http://www.nytimes.com/2007/09/07/world/asia/07migrate.html

"TRIVANDRUM, India — This verdant swath of southern Indian coastline 
is a famously good place to be poor. People in the state of Kerala 
live nearly as long as Americans do, on a sliver of the income. They 
read at nearly the same rates. 

With leftist governments here in the state capital spending heavily 
on health and schools, a generation of scholars has celebrated 
the "Kerala model" as a humane alternative to market-driven 
development, a vision of social equality in an unequal capitalist 
world. But the Kerala model is under attack, one outbound worker at a 
time. 

Plagued by chronic unemployment, more Keralites than ever work 
abroad, often at sun-scorched jobs in the Persian Gulf that pay about 
$1 an hour and keep them from their families for years. The cash 
flowing home now helps support nearly one Kerala resident in three. 
That has some local scholars rewriting the Kerala story: far from 
escaping capitalism, they say, this celebrated corner of the 
developing world is painfully dependent on it. 

"Remittances from global capitalism are carrying the whole Kerala 
economy," said S. Irudaya Rajan, a demographer at the Center for 
Development Studies, a local research group. "There would have been 
starvation deaths in Kerala if there had been no migration. The 
Kerala model is good to read about but not practically applicable to 
any part of the world, including Kerala." 

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