Deprecated (16384): The ArrayAccess methods will be removed in 4.0.0.Use getParam(), getData() and getQuery() instead. - /home/brlfuser/public_html/src/Controller/ArtileDetailController.php, line: 73 You can disable deprecation warnings by setting `Error.errorLevel` to `E_ALL & ~E_USER_DEPRECATED` in your config/app.php. [CORE/src/Core/functions.php, line 311]Code Context
trigger_error($message, E_USER_DEPRECATED);
}
$message = 'The ArrayAccess methods will be removed in 4.0.0.Use getParam(), getData() and getQuery() instead. - /home/brlfuser/public_html/src/Controller/ArtileDetailController.php, line: 73 You can disable deprecation warnings by setting `Error.errorLevel` to `E_ALL & ~E_USER_DEPRECATED` in your config/app.php.' $stackFrame = (int) 1 $trace = [ (int) 0 => [ 'file' => '/home/brlfuser/public_html/vendor/cakephp/cakephp/src/Http/ServerRequest.php', 'line' => (int) 2421, 'function' => 'deprecationWarning', 'args' => [ (int) 0 => 'The ArrayAccess methods will be removed in 4.0.0.Use getParam(), getData() and getQuery() instead.' ] ], (int) 1 => [ 'file' => '/home/brlfuser/public_html/src/Controller/ArtileDetailController.php', 'line' => (int) 73, 'function' => 'offsetGet', 'class' => 'Cake\Http\ServerRequest', 'object' => object(Cake\Http\ServerRequest) {}, 'type' => '->', 'args' => [ (int) 0 => 'catslug' ] ], (int) 2 => [ 'file' => '/home/brlfuser/public_html/vendor/cakephp/cakephp/src/Controller/Controller.php', 'line' => (int) 610, 'function' => 'printArticle', 'class' => 'App\Controller\ArtileDetailController', 'object' => object(App\Controller\ArtileDetailController) {}, 'type' => '->', 'args' => [] ], (int) 3 => [ 'file' => '/home/brlfuser/public_html/vendor/cakephp/cakephp/src/Http/ActionDispatcher.php', 'line' => (int) 120, 'function' => 'invokeAction', 'class' => 'Cake\Controller\Controller', 'object' => object(App\Controller\ArtileDetailController) {}, 'type' => '->', 'args' => [] ], (int) 4 => [ 'file' => '/home/brlfuser/public_html/vendor/cakephp/cakephp/src/Http/ActionDispatcher.php', 'line' => (int) 94, 'function' => '_invoke', 'class' => 'Cake\Http\ActionDispatcher', 'object' => object(Cake\Http\ActionDispatcher) {}, 'type' => '->', 'args' => [ (int) 0 => object(App\Controller\ArtileDetailController) {} ] ], (int) 5 => [ 'file' => '/home/brlfuser/public_html/vendor/cakephp/cakephp/src/Http/BaseApplication.php', 'line' => (int) 235, 'function' => 'dispatch', 'class' => 'Cake\Http\ActionDispatcher', 'object' => object(Cake\Http\ActionDispatcher) {}, 'type' => '->', 'args' => [ (int) 0 => object(Cake\Http\ServerRequest) {}, (int) 1 => object(Cake\Http\Response) {} ] ], (int) 6 => [ 'file' => '/home/brlfuser/public_html/vendor/cakephp/cakephp/src/Http/Runner.php', 'line' => (int) 65, 'function' => '__invoke', 'class' => 'Cake\Http\BaseApplication', 'object' => object(App\Application) {}, 'type' => '->', 'args' => [ (int) 0 => object(Cake\Http\ServerRequest) {}, (int) 1 => object(Cake\Http\Response) {}, (int) 2 => object(Cake\Http\Runner) {} ] ], (int) 7 => [ 'file' => '/home/brlfuser/public_html/vendor/cakephp/cakephp/src/Routing/Middleware/RoutingMiddleware.php', 'line' => (int) 162, 'function' => '__invoke', 'class' => 'Cake\Http\Runner', 'object' => object(Cake\Http\Runner) {}, 'type' => '->', 'args' => [ (int) 0 => object(Cake\Http\ServerRequest) {}, (int) 1 => object(Cake\Http\Response) {} ] ], (int) 8 => [ 'file' => '/home/brlfuser/public_html/vendor/cakephp/cakephp/src/Http/Runner.php', 'line' => (int) 65, 'function' => '__invoke', 'class' => 'Cake\Routing\Middleware\RoutingMiddleware', 'object' => object(Cake\Routing\Middleware\RoutingMiddleware) {}, 'type' => '->', 'args' => [ (int) 0 => object(Cake\Http\ServerRequest) {}, (int) 1 => object(Cake\Http\Response) {}, (int) 2 => object(Cake\Http\Runner) {} ] ], (int) 9 => [ 'file' => '/home/brlfuser/public_html/vendor/cakephp/cakephp/src/Routing/Middleware/AssetMiddleware.php', 'line' => (int) 88, 'function' => '__invoke', 'class' => 'Cake\Http\Runner', 'object' => object(Cake\Http\Runner) {}, 'type' => '->', 'args' => [ (int) 0 => object(Cake\Http\ServerRequest) {}, (int) 1 => object(Cake\Http\Response) {} ] ], (int) 10 => [ 'file' => '/home/brlfuser/public_html/vendor/cakephp/cakephp/src/Http/Runner.php', 'line' => (int) 65, 'function' => '__invoke', 'class' => 'Cake\Routing\Middleware\AssetMiddleware', 'object' => object(Cake\Routing\Middleware\AssetMiddleware) {}, 'type' => '->', 'args' => [ (int) 0 => object(Cake\Http\ServerRequest) {}, (int) 1 => object(Cake\Http\Response) {}, (int) 2 => object(Cake\Http\Runner) {} ] ], (int) 11 => [ 'file' => '/home/brlfuser/public_html/vendor/cakephp/cakephp/src/Error/Middleware/ErrorHandlerMiddleware.php', 'line' => (int) 96, 'function' => '__invoke', 'class' => 'Cake\Http\Runner', 'object' => object(Cake\Http\Runner) {}, 'type' => '->', 'args' => [ (int) 0 => object(Cake\Http\ServerRequest) {}, (int) 1 => object(Cake\Http\Response) {} ] ], (int) 12 => [ 'file' => '/home/brlfuser/public_html/vendor/cakephp/cakephp/src/Http/Runner.php', 'line' => (int) 65, 'function' => '__invoke', 'class' => 'Cake\Error\Middleware\ErrorHandlerMiddleware', 'object' => object(Cake\Error\Middleware\ErrorHandlerMiddleware) {}, 'type' => '->', 'args' => [ (int) 0 => object(Cake\Http\ServerRequest) {}, (int) 1 => object(Cake\Http\Response) {}, (int) 2 => object(Cake\Http\Runner) {} ] ], (int) 13 => [ 'file' => '/home/brlfuser/public_html/vendor/cakephp/cakephp/src/Http/Runner.php', 'line' => (int) 51, 'function' => '__invoke', 'class' => 'Cake\Http\Runner', 'object' => object(Cake\Http\Runner) {}, 'type' => '->', 'args' => [ (int) 0 => object(Cake\Http\ServerRequest) {}, (int) 1 => object(Cake\Http\Response) {} ] ], (int) 14 => [ 'file' => '/home/brlfuser/public_html/vendor/cakephp/cakephp/src/Http/Server.php', 'line' => (int) 98, 'function' => 'run', 'class' => 'Cake\Http\Runner', 'object' => object(Cake\Http\Runner) {}, 'type' => '->', 'args' => [ (int) 0 => object(Cake\Http\MiddlewareQueue) {}, (int) 1 => object(Cake\Http\ServerRequest) {}, (int) 2 => object(Cake\Http\Response) {} ] ], (int) 15 => [ 'file' => '/home/brlfuser/public_html/webroot/index.php', 'line' => (int) 39, 'function' => 'run', 'class' => 'Cake\Http\Server', 'object' => object(Cake\Http\Server) {}, 'type' => '->', 'args' => [] ] ] $frame = [ 'file' => '/home/brlfuser/public_html/src/Controller/ArtileDetailController.php', 'line' => (int) 73, 'function' => 'offsetGet', 'class' => 'Cake\Http\ServerRequest', 'object' => object(Cake\Http\ServerRequest) { trustProxy => false [protected] params => [ [maximum depth reached] ] [protected] data => [[maximum depth reached]] [protected] query => [[maximum depth reached]] [protected] cookies => [ [maximum depth reached] ] [protected] _environment => [ [maximum depth reached] ] [protected] url => 'latest-news-updates/poverty-haunts-indias-economic-miracle-2605/print' [protected] base => '' [protected] webroot => '/' [protected] here => '/latest-news-updates/poverty-haunts-indias-economic-miracle-2605/print' [protected] trustedProxies => [[maximum depth reached]] [protected] _input => null [protected] _detectors => [ [maximum depth reached] ] [protected] _detectorCache => [ [maximum depth reached] ] [protected] stream => object(Zend\Diactoros\PhpInputStream) {} [protected] uri => object(Zend\Diactoros\Uri) {} [protected] session => object(Cake\Http\Session) {} [protected] attributes => [[maximum depth reached]] [protected] emulatedAttributes => [ [maximum depth reached] ] [protected] uploadedFiles => [[maximum depth reached]] [protected] protocol => null [protected] requestTarget => null [private] deprecatedProperties => [ [maximum depth reached] ] }, 'type' => '->', 'args' => [ (int) 0 => 'catslug' ] ]deprecationWarning - CORE/src/Core/functions.php, line 311 Cake\Http\ServerRequest::offsetGet() - CORE/src/Http/ServerRequest.php, line 2421 App\Controller\ArtileDetailController::printArticle() - APP/Controller/ArtileDetailController.php, line 73 Cake\Controller\Controller::invokeAction() - CORE/src/Controller/Controller.php, line 610 Cake\Http\ActionDispatcher::_invoke() - CORE/src/Http/ActionDispatcher.php, line 120 Cake\Http\ActionDispatcher::dispatch() - CORE/src/Http/ActionDispatcher.php, line 94 Cake\Http\BaseApplication::__invoke() - CORE/src/Http/BaseApplication.php, line 235 Cake\Http\Runner::__invoke() - CORE/src/Http/Runner.php, line 65 Cake\Routing\Middleware\RoutingMiddleware::__invoke() - CORE/src/Routing/Middleware/RoutingMiddleware.php, line 162 Cake\Http\Runner::__invoke() - CORE/src/Http/Runner.php, line 65 Cake\Routing\Middleware\AssetMiddleware::__invoke() - CORE/src/Routing/Middleware/AssetMiddleware.php, line 88 Cake\Http\Runner::__invoke() - CORE/src/Http/Runner.php, line 65 Cake\Error\Middleware\ErrorHandlerMiddleware::__invoke() - CORE/src/Error/Middleware/ErrorHandlerMiddleware.php, line 96 Cake\Http\Runner::__invoke() - CORE/src/Http/Runner.php, line 65 Cake\Http\Runner::run() - CORE/src/Http/Runner.php, line 51 Cake\Http\Server::run() - CORE/src/Http/Server.php, line 98
Deprecated (16384): The ArrayAccess methods will be removed in 4.0.0.Use getParam(), getData() and getQuery() instead. - /home/brlfuser/public_html/src/Controller/ArtileDetailController.php, line: 74 You can disable deprecation warnings by setting `Error.errorLevel` to `E_ALL & ~E_USER_DEPRECATED` in your config/app.php. [CORE/src/Core/functions.php, line 311]Code Context
trigger_error($message, E_USER_DEPRECATED);
}
$message = 'The ArrayAccess methods will be removed in 4.0.0.Use getParam(), getData() and getQuery() instead. - /home/brlfuser/public_html/src/Controller/ArtileDetailController.php, line: 74 You can disable deprecation warnings by setting `Error.errorLevel` to `E_ALL & ~E_USER_DEPRECATED` in your config/app.php.' $stackFrame = (int) 1 $trace = [ (int) 0 => [ 'file' => '/home/brlfuser/public_html/vendor/cakephp/cakephp/src/Http/ServerRequest.php', 'line' => (int) 2421, 'function' => 'deprecationWarning', 'args' => [ (int) 0 => 'The ArrayAccess methods will be removed in 4.0.0.Use getParam(), getData() and getQuery() instead.' ] ], (int) 1 => [ 'file' => '/home/brlfuser/public_html/src/Controller/ArtileDetailController.php', 'line' => (int) 74, 'function' => 'offsetGet', 'class' => 'Cake\Http\ServerRequest', 'object' => object(Cake\Http\ServerRequest) {}, 'type' => '->', 'args' => [ (int) 0 => 'artileslug' ] ], (int) 2 => [ 'file' => '/home/brlfuser/public_html/vendor/cakephp/cakephp/src/Controller/Controller.php', 'line' => (int) 610, 'function' => 'printArticle', 'class' => 'App\Controller\ArtileDetailController', 'object' => object(App\Controller\ArtileDetailController) {}, 'type' => '->', 'args' => [] ], (int) 3 => [ 'file' => '/home/brlfuser/public_html/vendor/cakephp/cakephp/src/Http/ActionDispatcher.php', 'line' => (int) 120, 'function' => 'invokeAction', 'class' => 'Cake\Controller\Controller', 'object' => object(App\Controller\ArtileDetailController) {}, 'type' => '->', 'args' => [] ], (int) 4 => [ 'file' => '/home/brlfuser/public_html/vendor/cakephp/cakephp/src/Http/ActionDispatcher.php', 'line' => (int) 94, 'function' => '_invoke', 'class' => 'Cake\Http\ActionDispatcher', 'object' => object(Cake\Http\ActionDispatcher) {}, 