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Facets of India's rural development
INDIA RURAL DEVELOPMENT REPORT 1999: R. C. Choudhury and S.
Rajakutty - Editors; National Institute of Rural Development,
Rajendranagar, Hyderabad-500030. Rs. 500.
``UNLESS SOCIO-ECONOMIC equity forms an integral part of any
strategy for sustainable development, poverty can become a reason
for destabilization of political structure,'' stresses the
recently released India Rural Development Report-1999.
It analyses the regional inequity for a range of variables
relating to deprivation and entitlements. It also throws light on
the extent of widening gaps between different areas, which in
turn would have implications for inter-state and intra-state
distribution of resources and affirmative action, particularly
with regard to the weaker sections.
One of the biggest failures of the country is its inability to
overcome the unabated social and economic disablement of rural
people. Poverty has long ceased to be an issue of compassion
alone. In an era of globalisation, the formidable question is how
to include the poor in the so-called mainstream.
The book under review has critically looked into all these issues
and come out with concrete suggestions to improve the efforts for
the upliftment of the rural poor. The report has been hailed as a
unique reference book on the state-of-the art of rural
development by experts. It is for the first time, such a
comprehensive analysis of various facets of rural development
including agriculture, labour, infrastructure, social, human,
gender and environment, have been dealt with in a single volume.
The report, in seven chapters, particularly captures the
variations in development at sub-state level and their effort on
poverty, covering all the 78 NSS regions across the country as
well as a wide cross-section of the society in rural India.
The lucid volume brings to light the regional disparities in
development and poverty. Though poverty has declined in
percentage terms over the years, the absolute number of poor,
more or less, remained static. The regions in the western part of
the country had lower incidence of poverty than the central and
eastern regions. In general, the states, which were under the
zamindari regime and have experienced relatively ineffective
agrarian and land reforms and thereafter marginal impact of green
revolution, have been the losers.
Bihar, Madhya Pradesh, Rajasthan and Uttar Pradesh account for 51
per cent of the country's poor. If Assam, Orissa, West Bengal and
some Union Territories are added, these States account for over
70 per cent of the poor in the country.
Some castes have been found to be among the poorest in these
places. It is, however, of interest that the majority of the poor
are concentrated around the poverty line, which is a source of
comfort in the sense. With a little focussed effort a significant
proportion of the poor can be brought above the poverty line.
Social Development Index (SDI) and Infrastructure Development
Index (IDI), developed in this report, show close association
with poverty reduction. Orissa, Bihar, Madhya Pradesh, Rajasthan,
Uttar Pradesh and Assam have high backwardness index (meaning
that large parts of these States are backward in terms of social
and physical infrastructure and social development).
In Gender Related Development Index (GDI), India's (GDI 0.388)
rank is 112 out of 143 countries. Within India, Kerala tops with
a GDI of 0.565, while Uttar Pradesh has the lowest (0.248).
States like Haryana, Punjab, Uttar Pradesh, Bihar and West Bengal
have very high gender inequality. While gender inequality may not
always be correlated to income levels, it may point to anti-
female bias and systematic women deprivation. Sustainable
economic progress and human development can be achieved only when
inequities are contained.
Programmes/schemes based on the belief that spending more money
is in itself a necessary and sufficient condition for poverty
alleviation, may fail if the delivery mechanisms are not
strengthened and streamlined. Often, certain government policies
harm the poor much more than the benefit that accrue to them
through money-oriented schemes. The anti-poor bias in many
sectors stems from the belief that economic development and
reduction of poverty require two different strategies. One must
accept the inter-dependence of non-monetary policies and
budgetary schemes. In this context, the Planning Commission
should monitor not only the allocation and expenditure but also
scrutinise whether these expenditures directly result in
reduction of poverty or not.
The ultimate goal should be to achieve rural prosperity and not
just poverty reduction. This will be possible only if the
individual and community become focal points of development. Such
a development is not possible without bestowing the real
decision-making power on the community. This would call for large
scale promotion of strong and viable self-help groups, community-
based interest groups and user groups, genuinely strengthening
the civil society movement. Strong organic linkages have to be
established between formal structures like Panchayati Raj
institutions and informal structures like community-based
organisations and the non- governmental organisations, according
to the report.
G. VENKATARAMANI
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