*Media hype and the reality of “new” India
* Hasan Suroor
http://www.hindu.com/2010/07/20/stories/2010072055881100.htm
* Poverty in at least eight States — Bihar, Uttar Pradesh, Rajasthan, West
Bengal, Orissa, Madhya Pradesh, Chhattisgarh and Jharkhand — was worse than
in some of the poorest countries of sub-Saharan Africa. *

**

*In a week when Delhi's new “world-class” airport opened for business and
the Indian Space Research Organisation celebrated the successful launch of
five new satellites, we had a stark reminder of another India that,
increasingly, many Indians feel embarrassed to talk about. A United
Nations-backed study by Oxford University revealed that poverty in at least
eight Indian States — Bihar, Uttar Pradesh, Rajasthan, West Bengal, Orissa,
Madhya Pradesh, Chhattisgarh and Jharkhand — was worse than in some of the
poorest countries of sub-Saharan Africa.*

*The findings are based on a global poverty index, the Multidimensional
Poverty Index or MPI, developed by Oxford University. It takes into account
a range of social factors not hitherto considered while measuring poverty
and will replace the Human Poverty Index (HPI) which, until now, has formed
the basis for the annual U.N. Human Development Reports.*

*How's the new index significantly different from the traditional ways of
measuring poverty and how will it make a difference on the ground? Here, Dr.
Sabina Alkire , Director of the Oxford Poverty and Human Development
Initiative (OPHI), who has travelled extensively in India, speaks to Hasan
Suroor :*

*Were you surprised by the finding that there are more poor people in eight
Indian States than in the 26 poorest African states combined?*

No, I wasn't really surprised, as the scale of Indian poverty is well known
within the academic world —whether measured in income terms or
multi-dimensionally. But the recent focus on India's phenomenal growth in
the media has given the impression that the largest numbers of very poor
people are in Sub-Saharan Africa rather than South Asia (where there are
nearly twice as many MPI poor than in Africa). We wanted to test that
impression.

To get this comparison, what we did was to set a more extreme poverty
cut-off, which identified the Indian States and the African countries whose
Multidimensional Poverty Index (MPI) was equal or greater than 0.32 (the
MPIs we calculated for 104 countries range from 0 to .64). Eight Indian
States and 26 African countries fall below that cutoff. That's where this
figure comes from.

To give an idea of what this means, the least poor entry is West Bengal (MPI
= 0.32), in which 58 per cent of people are MPI poor, and they are on
average deprived in 54 per cent of the dimensions or weighted indicators; in
Niger 93 per cent of people are MPI poor.

Actually, the intensity of poverty in Africa is still higher — the
population-weighted MPI for the 26 African countries is 0.43, whereas for
the Indian States it is 0.39.

*How is the new Multidimensional Poverty Index or MPI significantly
different from the Human Poverty Index (HPI) that the U.N. uses for its
Human Development Report? Doesn't that also take social indicators as the
basis for measuring poverty?*

The indices share the same motivation, but are totally different. The MPI
starts with each person, and looks at their lives and that of their
household members, and identifies a person as poor only if they have
multiple deprivations. The MPI reflects the intensity of deprivation each
person experiences as well as the percentage of people who are poor.

The HPI aggregates percentages of people who are deprived in different
things. So it cannot see if all of the HPI indicators affect the same person
simultaneously, or if each person only has one deprivation.

This is understandable, because in 1997 when the HPI was developed we did
not have the data that is required to construct the MPI. Only recently has
it become possible to focus first on each person's life, and build a
multidimensional poverty measure from that.

*Critics might say that studies such as yours simply end up producing
sensational headlines without anything actually changing on the ground? Is
there any evidence, for instance, that the Human Poverty Index has helped
fight poverty better than the previous measures of poverty?*

Our aim is to strengthen the work of many others who are working
passionately to stand alongside and empower those who live with suffering
and poverty to shape their own destinies. We welcome specific suggestions
from others about how better to do this, but it seems that sharing a measure
which can show the simultaneous deprivations people face should be a useful
tool to others.

*Doesn't, ultimately, the good old definition of poverty based on household
income and purchasing still remain valid?*

Yes. Our measure complements the income and consumption data, and focuses
only on very acute indications of poverty. These data come from different
surveys, in most cases. It is a matter of enriching the information field.
If both measures coincide perfectly, of course, there would be no need for
both poverty measures. However from preliminary analysis it seems that they
differ quite a bit, even at the level of individual. We need to understand
how and why. If a household has a disabled person it may not be income poor
but clearly experiences multiple deprivations for example. Or a family may
have enough money to be nourished, but actually the children are
malnourished. Also, the MPI checks access to certain services directly,
whereas income data includes these in a different way. Finally, data in both
cases are imperfect, so comparing two different measures can give us a
clearer picture.

*In the course of your study, did you come across any other surprising
trends about India?*

We did note that the MPI for different caste groups varies a great deal. The
Scheduled Tribes have the highest MPI (0.482), almost the same as
Mozambique, and a headcount (the percentage of people who are MPI poor) of
81 per cent. The Scheduled Castes have a headcount of 66 per cent (the
percentage of people who are MPI poor) and their MPI is a bit better than
Nigeria. Fifty-eight per cent of other Backward Castes are MPI poor. About
one in three of the remaining Indian households are multi-dimensionally
poor, and their MPI is just below that of Honduras. While this is not a
surprise, it is yet another clear indication of the need for interventions
that address these social aspects of poverty in India, alongside the direct
deprivations.

*~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
"Ours is a battle not for wealth or for power.
 It is a battle for freedom. It is a battle for the reclamation of human
personality."
- Dr BR Ambedkar
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~*

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