Poverty declined to 29.8 per cent
Rajya Sabha today witnessed noisy scenes during the question hour with
the opposition members protesting against media reports on fall in
the poverty levels. As soon as the House met for the day, opposition
members were on their feet to raise the matter for a debate. Amidst
protests, Mr S S Ahluwalia of the BJP said that attempts are being made
to end the poverty line and begin starvation line in the country.
Responding to this, the Minister of State for Parliamentary Affairs, Mr
Rajiv Shukla said the members can raise the issue during the discussion
on Union Budget beginning tomorrow. He said if the members still
want a response, he would request the Planning Minister to respond.
Later, the House took up the questions listed for the day.
Going by the
controversial daily consumption number of Rs 28.65 per day, one out of
every three Indian is poor as per the new Planning Commission's
estimates which have pegged the poverty ratio in 2009-10 at 29.8 pc,
down from 37.2 pc in 2004-05
An
individual above a monthly consumption of Rs 859.6 in urban cities and
Rs 672.8 in rural areas (at pier 2009-10 prices) is not considered poor,
says the Planning Commission's estimate based on the controversial
Tendulkar Committee methodology.
The
Plan panel has kept the poverty threshold in its recent estimates lower
than Rs 32 per capita per day consumption in urban cities and Rs 26 in
rural areas is provided last year which were based on June 2011 prices.
The
Plan panel had said that, in its affidavit before the apex court that
the "poverty line at June 2011 price level can be placed provisionally
at Rs 965 (Rs 32 per day) per capita per month in urban areas and Rs 781
(Rs 26 per day) in rural areas.
The
civil society had questioned this definition stating it was very low.As
per estimates released today, the number of poor in India has declined
to 34.47 crore in 2009-10 from 40.72 crore in 2004-05.The methodology
recommended by the Tendulkar Committee includes spending on health and
education, besides the calorie intake.Among
religious groups, Sikhs have lowest poverty ratio in rural areas at
11.9 per cent, whereas in urban areas, Christians have the lowest
proportion of poor at 12.9 per cent.Poverty ratio is the highest for
Muslims, at 33.9 per cent, in urban areas.
Further, poverty in rural areas declined at a faster pace than in urban cities between 2004-05 and 2009-10.
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