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Poverty and Inequality in India: a Reexamination - Princeton University

Poverty and Inequality in India: a Reexamination - Princeton University

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they ignore the diversity of causal <strong>in</strong>fluencesthat have a bear<strong>in</strong>g on these trends.The accelerated progress of elementaryeducation <strong>in</strong> the n<strong>in</strong>eties, for <strong>in</strong>stance, haslittle to do with liberalisation, <strong>and</strong> the sameapplies to the slowdown of <strong>in</strong>fant mortalitydecl<strong>in</strong>e, not to speak of the decl<strong>in</strong>e ofthe female-male ratio among children.Much else than liberalisation has happened<strong>in</strong> the n<strong>in</strong>eties, <strong>and</strong> while issues of economicreform are of course extremelyimportant, so are other aspects of economic<strong>and</strong> social policy.VIConclud<strong>in</strong>g RemarksA number of useful lessons emerge fromthis reexam<strong>in</strong>ation of the evidence onpoverty <strong>and</strong> <strong>in</strong>equality <strong>in</strong> the n<strong>in</strong>eties. First,there is consistent evidence of cont<strong>in</strong>u<strong>in</strong>gpoverty decl<strong>in</strong>e <strong>in</strong> the n<strong>in</strong>eties, <strong>in</strong> terms ofthe ‘headcount ratio’. The extent of thedecl<strong>in</strong>e, however, rema<strong>in</strong>s somewhatuncerta<strong>in</strong> at this time. Given the methodologicalchanges that took place betweenthe 50th <strong>and</strong> 55th Rounds of the NationalSample Survey, the official figures (imply<strong>in</strong>ga decl<strong>in</strong>e from 36 per cent to 26 percent <strong>in</strong> the all-<strong>India</strong> headcount ratio between1993-94 <strong>and</strong> 1999-2000) are, strictlyspeak<strong>in</strong>g, <strong>in</strong>valid. We have discussedalternative estimates, based on comparabledata from the two surveys. As it turns out,these adjusted estimates suggest that alarge part of the poverty decl<strong>in</strong>e associatedwith official figures is ‘real’, rather th<strong>and</strong>riven by methodological changes. Whilefurther corroboration <strong>and</strong> <strong>in</strong>vestigation ofthe adjustment procedure is required, theresults have been supported by one <strong>in</strong>dependentstudy us<strong>in</strong>g an entirely differentmethodology [Sundaram <strong>and</strong> Tendulkar2002]. Further, the adjusted figures fitreasonably well with related evidence fromthe national accounts statistics, the employment-unemploymentsurveys, <strong>and</strong> dataon agricultural wages.Second, we have discussed some importantlimitations of the headcount ratio asan <strong>in</strong>dex of poverty (even with<strong>in</strong> the st<strong>and</strong>ardexpenditure-based approach), <strong>and</strong>argued for wider adoption of alternativepoverty <strong>in</strong>dexes such as the poverty-gap<strong>in</strong>dex. The ma<strong>in</strong> argument for us<strong>in</strong>gheadcount ratios is that they have good‘communication value’, <strong>in</strong> so far as theyare relatively easy to underst<strong>and</strong> <strong>and</strong> <strong>in</strong>terpret.However, this transparency is tosome extent deceptive, <strong>and</strong> much cautionis required <strong>in</strong> <strong>in</strong>terpret<strong>in</strong>g poverty trendson the basis of headcount ratios. For thepurpose of the poverty comparisons exam<strong>in</strong>ed<strong>in</strong> this paper, the headcount ratio turnsout to be no less <strong>in</strong>formative than thepoverty-gap <strong>in</strong>dex. Yet it was importantto calculate the PGIs, if only to discoverthat this ref<strong>in</strong>ement does not, after all,make much difference <strong>in</strong> this particularcontext.Third, growth patterns <strong>in</strong> the n<strong>in</strong>eties arecharacterised by major regional imbalances.Broadly speak<strong>in</strong>g, the western <strong>and</strong> southernstates (Andhra Pradesh excluded) havetended to do comparatively well. The lowgrowth states, for their part, form a largecontiguous region <strong>in</strong> the north <strong>and</strong> east.This is a matter of concern, s<strong>in</strong>ce thenorthern <strong>and</strong> eastern regions were poorerto start with. Indeed, National SampleSurvey data suggest a strong pattern of<strong>in</strong>ter-regional ‘divergence’ <strong>in</strong> average percapita expenditure (APCE): states thatstarted off with higher APCE levels alsohad higher growth rates of APCE between1993-94 <strong>and</strong> 1999-2000. In some of thepoorer states, notably Assam <strong>and</strong> Orissa,there has been virtually zero growth ofaverage per capita expenditure (<strong>and</strong> verylittle reduction, if any, <strong>in</strong> rural poverty)between 1993-94 <strong>and</strong> 1999-2000. Theseregional patterns are at least broadly consistentwith <strong>in</strong>dependent estimates of thegrowth rates of state domestic product(SDP).Fourth, the <strong>in</strong>tensification