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Rising poverty - Pandemic-Induced Disparities

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March 22, 2021

Why in news?

  • A new study by the Pew Research Center estimates that the COVID-19 pandemic has had a disproportionately deleterious impact on living standards in India and China in 2020.
  • The report uses World Bank projections of economic growth to estimate the impact of COVID-19 on Indian incomes.

What are the highlights of the report?

  • The lockdown triggered by the pandemic resulted in shut businesses, lost jobs and falling incomes.
  • This plunged the Indian economy into a deep recession.
  • However, China managed to avoid a contraction, although growth slowed.
  • Resultantly, Chinese incomes remained relatively unshaken.
  • Middle class - The report defines the middle class as people with incomes of approximately Rs. 700-1,500 or $10-20 per day.
  • The middle class in India is estimated to have shrunk by 3.2 crore in 2020 as a consequence of the downturn.
  • This is if compared with the number it may have reached without the pandemic.
  • In other words, India’s middle class may have shrunk by a third due to 2020’s pandemic-driven recession.
  • In comparison, there was just a 2% drop in the middle class population in China.
  • Poor - The number of poor people earning less than Rs. 150 per day has more than doubled, from almost 6 crore to 13.4 crore in India.
  • This accounts for nearly 60% of the global increase in poverty.
  • The report also noted the record spike in MGNREGA participants as proof that the poor were struggling to find work.
  • Low income group - The vast majority of India’s population fall into the low income tier, earning about Rs.150 to 700 per day.
  • This group shrank from 119.7 crore to 116.2 crore per day, with about 3.5 crore dropping below the poverty line.
  • Besides, the richer population who earn more than Rs. 1,500 a day also fell almost 30% to 1.8 crore people.

What is the overall impact?

  • In all, in India’s case, the sharp economic contraction has pushed as many as 7.5 crore people into the ranks of the poor.
  • In contrast, the figure is about 10 lakh in China, whose economy slowed but continued to post growth.
  • China’s middle class is likely to see a miniscule dip of just one crore.
  • In absolute terms, the number of poor in India is posited to have swelled to 13.4 crore.
  • This would reverse the gains made in the preceding 9 years when India cut the number of poor by more than three-fourths to an estimated 7.8 crore in 2019.

Why is it a serious concern?

  • Pew warned that the situation may actually be worse than estimated.
  • The methodology in this analysis assumes that incomes change at the same rate for all people.
  • If the COVID-19 recession has worsened inequality, the increase in the number of poor is likely greater than estimated in this analysis.
  • Also, the decrease in the number belonging to the high income group is likely less than estimated.
  • The middle class may have shrunk by more than projected.

What is the significance?

  • The Pew assessment acknowledges the multiple assumptions that inform the study.
  • These include varying base years for income/consumption figures, with India’s from 2011 and China’s from 2016.
  • Nevertheless, the study serves as a stark reminder of the economic disparities, both within India and at a comparative level with its northern neighbour.
  • The report once again spotlights the widening inequality in India, exacerbated by the pandemic.
  • Notably, the lower income populations have disproportionately borne the brunt of job and income losses in the wake of the lockdowns.
  • The fiscal policy response to redress this precarious situation has also been underwhelming.
  • This is especially true when viewed from the perspective of the pre-pandemic tax cuts for corporates done in an attempt to revive private investment.

How does the future look?

  • The number of COVID-19 cases is once again rising across the country.
  • Given this, there is a clear and present danger that any nascent economic recovery could be hindered even before it gains traction.
  • More worryingly, the number of those sliding into poverty could jump dramatically.
  • The government’s policy responses would well have to deal with the ‘lives versus livelihoods’ dilemma.

 

Source: The Hindu

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