Dear Friends:

There are two editions to India Ink, N Y Times, this morning (21.03 2012). The 
first one is below:


-bhuban













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March 21, 2012, 3:06 AM
Has Poverty Really Dropped in India?
By NIKHILA GILL

Rafiq Maqbool/Associated Press
A young girl sitting on a handcart writes in a notebook in a slum in Mumbai, 
Maharashtra.

Remember when the public was outraged at the idea that the poverty line should 
be 32 rupees, or 63 cents, a day in urban areas?
We’ve now learned it should really be 29 rupees. And believe it or not, this is 
no sleight of hand to show a drop in poverty.
The Planning Commission’s latest poverty estimates, released Monday evening, 
show a 7 percentage-point drop in India’s poor, the largest fall since the 
figure was first calculated in 1962.
Some critics say the Planning Commission has reduced an already controversially 
low poverty line even further, using the new thresholds to create the 
appearance of a large drop in absolute numbers.
The Global Post argued Tuesday that the Planning Commission, “already under 
fire for setting a poverty line of 32 rupees per day for urban India and 26 
rupees for rural India” last year, lowered the bar “a hefty 12 percent to 29 
rupees and 22 rupees to fudge the stats.”
The Financial Times said Tuesday that if the government continues along these 
lines, “India will soon achieve something remarkable in the course of human 
history: by September of next year, it will be the first country on the planet 
to be completely free of poor people.”
But are the goalposts actually moving?
Mihir Shah, a member of the Planning Commission, said no. The commission, he 
said, is using the same methodology it did when it last published poverty 
estimates in 2009, based on data from a nationwide survey in 2004-5. The 
poverty lines have been raised significantly, by nearly 50 percent, since then: 
In urban areas, the poverty line increased from 578.80 rupees, or $11.50, per 
capita per month to 859.60 rupees; and in rural areas it went from 446.70 
rupees to 672.80 rupees.
The misunderstandings arise because in September 2011, the Planning Commission 
filed an affidavit with the Supreme Court in response to a case filed by 
activists. The affidavit pegged the provisional poverty line for urban and 
rural areas at 965 rupees and 781 rupees per capita per month, respectively.
However, the figures filed in the September affidavit were “back of the 
envelope calculations” and projected a poverty line for June 2011 based on the 
2004-5 National Sample Survey data, according to Saumitra Chaudhuri, a member 
of the Planning Commission. In other words, the 32 rupees a day poverty line 
was simply a forecast based on old consumption patterns.
The figures released on Monday are based on 2009-10 N.S.S. data, which include 
actual consumption by households measured by the costs of food, rent and 
clothing, rather than estimates.
So in fact, only two official poverty lines exist for the period between 2004 
and 2010 based on N.S.S. surveys. The 32 rupees a day was an estimate and 
should be disregarded when evaluating the poverty figures. For the purpose of 
comparison, the revised poverty line of 29 rupees a day for 2009-10 should be 
weighed against the line of 19 rupees a day in 2004-5 in urban areas.
Both poverty lines (based on data from 2004-5 and 2009-10) were calculated 
using the same methodology and were therefore comparable, Mr. Chaudhuri said.
Mr. Shah acknowledged that the poverty lines set by the commission did not 
constitute “an adequate definition of poverty” since they did not take into 
account malnutrition, sanitation, drinking water, housing and health. These 
poverty lines will not be used to determine entitlements under government 
programs, he said, and their only purpose was to provide a comparison of 
consumption expenditure levels over time and across states, he added.
Some say the furor over the poverty lines should be focused instead on the 
distinction between an ethical and an administrative poverty line.
Abhijit Banerjee, director of the Abdul Latif Jameel Poverty Action Lab at 
M.I.T., argues that “we need two different poverty lines: an ethical poverty 
line to describe the standard we should aspire to,” which could be 50 rupees or 
more, “and an administrative poverty line, which tells us how to best target 
our limited resources.”







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