'type' => '->', 'args' => [ (int) 0 => object(App\Controller\ArtileDetailController) {} ] ], (int) 5 => [ 'file' => '/home/brlfuser/public_html/vendor/cakephp/cakephp/src/Http/BaseApplication.php', 'line' => (int) 235, 'function' => 'dispatch', 'class' => 'Cake\Http\ActionDispatcher', 'object' => object(Cake\Http\ActionDispatcher) {}, 'type' => '->', 'args' => [ (int) 0 => object(Cake\Http\ServerRequest) {}, (int) 1 => object(Cake\Http\Response) {} ] ], (int) 6 => [ 'file' => '/home/brlfuser/public_html/vendor/cakephp/cakephp/src/Http/Runner.php', 'line' => (int) 65, 'function' => '__invoke', 'class' => 'Cake\Http\BaseApplication', 'object' => object(App\Application) {}, 'type' => '->', 'args' => [ (int) 0 => object(Cake\Http\ServerRequest) {}, (int) 1 => object(Cake\Http\Response) {}, (int) 2 => object(Cake\Http\Runner) {} ] ], (int) 7 => [ 'file' => '/home/brlfuser/public_html/vendor/cakephp/cakephp/src/Routing/Middleware/RoutingMiddleware.php', 'line' => (int) 162, 'function' => '__invoke', 'class' => 'Cake\Http\Runner', 'object' => object(Cake\Http\Runner) {}, 'type' => '->', 'args' => [ (int) 0 => object(Cake\Http\ServerRequest) {}, (int) 1 => object(Cake\Http\Response) {} ] ], (int) 8 => [ 'file' => '/home/brlfuser/public_html/vendor/cakephp/cakephp/src/Http/Runner.php', 'line' => (int) 65, 'function' => '__invoke', 'class' => 'Cake\Routing\Middleware\RoutingMiddleware', 'object' => object(Cake\Routing\Middleware\RoutingMiddleware) {}, 'type' => '->', 'args' => [ (int) 0 => object(Cake\Http\ServerRequest) {}, (int) 1 => object(Cake\Http\Response) {}, (int) 2 => object(Cake\Http\Runner) {} ] ], (int) 9 => [ 'file' => '/home/brlfuser/public_html/vendor/cakephp/cakephp/src/Routing/Middleware/AssetMiddleware.php', 'line' => (int) 88, 'function' => '__invoke', 'class' => 'Cake\Http\Runner', 'object' => object(Cake\Http\Runner) {}, 'type' => '->', 'args' => [ (int) 0 => object(Cake\Http\ServerRequest) {}, (int) 1 => object(Cake\Http\Response) {} ] ], (int) 10 => [ 'file' => '/home/brlfuser/public_html/vendor/cakephp/cakephp/src/Http/Runner.php', 'line' => (int) 65, 'function' => '__invoke', 'class' => 'Cake\Routing\Middleware\AssetMiddleware', 'object' => object(Cake\Routing\Middleware\AssetMiddleware) {}, 'type' => '->', 'args' => [ (int) 0 => object(Cake\Http\ServerRequest) {}, (int) 1 => object(Cake\Http\Response) {}, (int) 2 => object(Cake\Http\Runner) {} ] ], (int) 11 => [ 'file' => '/home/brlfuser/public_html/vendor/cakephp/cakephp/src/Error/Middleware/ErrorHandlerMiddleware.php', 'line' => (int) 96, 'function' => '__invoke', 'class' => 'Cake\Http\Runner', 'object' => object(Cake\Http\Runner) {}, 'type' => '->', 'args' => [ (int) 0 => object(Cake\Http\ServerRequest) {}, (int) 1 => object(Cake\Http\Response) {} ] ], (int) 12 => [ 'file' => '/home/brlfuser/public_html/vendor/cakephp/cakephp/src/Http/Runner.php', 'line' => (int) 65, 'function' => '__invoke', 'class' => 'Cake\Error\Middleware\ErrorHandlerMiddleware', 'object' => object(Cake\Error\Middleware\ErrorHandlerMiddleware) {}, 'type' => '->', 'args' => [ (int) 0 => object(Cake\Http\ServerRequest) {}, (int) 1 => object(Cake\Http\Response) {}, (int) 2 => object(Cake\Http\Runner) {} ] ], (int) 13 => [ 'file' => '/home/brlfuser/public_html/vendor/cakephp/cakephp/src/Http/Runner.php', 'line' => (int) 51, 'function' => '__invoke', 'class' => 'Cake\Http\Runner', 'object' => object(Cake\Http\Runner) {}, 'type' => '->', 'args' => [ (int) 0 => object(Cake\Http\ServerRequest) {}, (int) 1 => object(Cake\Http\Response) {} ] ], (int) 14 => [ 'file' => '/home/brlfuser/public_html/vendor/cakephp/cakephp/src/Http/Server.php', 'line' => (int) 98, 'function' => 'run', 'class' => 'Cake\Http\Runner', 'object' => object(Cake\Http\Runner) {}, 'type' => '->', 'args' => [ (int) 0 => object(Cake\Http\MiddlewareQueue) {}, (int) 1 => object(Cake\Http\ServerRequest) {}, (int) 2 => object(Cake\Http\Response) {} ] ], (int) 15 => [ 'file' => '/home/brlfuser/public_html/webroot/index.php', 'line' => (int) 39, 'function' => 'run', 'class' => 'Cake\Http\Server', 'object' => object(Cake\Http\Server) {}, 'type' => '->', 'args' => [] ] ] $frame = [ 'file' => '/home/brlfuser/public_html/src/Controller/ArtileDetailController.php', 'line' => (int) 74, 'function' => 'offsetGet', 'class' => 'Cake\Http\ServerRequest', 'object' => object(Cake\Http\ServerRequest) { trustProxy => false [protected] params => [ [maximum depth reached] ] [protected] data => [[maximum depth reached]] [protected] query => [[maximum depth reached]] [protected] cookies => [ [maximum depth reached] ] [protected] _environment => [ [maximum depth reached] ] [protected] url => 'latest-news-updates/poverty-haunts-indias-economic-miracle-2605/print' [protected] base => '' [protected] webroot => '/' [protected] here => '/latest-news-updates/poverty-haunts-indias-economic-miracle-2605/print' [protected] trustedProxies => [[maximum depth reached]] [protected] _input => null [protected] _detectors => [ [maximum depth reached] ] [protected] _detectorCache => [ [maximum depth reached] ] [protected] stream => object(Zend\Diactoros\PhpInputStream) {} [protected] uri => object(Zend\Diactoros\Uri) {} [protected] session => object(Cake\Http\Session) {} [protected] attributes => [[maximum depth reached]] [protected] emulatedAttributes => [ [maximum depth reached] ] [protected] uploadedFiles => [[maximum depth reached]] [protected] protocol => null [protected] requestTarget => null [private] deprecatedProperties => [ [maximum depth reached] ] }, 'type' => '->', 'args' => [ (int) 0 => 'artileslug' ] ]deprecationWarning - CORE/src/Core/functions.php, line 311 Cake\Http\ServerRequest::offsetGet() - CORE/src/Http/ServerRequest.php, line 2421 App\Controller\ArtileDetailController::printArticle() - APP/Controller/ArtileDetailController.php, line 74 Cake\Controller\Controller::invokeAction() - CORE/src/Controller/Controller.php, line 610 Cake\Http\ActionDispatcher::_invoke() - CORE/src/Http/ActionDispatcher.php, line 120 Cake\Http\ActionDispatcher::dispatch() - CORE/src/Http/ActionDispatcher.php, line 94 Cake\Http\BaseApplication::__invoke() - CORE/src/Http/BaseApplication.php, line 235 Cake\Http\Runner::__invoke() - CORE/src/Http/Runner.php, line 65 Cake\Routing\Middleware\RoutingMiddleware::__invoke() - CORE/src/Routing/Middleware/RoutingMiddleware.php, line 162 Cake\Http\Runner::__invoke() - CORE/src/Http/Runner.php, line 65 Cake\Routing\Middleware\AssetMiddleware::__invoke() - CORE/src/Routing/Middleware/AssetMiddleware.php, line 88 Cake\Http\Runner::__invoke() - CORE/src/Http/Runner.php, line 65 Cake\Error\Middleware\ErrorHandlerMiddleware::__invoke() - CORE/src/Error/Middleware/ErrorHandlerMiddleware.php, line 96 Cake\Http\Runner::__invoke() - CORE/src/Http/Runner.php, line 65 Cake\Http\Runner::run() - CORE/src/Http/Runner.php, line 51 Cake\Http\Server::run() - CORE/src/Http/Server.php, line 98
Warning (512): Unable to emit headers. Headers sent in file=/home/brlfuser/public_html/vendor/cakephp/cakephp/src/Error/Debugger.php line=853 [CORE/src/Http/ResponseEmitter.php, line 48]Code Contextif (Configure::read('debug')) {
trigger_error($message, E_USER_WARNING);
} else {
$response = object(Cake\Http\Response) { 'status' => (int) 200, 'contentType' => 'text/html', 'headers' => [ 'Content-Type' => [ [maximum depth reached] ] ], 'file' => null, 'fileRange' => [], 'cookies' => object(Cake\Http\Cookie\CookieCollection) {}, 'cacheDirectives' => [], 'body' => '<!DOCTYPE html PUBLIC "-//W3C//DTD XHTML 1.0 Transitional//EN" "http://www.w3.org/TR/xhtml1/DTD/xhtml1-transitional.dtd"> <html xmlns="http://www.w3.org/1999/xhtml"> <head> <link rel="canonical" href="https://im4change.in/<pre class="cake-error"><a href="javascript:void(0);" onclick="document.getElementById('cakeErr67f372e5609df-trace').style.display = (document.getElementById('cakeErr67f372e5609df-trace').style.display == 'none' ? '' : 'none');"><b>Notice</b> (8)</a>: Undefined variable: urlPrefix [<b>APP/Template/Layout/printlayout.ctp</b>, line <b>8</b>]<div id="cakeErr67f372e5609df-trace" class="cake-stack-trace" style="display: none;"><a href="javascript:void(0);" onclick="document.getElementById('cakeErr67f372e5609df-code').style.display = (document.getElementById('cakeErr67f372e5609df-code').style.display == 'none' ? '' : 'none')">Code</a> <a href="javascript:void(0);" onclick="document.getElementById('cakeErr67f372e5609df-context').style.display = (document.getElementById('cakeErr67f372e5609df-context').style.display == 'none' ? '' : 'none')">Context</a><pre id="cakeErr67f372e5609df-code" class="cake-code-dump" style="display: none;"><code><span style="color: #000000"><span style="color: #0000BB"></span><span style="color: #007700"><</span><span style="color: #0000BB">head</span><span style="color: #007700">> </span></span></code> <span class="code-highlight"><code><span style="color: #000000"> <link rel="canonical" href="<span style="color: #0000BB"><?php </span><span style="color: #007700">echo </span><span style="color: #0000BB">Configure</span><span style="color: #007700">::</span><span style="color: #0000BB">read</span><span style="color: #007700">(</span><span style="color: #DD0000">'SITE_URL'</span><span style="color: #007700">); </span><span style="color: #0000BB">?><?php </span><span style="color: #007700">echo </span><span style="color: #0000BB">$urlPrefix</span><span style="color: #007700">;</span><span style="color: #0000BB">?><?php </span><span style="color: #007700">echo </span><span style="color: #0000BB">$article_current</span><span style="color: #007700">-></span><span style="color: #0000BB">category</span><span style="color: #007700">-></span><span style="color: #0000BB">slug</span><span style="color: #007700">; </span><span style="color: #0000BB">?></span>/<span style="color: #0000BB"><?php </span><span style="color: #007700">echo </span><span style="color: #0000BB">$article_current</span><span style="color: #007700">-></span><span style="color: #0000BB">seo_url</span><span style="color: #007700">; </span><span style="color: #0000BB">?