India's poverty levels have declined by more than seven percentage
points in five years, according to government data released on Monday,
but the country's north-east has become more impoverished.
The
figures from the influential Planning Commission used new household
consumer expenditure methods to calculate that poverty levels fell from
37.2 percent in 2004-05 to 29.8 percent in 2009-10. scavenge
The
decline was sharpest in rural areas, where the poverty ratio fell from
about 42 percent in 2004-05 to just under 34 percent in 2009-10.
Although
several states saw their poverty ratios plummet by more than ten
percentage points, a number of states in India's remote northeast
experienced a rise in poverty levels.
"In Assam, Meghalaya, Manipur, Mizoram and Nagaland, poverty in 2009-10 has increased," the commission said in a statement.
India's
poverty estimates are used to determine public access to welfare
benefits. Anyone living below the so-called poverty line is entitled to
subsidised food and cooking fuel distributed through state-owned stores.
The
Planning Commission ran into trouble last year when it suggested that
any villager earning around 50 cents a day could not be classified as
poor.
It later backed away from the definition after activists
accused the government of trying to water down poverty estimates and
reduce the official number of poor in the country of 1.2 billion people.
The
criteria for measuring poverty levels vary from state to state in India
but are now generally based on household spending on food, education
and other areas.
Courtesy: AFP






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