People's Democracy(Weekly Organ of the Communist Party of India (Marxist) |
Vol. XXXIII
No.
52 December 27, 2009 |
More
Indians Are
�Poor� Now
C
P
Chandrasekhar
THE
incidence of poverty, we are now being
officially told, is much higher than the government has been claiming
thus far.
The Suresh Tendulkar committee, set up by the Planning Commission, has
argued
that a little more than 37 per cent of Indians live in poverty as
compared with
the officially estimated 27.5 per cent. The new figure is bound to
further
stretch the tiresome debate on poverty, in which the issues involved
have been
clear for some time now. However, the government, which is yet to
formally
announce acceptance of the new figures and the new method of poverty
estimation, does not seem too displeased with the report. In all
likelihood,
the report�s recommendations would be accepted. Thus, from a political
economy
perspective, the more interesting question relates to the motivation
behind the
government�s decision to consider revising its poverty estimates,
especially
since it has been maximising the political mileage it gets from the
decline in poverty
incidence indicated by estimates based on the current methodology.
A
favourable answer would attribute the revision
to the recognition that the earlier method was delivering faulty
figures. In
the never-ending dispute on the extent of poverty in the country, it
has been
increasingly accepted that the official estimates were erring on the
lower
side. There were indeed a few who used the National Accounts Statistics
to
argue that the National Sample Survey figures on expenditure tended to
underestimate consumption and overestimate poverty in the country. But
they
were an unrecognised minority. For the rest, the problem was that the
NSS
figures on calorific intake per person, on which poverty estimates were
ostensibly anchored, pointed to a significantly higher proportion of
poverty
than the estimates obtained by adjusting for inflation a set of 1973-74
nominal
expenditure figures that were seen as adequate to deliver an average
per capita
per day calorie intake of 2400 calories in rural areas and 2100
calories in
urban areas. Some analysts attempted to explain away the low calorific
intake
of those seen as being above the �poverty line� by arguing that the
actually
needed nutritional requirements and changing consumption desires were
responsible for the divergence.
TIGHT
ROPEWALK
However,
these attempts at obfuscating the issue
were challenged by the fact that the nominal expenditure of those who
were seen
as being at or below the poverty line was embarrassingly low in the
rural
areas, where it stood at Rs 356.30 per month or around Rs 12 per day in
2004-05. What is more, the National Commission on Enterprises in the
Unorganised
Sector pointed out that, going by the consumer expenditure data, 78 per
cent of
Indians were forced to manage with Rs 20 or less per day � an
expenditure
figure which to many was low enough to identify three fourths of the
population
as living in poverty.
Whether
the Tendulkar committee was expressly
set up to deal with this anomaly or not, it was clear from the outset
that it
could not go with the low figures of poverty incidence that the
government had
been citing routinely for the last decade or more. But the committee
was
walking a tight rope, since the options in terms of method and sources
of data
were indeed limited. If it opted for a method which used the direct
calorie
intake figures available from the NSS reports on consumer expenditure,
the
proportion of the population below the poverty line would have risen
sharply at
least in some states, inviting criticism from those who would use the
sheer
size of the increase to question its validity. On the other hand, if it
anchored its estimates on the 1973-74 poverty lines and merely played
with the conventionally
used price indices, it would be stuck with embarrassingly low poverty
incidence
estimates.
Given
these circumstances, the committee has
chosen a clever route to a compromise figure. It has accepted the
currently
prevailing nominal poverty line figure for urban areas on two grounds.
First, that
it permits in practice a calorific intake per person of around 1775
calories,
which though below the 2100 calories urban norm, is close to the FAO
calorific
norm of 1800. And, second, that the nominal poverty line permits in
addition to
this a reasonable degree of expenditure on education and health and
allows for a
better definition of an above-poverty consumption basket.
Having
thus defended the nominal 2004-05 poverty
line for urban areas, the committee has decided to use this nominal
figure as
the anchor for estimating a rural poverty line. This it does by
arriving at a
purchasing power parity (PPP) equivalent of this figure for rural
areas, or a
nominal expenditure figure that would allow the same basket to be
consumed in
rural areas after taking account of rural-urban price differentials.
The net
result of these exercises is a new set of poverty lines for 2004-05 �
Rs 446.68
for rural areas and Rs 578.80 for urban areas per capita per month �
and a new
set of poverty incidence figures that are more or less the same for
2004-05 in
urban areas but higher at 41.8 per cent as compared with 28.3 per cent
in rural
areas.
TOWING
GOVT LINE
These
figures sound more �reasonable� in terms
of magnitude, even though they are derived from an ostensibly
�estimated� but
unanchored nominal poverty line for urban areas for 2004-05. But what
accounts
for the fact that the government is accepting them without much
protest?
The
explanation seems to lie outside the issue
of methodology of estimation. Poverty incidence figures matter now not
merely
because they reveal how many are marginalised in an
In
fact, a report prepared by former Planning
Commission member N C Saxena at the behest of the rural development
ministry
argued that the proportion of the population below the poverty line
should be
closer to 50 per cent, without specifying a clear method to arrive at
that
figure. This arbitrariness was obviously discomfiting. It also opened
doors to poverty
incidence figures that would require budgetary outlays for targeted
schemes that
would trouble a fiscally conservative government.
Thus,
since it has managed to legitimise
targeting, a method that delivers a middling poverty figure suits the
government. Especially because �even though the suggested new
methodology gives
a higher estimate of rural headcount ratio at the all-India level for
2004-05,
the extent of poverty reduction in comparable percentage point decline
between
1993-94 and 2004-05 is not different from that inferred using the old
methodology.� This also deals with the embarrassment of those who have
to
compute and put out poverty incidence figures. The result is a cosy
convergence
in the views of the Tendulkar committee and the government in which the
poor are
by no means left any better.