></span>.html"/> </span></code></span> <code><span style="color: #000000"><span style="color: #0000BB"> </span><span style="color: #007700"><</span><span style="color: #0000BB">meta http</span><span style="color: #007700">-</span><span style="color: #0000BB">equiv</span><span style="color: #007700">=</span><span style="color: #DD0000">"Content-Type" </span><span style="color: #0000BB">content</span><span style="color: #007700">=</span><span style="color: #DD0000">"text/html; charset=utf-8"</span><span style="color: #007700">/> </span></span></code></pre><pre id="cakeErr67f372e5609df-context" class="cake-context" style="display: none;">$viewFile = '/home/brlfuser/public_html/src/Template/Layout/printlayout.ctp' $dataForView = [ 'article_current' => object(App\Model\Entity\Article) { 'id' => (int) 2521, 'title' => 'Poverty haunts India's economic miracle', 'subheading' => '', 'description' => '<p align="justify"> <font face="arial,helvetica,sans-serif" size="3"></font> </p> <p align="justify"> <br /> <font face="arial,helvetica,sans-serif" size="3">When flames from an open cooking fire raced through Fida Hussein's shack in northern India, it was a disaster for him and his poverty-stricken family. </font> </p> <p align="justify"> <font face="arial,helvetica,sans-serif" size="3">&quot;We have nothing,&quot; said Hussein as he stood in the ruins of his hut through which the sky could be seen between the burnt roof timbers in a remote corner of Uttar Pradesh, India's most populous state. </font> </p> <p align="justify"> <font face="arial,helvetica,sans-serif" size="3">India's number of millionaires grew by 51 percent to 126,700 in 2009, according to US investment bank Merrill Lynch and consultants Capgemini, boosted by a buoyant economy which grew 8.6 percent in the last fiscal quarter. </font> </p> <p align="justify"> <font face="arial,helvetica,sans-serif" size="3">But increasing wealth has not trickled down to the likes of 40-year-old Hussein, a landless labourer whose seamed face is prematurely aged, and his family of six children who have no toys, books or other possessions. </font> </p> <p align="justify"> <font face="arial,helvetica,sans-serif" size="3">&quot;We have no clothes, no furniture,&quot; he said, gesturing to what remained of his burned out shack which he had roughly patched up with plastic bags. </font> </p> <p align="justify"> <font face="arial,helvetica,sans-serif" size="3">&quot;We have only one quilt -- eight of us sleep under it in winter,&quot; he said, as his children played in the dirt yard outside the hut. &quot;But there's no use in crying -- no one hears us,&quot; he added. </font> </p> <p align="justify"> <font face="arial,helvetica,sans-serif" size="3">Like the more than 400 million Indians who have no electricity, Hussein's home has has no lighting and there is no running water in the huts in his village, which lies 60 kilometres (40 miles) from the state capital Lucknow. </font> </p> <p align="justify"> <font face="arial,helvetica,sans-serif" size="3">In 1947, in his midnight independence address, India's first prime minister, Jawaharlal Nehru, called for &quot;the ending of poverty and ignorance and disease and inequality of opportunity.&quot; </font> </p> <p align="justify"> <font face="arial,helvetica,sans-serif" size="3">It's an end that still seems a long way off. </font> </p> <p align="justify"> <font face="arial,helvetica,sans-serif" size="3"><em>JUMP IN NUMBER OF INDIANS BELOW POVERTY LINE </em></font> </p> <p align="justify"> <font face="arial,helvetica,sans-serif" size="3">In April, the Planning Commission, India's premier economic policymaking body, raised its estimate of the number of Indians living in poverty -- unable to meet their nutritional needs -- from 28 percent to 37 percent, which is roughly 440 million of the 1.2 billion population. </font> </p> <p align="justify"> <font face="arial,helvetica,sans-serif" size="3">A new international Mulitple Poverty Index, developed at Oxford University and measuring a wide range of household-level deprivation, suggests that more people are mired in poverty in just eight Indian states than in the 26 poorest African countries. </font> </p> <p align="justify"> <font face="arial,helvetica,sans-serif" size="3">&quot;There are two categories growing in the 'Rising India'... the super rich, and the abysmally poor,&quot; noted newspaper editor M.J. Akbar in a recent column. </font> </p> <p align="justify"> <font face="arial,helvetica,sans-serif" size="3">The left-of-centre Congress government was re-elected on a pro-poor platform that promised to do something for its main support base in India's rural hinterlands. </font> </p> <p align="justify"> <font face="arial,helvetica,sans-serif" size="3">During its first term, it increased social spending, raising health and education budgets and launched a huge public works program -- the National Rural Employment Guarantee Act -- and a big loan repayment waiver for farmers. </font> </p> <p align="justify"> <font face="arial,helvetica,sans-serif" size="3">But Hussein, who does work for local farmers, says he has not managed to obtain a card needed to work in the jobs scheme. Others in the area complain that they only get a few days work with the programme. </font> </p> <p align="justify"> <font face="arial,helvetica,sans-serif" size="3">Former premier Rajiv Gandhi once said only 15 percent of development money gets to its intended targets. While things have improved, there is still a lot of &quot;leakage&quot; from poverty programmes. </font> </p> <p align="justify"> <font face="arial,helvetica,sans-serif" size="3">The government will spend at least 250 billion dollars on services for the poor in the next five years but a recent report by investment house CLSA Asia Pacific Markets estimated more than 100 billion dollars would be skimmed off. </font> </p> <p align="justify"> <font face="arial,helvetica,sans-serif" size="3">&quot;There's personal gain going on at public cost where people who are supposed to look after the interests of the people accumulate large sums,&quot; Anupama Jha, executive director of Transparency International India, said. </font> </p> <p align="justify"> <font face="arial,helvetica,sans-serif" size="3">Corruption, she said, is rife -- percolating through government, the private sector, the police and the judiciary. </font> </p> <p align="justify"> <font face="arial,helvetica,sans-serif" size="3">&quot;There are signs of deterioration in behaviour where people who have access to money do not feel accountable to the people they represent,&quot; Jha said. </font> </p> <p align="justify"> <font face="arial,helvetica,sans-serif" size="3">&quot;The poor are not spared even in the case of targeted programmes&quot; and are often obliged to pay bribes to take advantage of public services, according to a recent study by the group. </font> </p> <p align="justify"> <font face="arial,helvetica,sans-serif" size="3"><em>STUCK IN MONEYLENDER TRAP </em></font> </p> <p align="justify"> <font face="arial,helvetica,sans-serif" size="3">Hardwari Lal, a labourer who has three children and whose wife is expecting a fourth, says he also has not received the card needed to get work. </font> </p> <p align="justify"> <font face="arial,helvetica,sans-serif" size="3">Lal, 32, owes a moneylender who is charging five percent interest a month on a 7,000 rupee (150-dollar) loan he took out for his son's hospital bill. </font> </p> <p align="justify"> <font face="arial,helvetica,sans-serif" size="3">&quot;There is only so much I can do,&quot; he said, adding he has no way of feeding his family properly as he can barely keep up with the interest payments let alone make a dent in the principal. </font> </p> <p align="justify"> <font face="arial,helvetica,sans-serif" size="3">&quot;So many poor villagers are caught up in this cycle of poverty where they get into difficulty and go to a moneylender,&quot; said local development worker Vikrant Kumar. </font> </p> <p align="justify"> <font face="arial,helvetica,sans-serif" size="3">As part of its anti-poverty drive, the government is drafting a Right to Food Act which calls for a government-subsidized minimum of 25 kilograms (55 pounds) of wheat and rice a month for households below the poverty line. </font> </p> <p align="justify"> <font face="arial,helvetica,sans-serif" size="3">Hussain feeds his six children two meals a day -- potatoes and wheat chapatis or flat bread -- and eats one meal a day himself. Dal, the mainstay of Indian diets because of its high protein, is too expensive, he says. </font> </p> <p align="justify"> <font face="arial,helvetica,sans-serif" size="3">Malnutrition among under-fives in India stands at 43.5 percent -- worse than sub-Saharan Africa -- and only nine percentage points less than when India's &quot;economic miracle&quot; began in 1991. </font> </p> <p align="justify"> <font face="arial,helvetica,sans-serif" size="3">During the same period, India's gross domestic product per capita has jumped 50-fold. </font> </p> <p align="justify"> <font face="arial,helvetica,sans-serif" size="3">&quot;We have gone from being a food deficit country to a food surplus country, which is a big achievement, but there's a lot to be done in terms of getting the food to people who need it,&quot; said Indian political author Ajoy Bose. </font> </p> <p align="justify"> <font face="arial,helvetica,sans-serif" size="3">&quot;You look slightly stupid in claiming to be a major power or even a modern progressive state if you haven't done the very elementary basics for your marginalised population,&quot; Bose said. </font> </p> <p align="justify"> <font face="arial,helvetica,sans-serif" size="3">Mountains of grain and vegetables still rot each year due to poor storage and distribution. </font> </p> <p align="justify"> <font face="arial,helvetica,sans-serif" size="3">The immense gap between poor and rich has been pointed to by numerous commentators as a factor fuelling a growing Maoist insurgency that has spread across a large swathe of the country and is at its strongest in remote, impoverished regions. </font> </p> <p align="justify"> <font face="arial,helvetica,sans-serif" size="3">&quot;It is not just poverty that is increasing, it also the inequality,&quot; said senior Indian communist leader Brinda Karat. </font> </p> <p align="justify"> <font face="arial,helvetica,sans-serif" size="3">The government insists it needs double-digit growth to eradicate poverty, but New Delhi-based food and trade policy analyst Devinder Sharma argues that effective distribution of wealth is the real key. </font> </p> <p align="justify"> <font face="arial,helvetica,sans-serif" size="3">&quot;We are already on a growth trajectory, but people are getting poorer. Eradicating poverty is not woven into growth,&quot; he said.