of regionaldisparities is only one aspect of a broaderpattern of <strong>in</strong>creas<strong>in</strong>g economic <strong>in</strong>equality<strong>in</strong> the n<strong>in</strong>eties. Two other aspects are ris<strong>in</strong>grural-urban disparities <strong>in</strong> per capita expenditure,<strong>and</strong> ris<strong>in</strong>g <strong>in</strong>equality of per capitaexpenditure with<strong>in</strong> urban areas <strong>in</strong> moststates. Further, the real wages of agriculturallabourers have <strong>in</strong>creased more slowlythan per capita GDP, <strong>and</strong> conversely withpublic sector employees, suggest<strong>in</strong>g some<strong>in</strong>tensification of economic <strong>in</strong>equalitybetween occupation groups.Fifth, we have argued for assess<strong>in</strong>gchanges <strong>in</strong> liv<strong>in</strong>g st<strong>and</strong>ards <strong>in</strong> a broaderperspective, go<strong>in</strong>g beyond the st<strong>and</strong>ardfocus on expenditure-based <strong>in</strong>dicators. Inthat broader perspective, a more diversepicture emerges, with areas of acceleratedprogress <strong>in</strong> the n<strong>in</strong>eties as well as slowdown<strong>in</strong> other fields. For <strong>in</strong>stance, thereis much evidence of rapid progress <strong>in</strong> thefield of elementary education, but the rateof decl<strong>in</strong>e of <strong>in</strong>fant mortality has sloweddown. These <strong>and</strong> related trends deservegreater attention than they have received sofar <strong>in</strong> the debate on ‘poverty <strong>in</strong> the n<strong>in</strong>eties’.Sixth, the case for go<strong>in</strong>g beyond expenditure-based<strong>in</strong>dicators applies also to theassessment of <strong>in</strong>equality. While expenditure-baseddata suggest ris<strong>in</strong>g disparities<strong>in</strong> the n<strong>in</strong>eties, the same need not applyto other social <strong>in</strong>dicators. For <strong>in</strong>stance,while economic disparities between rural<strong>and</strong> urban areas have <strong>in</strong>creased <strong>in</strong> then<strong>in</strong>eties, there has been some narrow<strong>in</strong>gof the rural-urban gap <strong>in</strong> terms of lifeexpectancy <strong>and</strong> school participation.F<strong>in</strong>ally, we have argued aga<strong>in</strong>st read<strong>in</strong>gthese trends simply as evidence of theimpact (positive or negative) of ‘liberalisation’.For one th<strong>in</strong>g, the impact of liberalisationis a ‘counterfactual’ question, <strong>and</strong>much depends on how the alternatives arespecified. For another, much else has happened<strong>in</strong> the n<strong>in</strong>eties, other than liberalisation.The evidence we have reviewed isof much <strong>in</strong>terest <strong>in</strong> its own right, <strong>in</strong>dependentlyof the liberalisation debate. Muchwork rema<strong>in</strong>s to be done <strong>in</strong> terms of identify<strong>in</strong>gthe causal relations underly<strong>in</strong>g thetrends we have identified. EPWNotes[We are grateful to Suresh Tendulkar for helpfulcomments]1 See Datt (1999a), Gupta (1999), Bhalla (2000a,2000b), Deaton <strong>and</strong> Tarozzi (2000), Drèze(2000), Lal, Mohan <strong>and</strong> Natarajan (2001),Nagaraj (2000), Ravallion (2000), Sen (2000),Sundaram <strong>and</strong> Tendulkar (2000, 2001, 2002),Visaria (2000), Sundaram (2001a, 2001b,2001c), Ch<strong>and</strong>rasekhar <strong>and</strong> Ghosh (2002),Datt <strong>and</strong> Ravallion (2002), among others.2 On the first position, see, e g, Bhalla (2000a),Bhagwati (2001), Das (2000). On the otherside, see Mehta (2001), Sa<strong>in</strong>ath (2001a,2001b), Shiva (2001a), among others.3 These estimates build on earlier work by Deaton<strong>and</strong> Tarozzi (2000), Deaton (2001a, 2001b)<strong>and</strong> Tarozzi (2001).4 In the 50th Round, the correlation between thelogarithm of total household per capitaexpenditure <strong>and</strong> the logarithm of per capitaexpenditure on this subset of commodities is0.79 <strong>and</strong> 0.86 <strong>in</strong> the rural <strong>and</strong> urban sectors,respectively.5 More precisely, <strong>and</strong> somewhat less restrictively,we require that the probability of be<strong>in</strong>gpoor, given the amount of a household’sexpenditure on these <strong>in</strong>termediate goods,rema<strong>in</strong>s the same <strong>in</strong> the 55th Round as it was<strong>in</strong> the 50th. We require this on a state by statebasis, one sector at a time, which allows theconditional probability to vary by state <strong>and</strong> bysector.6 In Deaton <strong>and</strong> Tarozzi (2000), it is shown that,between the 43rd <strong>and</strong> 50th Rounds, thecomponent of the CPIAL for the uncovereditems grew somewhat less rapidly than thecomponent for the covered items. In consequence,if we were to supplement our price<strong>in</strong>dexes for uncovered items from the CPIAL,Economic <strong>and</strong> Political Weekly September 7, 2002 3745

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