Poverty and inequality in India: A re-examination

Type Journal Article - Economic and Political Weekly
Title Poverty and inequality in India: A re-examination
Author(s)
Volume 37
Issue 36
Publication (Day/Month/Year) 2002
Page numbers 3729-3748
URL http://w.sa-dhan.net/Adls/Microfinance/PerspectivePoverty/PovertyandInequality.pdf
Abstract
This paper presents a new set of integrated poverty and inequality estimates for India and Indian states for 1987-88, 1993-94 and 1999-2000. The poverty estimates are broadly consistent with independent evidence on per capita expenditure, state domestic product and real agricultural wages. They show that poverty decline in the 1990s proceeded more or less in line with earlier trends. Regional disparities increased in the 1990s, with the southern and western regions doing much better than the northern and eastern regions. Economic inequality also increased within states, especially within urban areas, and between urban and rural areas. We briefly examine other development indicators, relating for instance to health and education. Most indicators have continued to improve in the nineties, but social progress has followed very diverse patterns, ranging from accelerated progress in some fields to slow down and even regression in others. We find no support for sweeping claims that the nineties have been a period of ‘unprecedented improvement’ or ‘widespread impoverishment’.

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