. 9788184003499.
    73. To be Companions of the said Most Eminent Order . Supplement to the London Gazette . 1 February 1937 . 693 .
    74. Whitehall, March 21, 1944 . The London Gazette . 1333 . 21 March 1944.
    75. http://www.caluniv.ac.in/About%20the%20university/university_frame.htm Honoris Causa
    76. Web site: Record of Honoris Causa Degrees w.e.f. 1949 . Panjab University . 5 July 2016.
    77. Web site: The Ramon Magsaysay Awardees by Name. 8 December 2006. The Ramon Magsaysay Foundation. https://web.archive.org/web/20061129080446/http://www.rmaf.org.ph/Awardees/name.htm. 29 November 2006. dead.
    78. Web site: Padma Awards Directory (1954-2014) Year-Wise List . Ministry of Home Affairs, Government of India . 12 July 2016 . 63 . https://web.archive.org/web/20161115022326/http://mha.nic.in/sites/upload_files/mha/files/YearWiseListOfRecipientsBharatRatnaPadmaAwards-1954-2014.pdf . 15 November 2016 . dead . dmy-all .
    79. https://www.rbi.org.in/Content/Annual_CDMemorial.aspx Reserve Bank of India - Publications
    80. http://www.ncaer.org/event_details.php?EID=18 The Inaugural C.D. Deshmukh Memorial Lecture 2013
    81. http://www.ncaer.org/event_details.php?EID=48 The C D Deshmukh Memorial Lecture 2014
    82. http://www.ncaer.org/event_details.php?EID=106 The Third C.D. Deshmukh Memorial Lecture 2015
    83. http://www.cdinstitute.in/ C D Deshmukh's Institute
    84. http://www.iicdelhi.nic.in/User_Panel/UserView.aspx?TypeID=1150 IIC| India International Centre - Introduction
    85. http://www.iicdelhi.nic.in/User_Panel/UserView.aspx?TypeID=1223 IIC| India International Centre - C. D. Deshmukh Auditorium
    86. Web site: Commemorative postage stamp on C.D. Deshmukh . Press Information Bureau, Government of India . 13 January 2004 . 5 July 2016.