http://www.asianage.com/india/vibrant-gujarat-more-myth-fact-694
Vibrant Gujarat: More Myth than Fact
Jul 21, 2013 - Rashme
Sehgal<http://www.asianage.com/category/author/rashme-sehgal>
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The social indicators in a state of 60 million people tell a different tale
from the Vibrant Gujarat story being pushed by Mr Narendra Modi. Economist
Vidyut Joshi, former vice-chancellor of Bhavnagar University, notes with
regret that the high economic growth in Gujarat has been at the expense of
basic human development.
Infant mortality, one of the best indicators of the success of a
government, is a low ranking 11th with 44 deaths per 1,000 live births. Dr
Joshi says, “The Unicef’s State of the Children Report 2012 confirms that
every second child under the age of five in Gujarat is undernourished and
three out of four are anaemic. The gender ratio was 921 in 2001 but this
has declined to 919 in 2011 while the girl child ratio has worsened from
964 in 2001 to 890 in 2011.”
A report published by the Union ministry of statistics and programme
implementation, Children India 2012: A Statistical Appraisal, emphasised
that between 40 and 50 per cent of children in Gujarat are underweight.
Other states in this low weight category are Meghalaya, Chattisgarh, UP and
Orissa.
Environmental and educational activist Mahesh Panday, director of
Paryawaran Mitra, said, “While the BJP claims to have achieved 100 per cent
enrolment in primary schools, the UNDP has ranked it at the 18th position
in keeping children in schools.”
Mr Panday points out that Gujarat has decided to shut down more than 7,000
primary schools. He said, “The reason being given to us is that less than
100 children enrolled in each of these schools. But most of these schools
cater to children hailing from small villages with small populations. No
one is asking what will the future be of these kids once they lose the
neighbourhood school.”
The Gujarat Human Development report shows that female literacy has risen
less than three per cent between 2001-11 while male literacy has increased
by over 7 per cent in the period.
“In the Gujarat Human Development report, Gujarat had 19th position in
terms of female literacy and ninth position in terms of health indicators.
Following this, the state opted to do districtwise studies but the results
have not been made public,” Dr Joshi said.
Primary school teachers in villages are paid `3,500 a month. “How many
teachers are willing to come and teach in villages at these low rates,” Mr
Pandya asks.
“The situation in primary health centres is no better. Doctors in rural
areas are being paid `10,000 per month for the last 10 years. Local doctors
are not willing to man PHCs and so the government has been reduced to
employing doctors from UP,” he added.
In a move to reduce the number of government engineers and doctors, no
Public Service Commission exam has been held for 10 years. There result is
the state has stopped hiring engineers and doctors who are all perforce
forced to join private service.
Environmentalists say that Gujarat’s economic boom has created
environmentally dead zones. Many of its cities have seen pollution reach
critical levels. These include Ankleshwar and Vapi which rank amongst the
most polluted cities in India.. The rivers are going the same way. The
National Water Quality Programme led by the Central Pollution Control Board
positions the Sabarmati river, the Khari and the Amlakhadi as being the
most polluted rivers.
The other indicators are damning. Census 2011 shows that 67 per cent of
rural households have no access to toilets; 65 per cent defecate in the
open.
While GDP growth under Mr Modi has been around 9 per cent, Dr Joshi points
out that it was 16 per cent during the Madhavsinh Solanki and Chimanbhai
Patel regimes. “We have organised six Vibrant Gujarat summits but the
realisation level of investment has been 25 per cent as per government
data.”
How much has a daily labourer gained in this Vibrant Gujarat? According to
NSSO 2011 figures, the average wage a labourer in the informal sector in
urban areas can expect in Gujarat is `106 against `218 in Kerala.

In rural areas, Punjab ranks the highest at `152 a day while Gujarat ranks
12th at `83.


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