Affirmative action and long-run changes in group inequality in India

Type Working Paper - WIDER Working Paper
Title Affirmative action and long-run changes in group inequality in India
Author(s)
Issue 2016/85
Publication (Day/Month/Year) 2016
URL https://www.wider.unu.edu/sites/default/files/wp2016-85.pdf
Abstract
Research on caste-based inequalities in India has generally focused on differences
between large categories such as the Scheduled Castes, the Scheduled Tribes, and the remainder
of the population. We contribute to the literature on horizontal inequalities in India by looking
within these groupings, and studying differences between the individual jatis that comprise these
categories. Using census data, we find evidence of persistent inequalities in educational outcomes
between the jatis, suggesting that socio-economic hierarchies have proved to be stable
throughout the post-Independence period. Indeed, the evidence points to divergence:
communities with more education in 1961 also had higher educational attainment in 2001. Also,
while numerically larger Scheduled Caste communities witnessed greater improvements in
educational levels compared to smaller ones, this was not true for the Scheduled Tribes. This
may be the result of their greater political mobilization.

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