</font> </p> <p align="justify"> <font face="arial,helvetica,sans-serif" size="3"></font> </p> ', 'credit_writer' => 'The Economic Times, 18 July, 2010, http://economictimes.indiatimes.com/news/economy/indicators/Poverty-haunts-Indias-economic-miracle/articleshow/6183209.cms', 'article_img' => '', 'article_img_thumb' => '', 'status' => (int) 1, 'show_on_home' => (int) 1, 'lang' => 'EN', 'category_id' => (int) 16, 'tag_keyword' => '', 'seo_url' => 'poverty-haunts-indias-economic-miracle-2605', 'meta_title' => null, 'meta_keywords' => null, 'meta_description' => null, 'noindex' => (int) 0, 'publish_date' => object(Cake\I18n\FrozenDate) {}, 'most_visit_section_id' => null, 'article_big_img' => null, 'liveid' => (int) 2605, 'created' => object(Cake\I18n\FrozenTime) {}, 'modified' => object(Cake\I18n\FrozenTime) {}, 'edate' => '', 'tags' => [ [maximum depth reached] ], 'category' => object(App\Model\Entity\Category) {}, '[new]' => false, '[accessible]' => [ [maximum depth reached] ], '[dirty]' => [[maximum depth reached]], '[original]' => [[maximum depth reached]], '[virtual]' => [[maximum depth reached]], '[hasErrors]' => false, '[errors]' => [[maximum depth reached]], '[invalid]' => [[maximum depth reached]], '[repository]' => 'Articles' }, 'articleid' => (int) 2521, 'metaTitle' => 'LATEST NEWS UPDATES | Poverty haunts India's economic miracle', 'metaKeywords' => 'Human Development,Human Development,Poverty', 'metaDesc' => ' When flames from an open cooking fire raced through Fida Hussein's shack in northern India, it was a disaster for him and his poverty-stricken family. &quot;We have nothing,&quot; said Hussein as he stood in the ruins of his hut through...', 'disp' => '<p align="justify"><font ></font></p><p align="justify"><br /><font >When flames from an open cooking fire raced through Fida Hussein's shack in northern India, it was a disaster for him and his poverty-stricken family. </font></p><p align="justify"><font >&quot;We have nothing,&quot; said Hussein as he stood in the ruins of his hut through which the sky could be seen between the burnt roof timbers in a remote corner of Uttar Pradesh, India's most populous state. </font></p><p align="justify"><font >India's number of millionaires grew by 51 percent to 126,700 in 2009, according to US investment bank Merrill Lynch and consultants Capgemini, boosted by a buoyant economy which grew 8.6 percent in the last fiscal quarter. </font></p><p align="justify"><font >But increasing wealth has not trickled down to the likes of 40-year-old Hussein, a landless labourer whose seamed face is prematurely aged, and his family of six children who have no toys, books or other possessions. </font></p><p align="justify"><font >&quot;We have no clothes, no furniture,&quot; he said, gesturing to what remained of his burned out shack which he had roughly patched up with plastic bags. </font></p><p align="justify"><font >&quot;We have only one quilt -- eight of us sleep under it in winter,&quot; he said, as his children played in the dirt yard outside the hut. &quot;But there's no use in crying -- no one hears us,&quot; he added. </font></p><p align="justify"><font >Like the more than 400 million Indians who have no electricity, Hussein's home has has no lighting and there is no running water in the huts in his village, which lies 60 kilometres (40 miles) from the state capital Lucknow. </font></p><p align="justify"><font >In 1947, in his midnight independence address, India's first prime minister, Jawaharlal Nehru, called for &quot;the ending of poverty and ignorance and disease and inequality of opportunity.&quot; </font></p><p align="justify"><font >It's an end that still seems a long way off. </font></p><p align="justify"><font ><em>JUMP IN NUMBER OF INDIANS BELOW POVERTY LINE </em></font></p><p align="justify"><font >In April, the Planning Commission, India's premier economic policymaking body, raised its estimate of the number of Indians living in poverty -- unable to meet their nutritional needs -- from 28 percent to 37 percent, which is roughly 440 million of the 1.2 billion population. </font></p><p align="justify"><font >A new international Mulitple Poverty Index, developed at Oxford University and measuring a wide range of household-level deprivation, suggests that more people are mired in poverty in just eight Indian states than in the 26 poorest African countries. </font></p><p align="justify"><font >&quot;There are two categories growing in the 'Rising India'... the super rich, and the abysmally poor,&quot; noted newspaper editor M.J. Akbar in a recent column. </font></p><p align="justify"><font >The left-of-centre Congress government was re-elected on a pro-poor platform that promised to do something for its main support base in India's rural hinterlands. </font></p><p align="justify"><font >During its first term, it increased social spending, raising health and education budgets and launched a huge public works program -- the National Rural Employment Guarantee Act -- and a big loan repayment waiver for farmers. </font></p><p align="justify"><font >But Hussein, who does work for local farmers, says he has not managed to obtain a card needed to work in the jobs scheme. Others in the area complain that they only get a few days work with the programme. </font></p><p align="justify"><font >Former premier Rajiv Gandhi once said only 15 percent of development money gets to its intended targets. While things have improved, there is still a lot of &quot;leakage&quot; from poverty programmes. </font></p><p align="justify"><font >The government will spend at least 250 billion dollars on services for the poor in the next five years but a recent report by investment house CLSA Asia Pacific Markets estimated more than 100 billion dollars would be skimmed off. </font></p><p align="justify"><font >&quot;There's personal gain going on at public cost where people who are supposed to look after the interests of the people accumulate large sums,&quot; Anupama Jha, executive director of Transparency International India, said. </font></p><p align="justify"><font >Corruption, she said, is rife -- percolating through government, the private sector, the police and the judiciary. </font></p><p align="justify"><font >&quot;There are signs of deterioration in behaviour where people who have access to money do not feel accountable to the people they represent,&quot; Jha said. </font></p><p align="justify"><font >&quot;The poor are not spared even in the case of targeted programmes&quot; and are often obliged to pay bribes to take advantage of public services, according to a recent study by the group. </font></p><p align="justify"><font ><em>STUCK IN MONEYLENDER TRAP </em></font></p><p align="justify"><font >Hardwari Lal, a labourer who has three children and whose wife is expecting a fourth, says he also has not received the card needed to get work. </font></p><p align="justify"><font >Lal, 32, owes a moneylender who is charging five percent interest a month on a 7,000 rupee (150-dollar) loan he took out for his son's hospital bill. </font></p><p align="justify"><font >&quot;There is only so much I can do,&quot; he said, adding he has no way of feeding his family properly as he can barely keep up with the interest payments let alone make a dent in the principal. </font></p><p align="justify"><font >&quot;So many poor villagers are caught up in this cycle of poverty where they get into difficulty and go to a moneylender,&quot; said local development worker Vikrant Kumar. </font></p><p align="justify"><font >As part of its anti-poverty drive, the government is drafting a Right to Food Act which calls for a government-subsidized minimum of 25 kilograms (55 pounds) of wheat and rice a month for households below the poverty line. </font></p><p align="justify"><font >Hussain feeds his six children two meals a day -- potatoes and wheat chapatis or flat bread -- and eats one meal a day himself. Dal, the mainstay of Indian diets because of its high protein, is too expensive, he says. </font></p><p align="justify"><font >Malnutrition among under-fives in India stands at 43.5 percent -- worse than sub-Saharan Africa -- and only nine percentage points less than when India's &quot;economic miracle&quot; began in 1991. </font></p><p align="justify"><font >During the same period, India's gross domestic product per capita has jumped 50-fold. </font></p><p align="justify"><font >&quot;We have gone from being a food deficit country to a food surplus country, which is a big achievement, but there's a lot to be done in terms of getting the food to people who need it,&quot; said Indian political author Ajoy Bose. </font></p><p align="justify"><font >&quot;You look slightly stupid in claiming to be a major power or even a modern progressive state if you haven't done the very elementary basics for your marginalised population,&quot; Bose said. </font></p><p align="justify"><font >Mountains of grain and vegetables still rot each year due to poor storage and distribution. </font></p><p align="justify"><font >The immense gap between poor and rich has been pointed to by numerous commentators as a factor fuelling a growing Maoist insurgency that has spread across a large swathe of the country and is at its strongest in remote, impoverished regions. </font></p><p align="justify"><font >&quot;It is not just poverty that is increasing, it also the inequality,&quot; said senior Indian communist leader Brinda Karat. </font></p><p align="justify"><font >The government insists it needs double-digit growth to eradicate poverty, but New Delhi-based food and trade policy analyst Devinder Sharma argues that effective distribution of wealth is the real key. </font></p><p align="justify"><font >&quot;We are already on a growth trajectory, but people are getting poorer. Eradicating poverty is not woven into growth,&quot; he said.</font></p><p align="justify"><font ></font></p>', 'lang' => 'English', 'SITE_URL' => 'https://im4change.in/', 'site_title' => 'im4change', 'adminprix' => 'admin' ] $article_current = object(App\Model\Entity\Article) { 'id' => (int) 2521, 'title' => 'Poverty haunts India's economic miracle', 'subheading' => '', 'description' => '<p align="justify"> <font face="arial,helvetica,sans-serif" size="3"></font> </p> <p align="justify"> <br /> <font face="arial,helvetica,sans-serif" size="3">When flames from an open cooking fire raced through Fida Hussein's shack in northern India, it was a disaster for him and his poverty-stricken family. </font> </p> <p align="justify"> <font face="arial,helvetica,sans-serif" size="3">&quot;We have nothing,&quot; said Hussein as he stood in the ruins of his hut through which the sky could be seen between the burnt roof timbers in a remote corner of Uttar Pradesh, India's most populous state. </font> </p> <p align="justify"> <font face="arial,helvetica,sans-serif" size="3">India's number of millionaires grew by 51 percent to 126,700 in 2009, according to US investment bank Merrill Lynch and consultants Capgemini, boosted by a buoyant economy which grew 8.6 percent in the last fiscal quarter. </font> </p> <p align="justify"> <font face="arial,helvetica,sans-serif" size="3">But increasing wealth has not trickled down to the likes of 40-year-old Hussein, a landless labourer whose seamed face is prematurely aged, and his family of six children who have no toys, books or other possessions. </font> </p> <p align="justify"> <font face="arial,helvetica,sans-serif" size="3">&quot;We have no clothes, no furniture,&quot; he said, gesturing to what remained of his burned out shack which he had roughly patched up with plastic bags. </font> </p> <p align="justify"> <font face="arial,helvetica,sans-serif" size="3">&quot;We have only one quilt -- eight of us sleep under it in winter,&quot; he said, as his children played in the dirt yard outside the hut. &quot;But there's no use in crying -- no one hears us,&quot; he added. </font> </p> <p align="justify"> <font face="arial,helvetica,sans-serif" size="3">Like the more than 400 million Indians who have no electricity, Hussein's home has has no lighting and there is no running water in the huts in his village, which lies 60 kilometres (40 miles) from the state capital Lucknow. </font> </p> <p align="justify"> <font face="arial,helvetica,sans-serif" size="3">In 1947, in his midnight independence address, India's first prime minister, Jawaharlal Nehru, called for &quot;the ending of poverty and ignorance and disease and inequality of opportunity.