SD TENDULKAR, the former chairman of Prime Minister’s economic advisory council has prepared a report, according to which India has 38 per cent population below poverty line (BPL). At present, Planning commission of India’s 2006 figure is only 28.5 per cent of the population is under BPL.
If Tendulkar’s report is accepted officially by the government and the Planning commission, there shall be an addition of about 11 crore population in the exiting number of people living BPL. In India, since 1972, poverty is being calculated in terms of calories. 2100 calories for Urban and 2400 calories for rural areas are the yardsticks to measure poverty in India.
Tendulkar has used different methodology for this survey and took education, health, sanitation, nutrition and household income etc into account while calculating poverty, the definition of which has always been a point of difference amongst economists and experts. Many experts, economists and rights activists believe, and they give some convincing arguments also to support their views that poverty measurement formula in India is not satisfactory, there are actually more people below BPL, they argue.
Efforts have been made earlier also by the government in order to find a broader consensus on the definition of poverty. One NC Saxena committee was formed by government in June this year, which suggested that 50 per cent people are under BPL. In 2007, Arjun Sengupta, associated with National commission for enterprises in unorganised sector, said that 77 per cent of Indians are in BPL.
Only a couple of years ago, NSSO, the national sampling government organisation, has thrown a figure in the public domain that about 70 per cent of populations in India don’t even spend 20Rs/- a day on them. Whereas in this country itself, there are people who gifts 700 crores plane to his wife on birthday. The number of HNI in India is increasing with galloping speed and it has crossed one lakh figure till date. What a contrast and irony in deed!
Nitish Kr, CM of Bihar, only a couple of years ago, organised one ‘Global Seminar’ at Patna for evolving a unanimous definition on poverty. It was attended by a plethora of luminaries from across different fields ranging from economy to science and from NGO to government functionaries. The seminar deliberated upon ‘poverty’ and consensus was arrived at that the definition of poverty should be made ‘broad based’. Kumar had called on the Union government to reconsider the determinants to define the poverty. The report of Tendulkar has vindicated the stand of Nitish kumar.
Fall out on proposed National Food Security Act- The Union government is to come out with a historic bill on food security in the next session of Parliament. The proposed legislation is historic in the sense that it would guarantee availability of at least 25 Kg of grains to one BPL families per month @ 3 Rs/-. The proposed legislation would incur an additional 9500 crore rupees on the subsidy of the grains. At present, government is incurring 37,010 crore rupees on the subsidy of the food meant for BPL families.