Poverty Elimination
Instead of periodic but endless efforts to
define poverty, we should for the next 10-15 years adopt the globally accepted
definitions of comparative poverty defined by the World Banks in terms of
purchasing power parity, of $1.25 and $2 per person per day. The
question of inter-state allocation for Centrally Sponsored schemes that remain
should be addressed by use of Per Capita State GDP (as is done by Finance
Commission).
Financial re-allocation
1. Calculations done by us using NSS 1999 data and
by Surjit Bhalla using NSS 2004 and 2009 data showed that Indian poverty can be
eliminated if the money spent on Poverty Alleviation was re-directed to cash
transfers.[i]
NITI Ayog should redo these
calculations using the 2011 NSS data and corresponding expenditures for 2011.
Based on studies done earlier, on asset based indicators for identifying the poor it should settle/agree on a system for identifying them.
Based on studies done earlier, on asset based indicators for identifying the poor it should settle/agree on a system for identifying them.
To avoid controversies related to poverty line, calculate transfers
needed to bring all below Rs x per capita to x using 2011. Add reasonable administrative
cost (e.g. 10%) for identifying-locating them and delivering cash directly to
them => Calculate Rs. Y per capita achievable.
We must be clear that many of these will be land-less labor and marginal
farmers in rural areas who get a substantial part of their income from
agriculture, so that the issue of agricultural-rural poverty is addressed head-on
instead of futilely through agriculture programs.
Cash Delivery System
2. Find the most effective & efficient delivery method (with UID/Aadhar)
for delivering cash: Bank account, RuPay Debit/Credit card or Mobile (payment
& use system), or combination of three depending on geographical location
& characteristics (urban, rural, hilly, remote). Restrict ration shops to
areas where there is none or few private outlets for cereals (i.e, a local
retail monopoly).
Quality of Life: Public Goods
3. Identify a set of Social “Public Goods” or
“Quasi public” goods & services (P&QP G&S) that are critical for the bottom 40% of the
population. Experience & analysis suggests that Sewage and sanitation
systems complete chain), clean drinking water, village road side drainage,
communicable & vector borne disease, Basic education (3Rs) and basic job
skills (low to middle), public health education (germs, nutrition) are the most
important ones for the lower half of the population. NITI Ayog should make detailed
policy plans and training program (training the trainers) for achieving these goals
and propagate to States, Nagarpalikas, Panchayats and public. Identify and
disseminate (media, web sites et all) successful models for achieving each
Public good.
Two key CG programs can be very
helpful if redirected/developed in this direction:
Swach Bharat
Should incorporate development of Sewerage,
Drainage & Sanitation systems &
protocols for all villages and census towns of India. It should also include
public health education relating spread of disease through germs and basic nutrition
information.
Skill India
The
skill India mission can play an important role in standardization and
certification of low to middle skills that are critical for the masses of rural
youth and to training of trainers by the government. It is important to give sufficient attention
to skills that are relevant to the rural economy and to agriculture, including
those skills related to the introduction of modern technology relevant to them.
Education & Health
4. The poor and less advantaged suffer
the most from inferior quality of public & private education in rural areas.
In India there is the additional problem of high absenteeism among (State)
Government teachers, nurses and doctors posted in rural areas. New ICT technologies provide a way to leap
frog the historical evolution of educational improvement in the World’s rural
areas, and bypass the problem of poor governance (absenteeism & inability
to regulate quality): Make e-education/e-learning and e-health/e-medicine a key
part of the Central Governments education and health effort, leaving “Brick and
Mortar” approaches to States (who have the administrative set up to supply
social services and whose responsibility it is to do so).
Digital India, E-governance
These two CG missions can play a critical role in opening up rural areas
to the modern world and in providing access to information and knowledge that
was traditionally available only in urban agglomerations
Agriculture
As a an
overwhelming majority of poor live in rural areas or are recent migrants to
urban areas from rural, agriculture and rural development is a significant element
of poverty elimination, particularly in the Eastern States (or parts of States)
with sufficient surface water for crops (eg. W Bengal, Jharkhand, Orissa,
Chattisgarh, Bihar, C & E UP), but which need better systems of irrigation
and drainage.[ii]
Reform Goals
Governance systems relating
to Agriculture, Irrigation (which are primarily at State level given it is a
State subject) have deteriorated badly, with associated increase in leakages
and corruption. The capacity of State governments to undertake prijects and
programs is limited. Reforms must focus on removing the jungle of controls on
farmers and on agriculture.
G1: This requires de-control
all aspects of agriculture, rural infrastructure and services to allow
competition.
G2: More imaginative use of Public-Private co-operation (PPC)
to increase agricultural productivity & reduce income volatility, create
supply chains, develop new markets and provide weather insurance. The Private
sector’s desire to sell to rural markets and their interest in increasing size
of that market, should be channeled into PPC.