&quot; </font> </p> <p align="justify"> <font face="arial,helvetica,sans-serif" size="3">It's an end that still seems a long way off. </font> </p> <p align="justify"> <font face="arial,helvetica,sans-serif" size="3"><em>JUMP IN NUMBER OF INDIANS BELOW POVERTY LINE </em></font> </p> <p align="justify"> <font face="arial,helvetica,sans-serif" size="3">In April, the Planning Commission, India's premier economic policymaking body, raised its estimate of the number of Indians living in poverty -- unable to meet their nutritional needs -- from 28 percent to 37 percent, which is roughly 440 million of the 1.2 billion population. </font> </p> <p align="justify"> <font face="arial,helvetica,sans-serif" size="3">A new international Mulitple Poverty Index, developed at Oxford University and measuring a wide range of household-level deprivation, suggests that more people are mired in poverty in just eight Indian states than in the 26 poorest African countries. </font> </p> <p align="justify"> <font face="arial,helvetica,sans-serif" size="3">&quot;There are two categories growing in the 'Rising India'... the super rich, and the abysmally poor,&quot; noted newspaper editor M.J. Akbar in a recent column. </font> </p> <p align="justify"> <font face="arial,helvetica,sans-serif" size="3">The left-of-centre Congress government was re-elected on a pro-poor platform that promised to do something for its main support base in India's rural hinterlands. </font> </p> <p align="justify"> <font face="arial,helvetica,sans-serif" size="3">During its first term, it increased social spending, raising health and education budgets and launched a huge public works program -- the National Rural Employment Guarantee Act -- and a big loan repayment waiver for farmers. </font> </p> <p align="justify"> <font face="arial,helvetica,sans-serif" size="3">But Hussein, who does work for local farmers, says he has not managed to obtain a card needed to work in the jobs scheme. Others in the area complain that they only get a few days work with the programme. </font> </p> <p align="justify"> <font face="arial,helvetica,sans-serif" size="3">Former premier Rajiv Gandhi once said only 15 percent of development money gets to its intended targets. While things have improved, there is still a lot of &quot;leakage&quot; from poverty programmes. </font> </p> <p align="justify"> <font face="arial,helvetica,sans-serif" size="3">The government will spend at least 250 billion dollars on services for the poor in the next five years but a recent report by investment house CLSA Asia Pacific Markets estimated more than 100 billion dollars would be skimmed off. </font> </p> <p align="justify"> <font face="arial,helvetica,sans-serif" size="3">&quot;There's personal gain going on at public cost where people who are supposed to look after the interests of the people accumulate large sums,&quot; Anupama Jha, executive director of Transparency International India, said. </font> </p> <p align="justify"> <font face="arial,helvetica,sans-serif" size="3">Corruption, she said, is rife -- percolating through government, the private sector, the police and the judiciary. </font> </p> <p align="justify"> <font face="arial,helvetica,sans-serif" size="3">&quot;There are signs of deterioration in behaviour where people who have access to money do not feel accountable to the people they represent,&quot; Jha said. </font> </p> <p align="justify"> <font face="arial,helvetica,sans-serif" size="3">&quot;The poor are not spared even in the case of targeted programmes&quot; and are often obliged to pay bribes to take advantage of public services, according to a recent study by the group. </font> </p> <p align="justify"> <font face="arial,helvetica,sans-serif" size="3"><em>STUCK IN MONEYLENDER TRAP </em></font> </p> <p align="justify"> <font face="arial,helvetica,sans-serif" size="3">Hardwari Lal, a labourer who has three children and whose wife is expecting a fourth, says he also has not received the card needed to get work. </font> </p> <p align="justify"> <font face="arial,helvetica,sans-serif" size="3">Lal, 32, owes a moneylender who is charging five percent interest a month on a 7,000 rupee (150-dollar) loan he took out for his son's hospital bill. </font> </p> <p align="justify"> <font face="arial,helvetica,sans-serif" size="3">&quot;There is only so much I can do,&quot; he said, adding he has no way of feeding his family properly as he can barely keep up with the interest payments let alone make a dent in the principal. </font> </p> <p align="justify"> <font face="arial,helvetica,sans-serif" size="3">&quot;So many poor villagers are caught up in this cycle of poverty where they get into difficulty and go to a moneylender,&quot; said local development worker Vikrant Kumar. </font> </p> <p align="justify"> <font face="arial,helvetica,sans-serif" size="3">As part of its anti-poverty drive, the government is drafting a Right to Food Act which calls for a government-subsidized minimum of 25 kilograms (55 pounds) of wheat and rice a month for households below the poverty line. </font> </p> <p align="justify"> <font face="arial,helvetica,sans-serif" size="3">Hussain feeds his six children two meals a day -- potatoes and wheat chapatis or flat bread -- and eats one meal a day himself. Dal, the mainstay of Indian diets because of its high protein, is too expensive, he says. </font> </p> <p align="justify"> <font face="arial,helvetica,sans-serif" size="3">Malnutrition among under-fives in India stands at 43.5 percent -- worse than sub-Saharan Africa -- and only nine percentage points less than when India's &quot;economic miracle&quot; began in 1991. </font> </p> <p align="justify"> <font face="arial,helvetica,sans-serif" size="3">During the same period, India's gross domestic product per capita has jumped 50-fold. </font> </p> <p align="justify"> <font face="arial,helvetica,sans-serif" size="3">&quot;We have gone from being a food deficit country to a food surplus country, which is a big achievement, but there's a lot to be done in terms of getting the food to people who need it,&quot; said Indian political author Ajoy Bose. </font> </p> <p align="justify"> <font face="arial,helvetica,sans-serif" size="3">&quot;You look slightly stupid in claiming to be a major power or even a modern progressive state if you haven't done the very elementary basics for your marginalised population,&quot; Bose said. </font> </p> <p align="justify"> <font face="arial,helvetica,sans-serif" size="3">Mountains of grain and vegetables still rot each year due to poor storage and distribution. </font> </p> <p align="justify"> <font face="arial,helvetica,sans-serif" size="3">The immense gap between poor and rich has been pointed to by numerous commentators as a factor fuelling a growing Maoist insurgency that has spread across a large swathe of the country and is at its strongest in remote, impoverished regions. </font> </p> <p align="justify"> <font face="arial,helvetica,sans-serif" size="3">&quot;It is not just poverty that is increasing, it also the inequality,&quot; said senior Indian communist leader Brinda Karat. </font> </p> <p align="justify"> <font face="arial,helvetica,sans-serif" size="3">The government insists it needs double-digit growth to eradicate poverty, but New Delhi-based food and trade policy analyst Devinder Sharma argues that effective distribution of wealth is the real key. </font> </p> <p align="justify"> <font face="arial,helvetica,sans-serif" size="3">&quot;We are already on a growth trajectory, but people are getting poorer. Eradicating poverty is not woven into growth,&quot; he said.</font> </p> <p align="justify"> <font face="arial,helvetica,sans-serif" size="3"></font> </p> ', 'credit_writer' => 'The Economic Times, 18 July, 2010, http://economictimes.indiatimes.com/news/economy/indicators/Poverty-haunts-Indias-economic-miracle/articleshow/6183209.cms', 'article_img' => '', 'article_img_thumb' => '', 'status' => (int) 1, 'show_on_home' => (int) 1, 'lang' => 'EN', 'category_id' => (int) 16, 'tag_keyword' => '', 'seo_url' => 'poverty-haunts-indias-economic-miracle-2605', 'meta_title' => null, 'meta_keywords' => null, 'meta_description' => null, 'noindex' => (int) 0, 'publish_date' => object(Cake\I18n\FrozenDate) {}, 'most_visit_section_id' => null, 'article_big_img' => null, 'liveid' => (int) 2605, 'created' => object(Cake\I18n\FrozenTime) {}, 'modified' => object(Cake\I18n\FrozenTime) {}, 'edate' => '', 'tags' => [ (int) 0 => object(Cake\ORM\Entity) {}, (int) 1 => object(Cake\ORM\Entity) {}, (int) 2 => object(Cake\ORM\Entity) {} ], 'category' => object(App\Model\Entity\Category) {}, '[new]' => false, '[accessible]' => [ '*' => true, 'id' => false ], '[dirty]' => [], '[original]' => [], '[virtual]' => [], '[hasErrors]' => false, '[errors]' => [], '[invalid]' => [], '[repository]' => 'Articles' } $articleid = (int) 2521 $metaTitle = 'LATEST NEWS UPDATES | Poverty haunts India's economic miracle' $metaKeywords = 'Human Development,Human Development,Poverty' $metaDesc = ' When flames from an open cooking fire raced through Fida Hussein's shack in northern India, it was a disaster for him and his poverty-stricken family. &quot;We have nothing,&quot; said Hussein as he stood in the ruins of his hut through...' $disp = '<p align="justify"><font ></font></p><p align="justify"><br /><font >When flames from an open cooking fire raced through Fida Hussein's shack in northern India, it was a disaster for him and his poverty-stricken family. </font></p><p align="justify"><font >&quot;We have nothing,&quot; said Hussein as he stood in the ruins of his hut through which the sky could be seen between the burnt roof timbers in a remote corner of Uttar Pradesh, India's most populous state. </font></p><p align="justify"><font >India's number of millionaires grew by 51 percent to 126,700 in 2009, according to US investment bank Merrill Lynch and consultants Capgemini, boosted by a buoyant economy which grew 8.6 percent in the last fiscal quarter. </font></p><p align="justify"><font >But increasing wealth has not trickled down to the likes of 40-year-old Hussein, a landless labourer whose seamed face is prematurely aged, and his family of six children who have no toys, books or other possessions. </font></p><p align="justify"><font >&quot;We have no clothes, no furniture,&quot; he said, gesturing to what remained of his burned out shack which he had roughly patched up with plastic bags. </font></p><p align="justify"><font >&quot;We have only one quilt -- eight of us sleep under it in winter,&quot; he said, as his children played in the dirt yard outside the hut. &quot;But there's no use in crying -- no one hears us,&quot; he added. </font></p><p align="justify"><font >Like the more than 400 million Indians who have no electricity, Hussein's home has has no lighting and there is no running water in the huts in his village, which lies 60 kilometres (40 miles) from the state capital Lucknow. </font></p><p align="justify"><font >In 1947, in his midnight independence address, India's first prime minister, Jawaharlal Nehru, called for &quot;the ending of poverty and ignorance and disease and inequality of opportunity.