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India Inclusive Growth Issues. Consultations August 29, 2007 New Delhi. Context. Growth has been stellar: 6% p.a since the mid-1980s, and over 8% per annum in the past four years
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IndiaInclusive Growth Issues Consultations August 29, 2007 New Delhi
Context • Growth has been stellar: 6% p.a since the mid-1980s, and over 8% per annum in the past four years • But poverty impact of growth has been muted: poverty declined from 36% in 1993/94 to 28% in 2004/05, a 0.8% point reduction p.a. compared to 1.6% poverty reduction p.a. in Bangladesh and Nepal • This has raised concerns that India’s growth is not inclusive or its benefits are not widely shared. • Close to 300 million still live in deep poverty at less than a dollar a day.
Four reasons that help to explain India’s growth is not adequately inclusive. • Growth has diverged across regions, leaving behind the large populous states of North Central and North East India. • Growth has not been creating enough good jobs, that provide stable earnings for households to climb and stay out of poverty. • Growth in the agriculture sector, which employs more than half of India’s workers, has been an anemic 2%. • Growth has left behind key sections of the population -- females, the 90 million tribal population, some SC groups religious minorities, -- lagging behind in job opportunities, earnings, and human development.
Financial Times, August 14, 2007 Underlying all this is Public services fail the poor and are weakest in the poorer states
Public Services Weak in the poorer regions: e.g. Immunization Coverage
Exclusion • Female labor force participation rates have remained stubbornly low despite rising education levels among women due to absence of opportunities. • Significant wage discrimination – Among casual laborers, women get about half the wages of men. Less than one third of this gap can be explained by conventional factors such as skills, location, industry, etc. • Access to Finance - Rural Finance Access survey, 87 percent of the poorest households surveyed (marginal farmers) do not have access to credit, the rich pay a relatively low rate (33 percent), the poor pay rates of 104 percent and get only 8 percent of the credit.
A special Issue is the Tribal Population concentrated in some of poorest but mineral and forest rich areas – but cannot take advantage of those assets
Although SC groups have made progress, large sections of SC and ST groups are agricultural workers, the poorest earners
What is the Bank doing? • The CAS lays a strategic emphasis on the poorer regions • Projects – Rural Livelihoods projects, Rural Roads, VET program, Rural Credit Cooperatives, Decentralization, support for state level reforms for development efforts • Major focus on inclusion in economic work: DPR, Social Protection, On-going Work Poverty Analysis, Employment Study, Lagging Regions, North Eastern area