G3: The government should focus more on planning & providing
classic “public” goods and “quasi public goods(infrastructure externalities). A
modernized version of “Agro-climatic zones” needs revival as basis for
Government development planning. A modernized version would take account of
issues like Ground water depletion (zones-red, orange, yellow, green) and effect
of Climate change on volatility of weather (low, moderate, high).
Policy
1. Exim-Policy:
Follow the successful model of moving from QRs to Tariffs and export duties,
and then gradually lowering them. For a few agricultural commodities an variable/adjustable
and transparent system of Tariffs and/or duties could be adopted, based on medium
term trends in international and domestic prices.
2. Essential Commodities Act (ECA): Narrow in terms of crops (none on
perishables) & restrict usage to very precisely defined conditions (e.g. in
terms of acceleration in prices).
3. Agricultural Produce Marketing Act (APMA): De-license setting up of competitive
markets (including E-markets). Help land
acquisition for this purpose. De-control direct purchase of produce from
farmers by publicly listed Agro-processing Companies (w/o going through agro
market).
4. Land Policy:
Remove all controls on private sale, purchase, leasing, mortgaging, renting in
or out of land (except reserved forests & carefully defined tribal areas). Reduce
stamp duties for registering tenanancy and mortgages. Identify & notify
areas where large scale corporate farming will be freely allowed-decontrolled
(e.g. Degraded, Fallow, water logged areas)
5. Unsustainable levels of Central
Minimum Support prices (MSP) and
State advised Prices (SAP) that are
even higher than MSP, have resulted in Indian inflation rates exceeding those
across the World, instead of enhancing productivity or income security. Dis
continue SAP & MSP and de-control cane prices and sugar industry so that
farmers get competitive prices. Help provide self-insurance by diversification
into livestock, fisheries and farm forestry. Partner with private insurers providing
weather insurance.
6. Allow 100% FDI in Food retail,
agricultural/weather insurance & rural banking and rural health insurance.
7. Subsidy: Replace incentive for soil
destroying/polluting subsidies for fertilizer use by a combination of fertilizer
& seed purchase linked cash (a la LPG), Insurance (income support) &
subsidy for adoption of new technology/technology up-gradation to enhance land,
water, energy productivity. Over time the first element could be replaced
completely by the other two. De-control import and production of fertilizer and
all inputs into fertilizer production.
8. Water Policy: Water use efficiency in
China is two times that in India. Ground water is being rapidly depleted in
many areas (Punjab, Haryana, Maharashtra). In these areas we need a depletion
tax to be imposed (beyond a free allowance for every resident). This would be
offset by a subsidy for adoption of technology for efficient water use (eg drip
irrigation).
9. Productivity: Professional
independent regulator for introduction of new crop varieties including GM
crops. Expedite GM crop trials. Strengthen Central agricultural research
institutions and encourage agro-industrial corporations to do co-operative
research ad dissemination.
10. Completely de-control private, de-centralized,
unconventional power supply networks for difficult/remote/hilly/tribal areas
and regulated decontrol for other rural areas. Provide the same Govt. support
for such systems as is done for conventional generation, transmission &
distribution systems.
Expenditures, Programs, Projects
Some of the programs that Central government can and should
focus on are,
1. Information: Telecom/Broadband (open access to wires; publicly funded fibre network), E-governance centers as hubs for Agro-climatic information (Rainfed, Ground water depleting, soil conditions/analysis), best Practices and Market information.
2. Knowledge/Technology: Agro technology
(GM seeds, R&D, TOT/Extension) Farm management (water, soil, sowing,..).
3. Weather/Crop Damage Insurance, Human
& health insurance. Technical development & Govt. co-insurance in high
premium conditions.
4. Technical/Professional Services:
Train the trainers/suppliers of all Agricultural, Animal husbandry, fishery
& other services (including farm management consultants).
5. Road network as Development Drivers.
State highways as (better) planned hubs of integrated rural, semi-urban
development.
6. Railway stations: Develop as Agro-processing/Information/commercial
hubs in rural, semi-urban areas
[i] Arvind Virmani, “Poverty And Hunger In India: What
is needed To Eliminate Them,” Working Paper No. 1/2006-PC, Planning Commission,
February 2006. http://planningcommission.nic.in/reports/wrkpapers/rpwpf.htm.
[ii] Arvind Virmani, “The
Sudoku of Growth, Poverty and Malnutrition: Lessons For Lagging States,”
Working Paper No. 2/2007-PC, Planning Commission, July 2007. http://planningcommission.nic.in/reports/wrkpapers/rpwpf.htm
.
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