&quot; </font></p><p align="justify"><font >It's an end that still seems a long way off. </font></p><p align="justify"><font ><em>JUMP IN NUMBER OF INDIANS BELOW POVERTY LINE </em></font></p><p align="justify"><font >In April, the Planning Commission, India's premier economic policymaking body, raised its estimate of the number of Indians living in poverty -- unable to meet their nutritional needs -- from 28 percent to 37 percent, which is roughly 440 million of the 1.2 billion population. </font></p><p align="justify"><font >A new international Mulitple Poverty Index, developed at Oxford University and measuring a wide range of household-level deprivation, suggests that more people are mired in poverty in just eight Indian states than in the 26 poorest African countries. </font></p><p align="justify"><font >&quot;There are two categories growing in the 'Rising India'... the super rich, and the abysmally poor,&quot; noted newspaper editor M.J. Akbar in a recent column. </font></p><p align="justify"><font >The left-of-centre Congress government was re-elected on a pro-poor platform that promised to do something for its main support base in India's rural hinterlands. </font></p><p align="justify"><font >During its first term, it increased social spending, raising health and education budgets and launched a huge public works program -- the National Rural Employment Guarantee Act -- and a big loan repayment waiver for farmers. </font></p><p align="justify"><font >But Hussein, who does work for local farmers, says he has not managed to obtain a card needed to work in the jobs scheme. Others in the area complain that they only get a few days work with the programme. </font></p><p align="justify"><font >Former premier Rajiv Gandhi once said only 15 percent of development money gets to its intended targets. While things have improved, there is still a lot of &quot;leakage&quot; from poverty programmes. </font></p><p align="justify"><font >The government will spend at least 250 billion dollars on services for the poor in the next five years but a recent report by investment house CLSA Asia Pacific Markets estimated more than 100 billion dollars would be skimmed off. </font></p><p align="justify"><font >&quot;There's personal gain going on at public cost where people who are supposed to look after the interests of the people accumulate large sums,&quot; Anupama Jha, executive director of Transparency International India, said. </font></p><p align="justify"><font >Corruption, she said, is rife -- percolating through government, the private sector, the police and the judiciary. </font></p><p align="justify"><font >&quot;There are signs of deterioration in behaviour where people who have access to money do not feel accountable to the people they represent,&quot; Jha said. </font></p><p align="justify"><font >&quot;The poor are not spared even in the case of targeted programmes&quot; and are often obliged to pay bribes to take advantage of public services, according to a recent study by the group. </font></p><p align="justify"><font ><em>STUCK IN MONEYLENDER TRAP </em></font></p><p align="justify"><font >Hardwari Lal, a labourer who has three children and whose wife is expecting a fourth, says he also has not received the card needed to get work. </font></p><p align="justify"><font >Lal, 32, owes a moneylender who is charging five percent interest a month on a 7,000 rupee (150-dollar) loan he took out for his son's hospital bill. </font></p><p align="justify"><font >&quot;There is only so much I can do,&quot; he said, adding he has no way of feeding his family properly as he can barely keep up with the interest payments let alone make a dent in the principal. </font></p><p align="justify"><font >&quot;So many poor villagers are caught up in this cycle of poverty where they get into difficulty and go to a moneylender,&quot; said local development worker Vikrant Kumar. </font></p><p align="justify"><font >As part of its anti-poverty drive, the government is drafting a Right to Food Act which calls for a government-subsidized minimum of 25 kilograms (55 pounds) of wheat and rice a month for households below the poverty line. </font></p><p align="justify"><font >Hussain feeds his six children two meals a day -- potatoes and wheat chapatis or flat bread -- and eats one meal a day himself. Dal, the mainstay of Indian diets because of its high protein, is too expensive, he says. </font></p><p align="justify"><font >Malnutrition among under-fives in India stands at 43.5 percent -- worse than sub-Saharan Africa -- and only nine percentage points less than when India's &quot;economic miracle&quot; began in 1991. </font></p><p align="justify"><font >During the same period, India's gross domestic product per capita has jumped 50-fold. </font></p><p align="justify"><font >&quot;We have gone from being a food deficit country to a food surplus country, which is a big achievement, but there's a lot to be done in terms of getting the food to people who need it,&quot; said Indian political author Ajoy Bose. </font></p><p align="justify"><font >&quot;You look slightly stupid in claiming to be a major power or even a modern progressive state if you haven't done the very elementary basics for your marginalised population,&quot; Bose said. </font></p><p align="justify"><font >Mountains of grain and vegetables still rot each year due to poor storage and distribution. </font></p><p align="justify"><font >The immense gap between poor and rich has been pointed to by numerous commentators as a factor fuelling a growing Maoist insurgency that has spread across a large swathe of the country and is at its strongest in remote, impoverished regions. </font></p><p align="justify"><font >&quot;It is not just poverty that is increasing, it also the inequality,&quot; said senior Indian communist leader Brinda Karat. </font></p><p align="justify"><font >The government insists it needs double-digit growth to eradicate poverty, but New Delhi-based food and trade policy analyst Devinder Sharma argues that effective distribution of wealth is the real key. </font></p><p align="justify"><font >&quot;We are already on a growth trajectory, but people are getting poorer. Eradicating poverty is not woven into growth,&quot; he said.</font></p><p align="justify"><font ></font></p>' $lang = 'English' $SITE_URL = 'https://im4change.in/' $site_title = 'im4change' $adminprix = 'admin'</pre><pre class="stack-trace">include - APP/Template/Layout/printlayout.ctp, line 8 Cake\View\View::_evaluate() - CORE/src/View/View.php, line 1413 Cake\View\View::_render() - CORE/src/View/View.php, line 1374 Cake\View\View::renderLayout() - CORE/src/View/View.php, line 927 Cake\View\View::render() - CORE/src/View/View.php, line 885 Cake\Controller\Controller::render() - CORE/src/Controller/Controller.php, line 791 Cake\Http\ActionDispatcher::_invoke() - CORE/src/Http/ActionDispatcher.php, line 126 Cake\Http\ActionDispatcher::dispatch() - CORE/src/Http/ActionDispatcher.php, line 94 Cake\Http\BaseApplication::__invoke() - CORE/src/Http/BaseApplication.php, line 235 Cake\Http\Runner::__invoke() - CORE/src/Http/Runner.php, line 65 Cake\Routing\Middleware\RoutingMiddleware::__invoke() - CORE/src/Routing/Middleware/RoutingMiddleware.php, line 162 Cake\Http\Runner::__invoke() - CORE/src/Http/Runner.php, line 65 Cake\Routing\Middleware\AssetMiddleware::__invoke() - CORE/src/Routing/Middleware/AssetMiddleware.php, line 88 Cake\Http\Runner::__invoke() - CORE/src/Http/Runner.php, line 65 Cake\Error\Middleware\ErrorHandlerMiddleware::__invoke() - CORE/src/Error/Middleware/ErrorHandlerMiddleware.php, line 96 Cake\Http\Runner::__invoke() - CORE/src/Http/Runner.php, line 65 Cake\Http\Runner::run() - CORE/src/Http/Runner.php, line 51</pre></div></pre>latest-news-updates/poverty-haunts-indias-economic-miracle-2605.html"/> <meta http-equiv="Content-Type" content="text/html; charset=utf-8"/> <link href="https://im4change.in/css/control.css" rel="stylesheet" type="text/css" media="all"/> <title>LATEST NEWS UPDATES | Poverty haunts India's economic miracle | Im4change.org</title> <meta name="description" content=" When flames from an open cooking fire raced through Fida Hussein's shack in northern India, it was a disaster for him and his poverty-stricken family. "We have nothing," said Hussein as he stood in the ruins of his hut through..."/> <script src="https://im4change.in/js/jquery-1.10.2.js"></script> <script type="text/javascript" src="https://im4change.in/js/jquery-migrate.min.js"></script> <script language="javascript" type="text/javascript"> $(document).ready(function () { var img = $("img")[0]; // Get my img elem var pic_real_width, pic_real_height; $("<img/>") // Make in memory copy of image to avoid css issues .attr("src", $(img).attr("src")) .load(function () { pic_real_width = this.width; // Note: $(this).width() will not pic_real_height = this.height; // work for in memory images. }); }); </script> <style type="text/css"> @media screen { div.divFooter { display: block; } } @media print { .printbutton { display: none !important; } } </style> </head> <body> <table cellpadding="0" cellspacing="0" border="0" width="98%" align="center"> <tr> <td class="top_bg"> <div class="divFooter"> <img src="https://im4change.in/images/logo1.jpg" height="59" border="0" alt="Resource centre on India's rural distress" style="padding-top:14px;"/> </div> </td> </tr> <tr> <td id="topspace"> </td> </tr> <tr id="topspace"> <td> </td> </tr> <tr> <td height="50" style="border-bottom:1px solid #000; padding-top:10px;" class="printbutton"> <form><input type="button" value=" Print this page " onclick="window.print();return false;"/></form> </td> </tr> <tr> <td width="100%"> <h1 class="news_headlines" style="font-style:normal"> <strong>Poverty haunts India's economic miracle</strong></h1> </td> </tr> <tr> <td width="100%" style="font-family:Arial, 'Segoe Script', 'Segoe UI', sans-serif, serif"><font size="3"> <p align="justify"><font ></font></p><p align="justify"><br /><font >When flames from an open cooking fire raced through Fida Hussein's shack in northern India, it was a disaster for him and his poverty-stricken family. </font></p><p align="justify"><font >"We have nothing," said Hussein as he stood in the ruins of his hut through which the sky could be seen between the burnt roof timbers in a remote corner of Uttar Pradesh, India's most populous state. </font></p><p align="justify"><font >India's number of millionaires grew by 51 percent to 126,700 in 2009, according to US investment bank Merrill Lynch and consultants Capgemini, boosted by a buoyant economy which grew 8.6 percent in the last fiscal quarter. </font></p><p align="justify"><font >But increasing wealth has not trickled down to the likes of 40-year-old Hussein, a landless labourer whose seamed face is prematurely aged, and his family of six children who have no toys, books or other possessions. </font></p><p align="justify"><font >"We have no clothes, no furniture," he said, gesturing to what remained of his burned out shack which he had roughly patched up with plastic bags. </font></p><p align="justify"><font >"We have only one quilt -- eight of us sleep under it in winter," he said, as his children played in the dirt yard outside the hut. "But there's no use in crying -- no one hears us," he added. </font></p><p align="justify"><font >Like the more than 400 million Indians who have no electricity, Hussein's home has has no lighting and there is no running water in the huts in his village, which lies 60 kilometres (40 miles) from the state capital Lucknow. </font></p><p align="justify"><font >In 1947, in his midnight independence address, India's first prime minister, Jawaharlal Nehru, called for "the ending of poverty and ignorance and disease and inequality of opportunity." </font></p><p align="justify"><font >It's an end that still seems a long way off. </font></p><p align="justify"><font ><em>JUMP IN NUMBER OF INDIANS BELOW POVERTY LINE </em></font></p><p align="justify"><font >In April, the Planning Commission, India's premier economic policymaking body, raised its estimate of the number of Indians living in poverty -- unable to meet their nutritional needs -- from 28 percent to 37 percent, which is roughly 440 million of the 1.2 billion population. </font></p><p align="justify"><font >A new international Mulitple Poverty Index, developed at Oxford University and measuring a wide range of household-level deprivation, suggests that more people are mired in poverty in just eight Indian states than in the 26 poorest African countries. </font></p><p align="justify"><font >"There are two categories growing in the 'Rising India'... the super rich, and the abysmally poor," noted newspaper editor M.J. Akbar in a recent column. </font></p><p align="justify"><font >The left-of-centre Congress government was re-elected on a pro-poor platform that promised to do something for its main support base in India's rural hinterlands. </font></p><p align="justify"><font >During its first term, it increased social spending, raising health and education budgets and launched a huge public works program -- the National Rural Employment Guarantee Act -- and a big loan repayment waiver for farmers. </font></p><p align="justify"><font >But Hussein, who does work for local farmers, says he has not managed to obtain a card needed to work in the jobs scheme. Others in the area complain that they only get a few days work with the programme. </font></p><p align="justify"><font >Former premier Rajiv Gandhi once said only 15 percent of development money gets to its intended targets. While things have improved, there is still a lot of "leakage" from poverty programmes. </font></p><p align="justify"><font >The government will spend at least 250 billion dollars on services for the poor in the next five years but a recent report by investment house CLSA Asia Pacific Markets estimated more than 100 billion dollars would be skimmed off. </font></p><p align="justify"><font >"There's personal gain going on at public cost where people who are supposed to look after the interests of the people accumulate large sums," Anupama Jha, executive director of Transparency International India, said. </font></p><p align="justify"><font >Corruption, she said, is rife -- percolating through government, the private sector, the police and the judiciary. </font></p><p align="justify"><font >"There are signs of deterioration in behaviour where people who have access to money do not feel accountable to the people they represent," Jha said. </font></p><p align="justify"><font >"The poor are not spared even in the case of targeted programmes" and are often obliged to pay bribes to take advantage of public services, according to a recent study by the group. </font></p><p align="justify"><font ><em>STUCK IN MONEYLENDER TRAP </em></font></p><p align="justify"><font >Hardwari Lal, a labourer who has three children and whose wife is expecting a fourth, says he also has not received the card needed to get work. </font></p><p align="justify"><font >Lal, 32, owes a moneylender who is charging five percent interest a month on a 7,000 rupee (150-dollar) loan he took out for his son's hospital bill. </font></p><p align="justify"><font >"There is only so much I can do," he said, adding he has no way of feeding his family properly as he can barely keep up with the interest payments let alone make a dent in the principal. </font></p><p align="justify"><font >"So many poor villagers are caught up in this cycle of poverty where they get into difficulty and go to a moneylender," said local development worker Vikrant Kumar. </font></p><p align="justify"><font >As part of its anti-poverty drive, the government is drafting a Right to Food Act which calls for a government-subsidized minimum of 25 kilograms (55 pounds) of wheat and rice a month for households below the poverty line. </font></p><p align="justify"><font >Hussain feeds his six children two meals a day -- potatoes and wheat chapatis or flat bread -- and eats one meal a day himself. Dal, the mainstay of Indian diets because of its high protein, is too expensive, he says. </font></p><p align="justify"><font >Malnutrition among under-fives in India stands at 43.5 percent -- worse than sub-Saharan Africa -- and only nine percentage points less than when India's "economic miracle" began in 1991. </font></p><p align="justify"><font >During the same period, India's gross domestic product per capita has jumped 50-fold. </font></p><p align="justify"><font >"We have gone from being a food deficit country to a food surplus country, which is a big achievement, but there's a lot to be done in terms of getting the food to people who need it," said Indian political author Ajoy Bose. </font></p><p align="justify"><font >"You look slightly stupid in claiming to be a major power or even a modern progressive state if you haven't done the very elementary basics for your marginalised population," Bose said. </font></p><p align="justify"><font >Mountains of grain and vegetables still rot each year due to poor storage and distribution. </font></p><p align="justify"><font >The immense gap between poor and rich has been pointed to by numerous commentators as a factor fuelling a growing Maoist insurgency that has spread across a large swathe of the country and is at its strongest in remote, impoverished regions. </font></p><p align="justify"><font >"It is not just poverty that is increasing, it also the inequality," said senior Indian communist leader Brinda Karat. </font></p><p align="justify"><font >The government insists it needs double-digit growth to eradicate poverty, but New Delhi-based food and trade policy analyst Devinder Sharma argues that effective distribution of wealth is the real key. </font></p><p align="justify"><font >"We are already on a growth trajectory, but people are getting poorer. Eradicating poverty is not woven into growth," he said.</font></p><p align="justify"><font ></font></p> </font> </td> </tr> <tr> <td> </td> </tr> <tr> <td height="50" style="border-top:1px solid #000; border-bottom:1px solid #000;padding-top:10px;"> <form><input type="button" value=" Print this page " onclick="window.print();return false;"/></form> </td> </tr> </table></body> </html>' } $maxBufferLength = (int) 8192 $file = '/home/brlfuser/public_html/vendor/cakephp/cakephp/src/Error/Debugger.php' $line = (int) 853 $message = 'Unable to emit headers. Headers sent in file=/home/brlfuser/public_html/vendor/cakephp/cakephp/src/Error/Debugger.php line=853'Cake\Http\ResponseEmitter::emit() - CORE/src/Http/ResponseEmitter.php, line 48 Cake\Http\Server::emit() - CORE/src/Http/Server.php, line 141 [main] - ROOT/webroot/index.php, line 39
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'' : 'none')">Context</a><pre id="cakeErr67f372e5609df-code" class="cake-code-dump" style="display: none;"><code><span style="color: #000000"><span style="color: #0000BB"></span><span style="color: #007700"><</span><span style="color: #0000BB">head</span><span style="color: #007700">> </span></span></code> <span class="code-highlight"><code><span style="color: #000000"> <link rel="canonical" href="<span style="color: #0000BB"><?php </span><span style="color: #007700">echo </span><span style="color: #0000BB">Configure</span><span style="color: #007700">::</span><span style="color: #0000BB">read</span><span style="color: #007700">(</span><span style="color: #DD0000">'SITE_URL'</span><span style="color: #007700">); </span><span style="color: #0000BB">?><?php </span><span style="color: #007700">echo </span><span style="color: #0000BB">$urlPrefix</span><span style="color: #007700">;</span><span style="color: #0000BB">?><?php </span><span style="color: #007700">echo </span><span style="color: #0000BB">$article_current</span><span style="color: #007700">-></span><span style="color: #0000BB">category</span><span style="color: #007700">-></span><span style="color: #0000BB">slug</span><span style="color: #007700">; </span><span style="color: #0000BB">?></span>/<span style="color: #0000BB"><?php </span><span style="color: #007700">echo </span><span style="color: #0000BB">$article_current</span><span style="color: #007700">-></span><span style="color: #0000BB">seo_url</span><span style="color: #007700">; </span><span style="color: #0000BB">?></span>.html"/> </span></code></span> <code><span style="color: #000000"><span style="color: #0000BB"> </span><span style="color: #007700"><</span><span style="color: #0000BB">meta http</span><span style="color: #007700">-</span><span style="color: #0000BB">equiv</span><span style="color: #007700">=</span><span style="color: #DD0000">"Content-Type" </span><span style="color: #0000BB">content</span><span style="color: #007700">=</span><span style="color: #DD0000">"text/html; charset=utf-8"</span><span style="color: #007700">/> </span></span></code></pre><pre id="cakeErr67f372e5609df-context" class="cake-context" style="display: none;">$viewFile = '/home/brlfuser/public_html/src/Template/Layout/printlayout.ctp' $dataForView = [ 'article_current' => object(App\Model\Entity\Article) { 'id' => (int) 2521, 'title' => 'Poverty haunts India's economic miracle', 'subheading' => '', 'description' => '<p align="justify"> <font face="arial,helvetica,sans-serif" size="3"></font> </p> <p align="justify"> <br /> <font face="arial,helvetica,sans-serif" size="3">When flames from an open cooking fire raced through Fida Hussein's shack in northern India, it was a disaster for him and his poverty-stricken family. </font> </p> <p align="justify"> <font face="arial,helvetica,sans-serif" size="3">&quot;We have nothing,&quot; said Hussein as he stood in the ruins of his hut through which the sky could be seen between the burnt roof timbers in a remote corner of Uttar Pradesh, India's most populous state. </font> </p> <p align="justify"> <font face="arial,helvetica,sans-serif" size="3">India's number of millionaires grew by 51 percent to 126,700 in 2009, according to US investment bank Merrill Lynch and consultants Capgemini, boosted by a buoyant economy which grew 8.6 percent in the last fiscal quarter. </font> </p> <p align="justify"> <font face="arial,helvetica,sans-serif" size="3">But increasing wealth has not trickled down to the likes of 40-year-old Hussein, a landless labourer whose seamed face is prematurely aged, and his family of six children who have no toys, books or other possessions. </font> </p> <p align="justify"> <font face="arial,helvetica,sans-serif" size="3">&quot;We have no clothes, no furniture,&quot; he said, gesturing to what remained of his burned out shack which he had roughly patched up with plastic bags. </font> </p> <p align="justify"> <font face="arial,helvetica,sans-serif" size="3">&quot;We have only one quilt -- eight of us sleep under it in winter,&quot; he said, as his children played in the dirt yard outside the hut. &quot;But there's no use in crying -- no one hears us,&quot; he added. </font> </p> <p align="justify"> <font face="arial,helvetica,sans-serif" size="3">Like the more than 400 million Indians who have no electricity, Hussein's home has has no lighting and there is no running water in the huts in his village, which lies 60 kilometres (40 miles) from the state capital Lucknow. </font> </p> <p align="justify"> <font face="arial,helvetica,sans-serif" size="3">In 1947, in his midnight independence address, India's first prime minister, Jawaharlal Nehru, called for &quot;the ending of poverty and ignorance and disease and inequality of opportunity.&quot; </font> </p> <p align="justify"> <font face="arial,helvetica,sans-serif" size="3">It's an end that still seems a long way off. </font> </p> <p align="justify"> <font face="arial,helvetica,sans-serif" size="3"><em>JUMP IN NUMBER OF INDIANS BELOW POVERTY LINE </em></font> </p> <p align="justify"> <font face="arial,helvetica,sans-serif" size="3">In April, the Planning Commission, India's premier economic policymaking body, raised its estimate of the number of Indians living in poverty -- unable to meet their nutritional needs -- from 28 percent to 37 percent, which is roughly 440 million of the 1.2 billion population. </font> </p> <p align="justify"> <font face="arial,helvetica,sans-serif" size="3">A new international Mulitple Poverty Index, developed at Oxford University and measuring a wide range of household-level deprivation, suggests that more people are mired in poverty in just eight Indian states than in the 26 poorest African countries. </font> </p> <p align="justify"> <font face="arial,helvetica,sans-serif" size="3">&quot;There are two categories growing in the 'Rising India'... the super rich, and the abysmally poor,&quot; noted newspaper editor M.J. Akbar in a recent column. </font> </p> <p align="justify"> <font face="arial,helvetica,sans-serif" size="3">The left-of-centre Congress government was re-elected on a pro-poor platform that promised to do something for its main support base in India's rural hinterlands. </font> </p> <p align="justify"> <font face="arial,helvetica,sans-serif" size="3">During its first term, it increased social spending, raising health and education budgets and launched a huge public works program -- the National Rural Employment Guarantee Act -- and a big loan repayment waiver for farmers. </font> </p> <p align="justify"> <font face="arial,helvetica,sans-serif" size="3">But Hussein, who does work for local farmers, says he has not managed to obtain a card needed to work in the jobs scheme. Others in the area complain that they only get a few days work with the programme. </font> </p> <p align="justify"> <font face="arial,helvetica,sans-serif" size="3">Former premier Rajiv Gandhi once said only 15 percent of development money gets to its intended targets. While things have improved, there is still a lot of &quot;leakage&quot; from poverty programmes. </font> </p> <p align="justify"> <font face="arial,helvetica,sans-serif" size="3">The government will spend at least 250 billion dollars on services for the poor in the next five years but a recent report by investment house CLSA Asia Pacific Markets estimated more than 100 billion dollars would be skimmed off. </font> </p> <p align="justify"> <font face="arial,helvetica,sans-serif" size="3">&quot;There's personal gain going on at public cost where people who are supposed to look after the interests of the people accumulate large sums,&quot; Anupama Jha, executive director of Transparency International India, said. </font> </p> <p align="justify"> <font face="arial,helvetica,sans-serif" size="3">Corruption, she said, is rife -- percolating through government, the private sector, the police and the judiciary. </font> </p> <p align="justify"> <font face="arial,helvetica,sans-serif" size="3">&quot;There are signs of deterioration in behaviour where people who have access to money do not feel accountable to the people they represent,&quot; Jha said. </font> </p> <p align="justify"> <font face="arial,helvetica,sans-serif" size="3">&quot;The poor are not spared even in the case of targeted programmes&quot; and are often obliged to pay bribes to take advantage of public services, according to a recent study by the group. </font> </p> <p align="justify"> <font face="arial,helvetica,sans-serif" size="3"><em>STUCK IN MONEYLENDER TRAP </em></font> </p> <p align="justify"> <font face="arial,helvetica,sans-serif" size="3">Hardwari Lal, a labourer who has three children and whose wife is expecting a fourth, says he also has not received the card needed to get work. </font> </p> <p align="justify"> <font face="arial,helvetica,sans-serif" size="3">Lal, 32, owes a moneylender who is charging five percent interest a month on a 7,000 rupee (150-dollar) loan he took out for his son's hospital bill. </font> </p> <p align="justify"> <font face="arial,helvetica,sans-serif" size="3">&quot;There is only so much I can do,&quot; he said, adding he has no way of feeding his family properly as he can barely keep up with the interest payments let alone make a dent in the principal. </font> </p> <p align="justify"> <font face="arial,helvetica,sans-serif" size="3">&quot;So many poor villagers are caught up in this cycle of poverty where they get into difficulty and go to a moneylender,&quot; said local development worker Vikrant Kumar. </font> </p> <p align="justify"> <font face="arial,helvetica,sans-serif" size="3">As part of its anti-poverty drive, the government is drafting a Right to Food Act which calls for a government-subsidized minimum of 25 kilograms (55 pounds) of wheat and rice a month for households below the poverty line. </font> </p> <p align="justify"> <font face="arial,helvetica,sans-serif" size="3">Hussain feeds his six children two meals a day -- potatoes and wheat chapatis or flat bread -- and eats one meal a day himself. Dal, the mainstay of Indian diets because of its high protein, is too expensive, he says. </font> </p> <p align="justify"> <font face="arial,helvetica,sans-serif" size="3">Malnutrition among under-fives in India stands at 43.5 percent -- worse than sub-Saharan Africa -- and only nine percentage points less than when India's &quot;economic miracle&quot; began in 1991. </font> </p> <p align="justify"> <font face="arial,helvetica,sans-serif" size="3">During the same period, India's gross domestic product per capita has jumped 50-fold. </font> </p> <p align="justify"> <font face="arial,helvetica,sans-serif" size="3">&quot;We have gone from being a food deficit country to a food surplus country, which is a big achievement, but there's a lot to be done in terms of getting the food to people who need it,&quot; said Indian political author Ajoy Bose. </font> </p> <p align="justify"> <font face="arial,helvetica,sans-serif" size="3">&quot;You look slightly stupid in claiming to be a major power or even a modern progressive state if you haven't done the very elementary basics for your marginalised population,&quot; Bose said. </font> </p> <p align="justify"> <font face="arial,helvetica,sans-serif" size="3">Mountains of grain and vegetables still rot each year due to poor storage and distribution. </font> </p> <p align="justify"> <font face="arial,helvetica,sans-serif" size="3">The immense gap between poor and rich has been pointed to by numerous commentators as a factor fuelling a growing Maoist insurgency that has spread across a large swathe of the country and is at its strongest in remote, impoverished regions. </font> </p> <p align="justify"> <font face="arial,helvetica,sans-serif" size="3">&quot;It is not just poverty that is increasing, it also the inequality,&quot; said senior Indian communist leader Brinda Karat. </font> </p> <p align="justify"> <font face="arial,helvetica,sans-serif" size="3">The government insists it needs double-digit growth to eradicate poverty, but New Delhi-based food and trade policy analyst Devinder Sharma argues that effective distribution of wealth is the real key. </font> </p> <p align="justify"> <font face="arial,helvetica,sans-serif" size="3">&quot;We are already on a growth trajectory, but people are getting poorer. Eradicating poverty is not woven into growth,&quot; he said.</font> </p> <p align="justify"> <font face="arial,helvetica,sans-serif" size="3"></font> </p> ', 'credit_writer' => 'The Economic Times, 18 July, 2010, http://economictimes.indiatimes.com/news/economy/indicators/Poverty-haunts-Indias-economic-miracle/articleshow/6183209.cms', 'article_img' => '', 'article_img_thumb' => '', 'status' => (int) 1, 'show_on_home' => (int) 1, 'lang' => 'EN', 'category_id' => (int) 16, 'tag_keyword' => '', 'seo_url' => 'poverty-haunts-indias-economic-miracle-2605', 'meta_title' => null, 'meta_keywords' => null, 'meta_description' => null, 'noindex' => (int) 0, 'publish_date' => object(Cake\I18n\FrozenDate) {}, 'most_visit_section_id' => null, 'article_big_img' => null, 'liveid' => (int) 2605, 'created' => object(Cake\I18n\FrozenTime) {}, 'modified' => object(Cake\I18n\FrozenTime) {}, 'edate' => '', 'tags' => [ [maximum depth reached] ], 'category' => object(App\Model\Entity\Category) {}, '[new]' => false, '[accessible]' => [ [maximum depth reached] ], '[dirty]' => [[maximum depth reached]], '[original]' => [[maximum depth reached]], '[virtual]' => [[maximum depth reached]], '[hasErrors]' => false, '[errors]' => [[maximum depth reached]], '[invalid]' => [[maximum depth reached]], '[repository]' => 'Articles' }, 'articleid' => (int) 2521, 'metaTitle' => 'LATEST NEWS UPDATES | Poverty haunts India's economic miracle', 'metaKeywords' => 'Human Development,Human Development,Poverty', 'metaDesc' => ' When flames from an open cooking fire raced through Fida Hussein's shack in northern India, it was a disaster for him and his poverty-stricken family. &quot;We have nothing,&quot; said Hussein as he stood in the ruins of his hut through...', 'disp' => '<p align="justify"><font ></font></p><p align="justify"><br /><font >When flames from an open cooking fire raced through Fida Hussein's shack in northern India, it was a disaster for him and his poverty-stricken family. </font></p><p align="justify"><font >&quot;We have nothing,&quot; said Hussein as he stood in the ruins of his hut through which the sky could be seen between the burnt roof timbers in a remote corner of Uttar Pradesh, India's most populous state. </font></p><p align="justify"><font >India's number of millionaires grew by 51 percent to 126,700 in 2009, according to US investment bank Merrill Lynch and consultants Capgemini, boosted by a buoyant economy which grew 8.6 percent in the last fiscal quarter. </font></p><p align="justify"><font >But increasing wealth has not trickled down to the likes of 40-year-old Hussein, a landless labourer whose seamed face is prematurely aged, and his family of six children who have no toys, books or other possessions. </font></p><p align="justify"><font >&quot;We have no clothes, no furniture,&quot; he said, gesturing to what remained of his burned out shack which he had roughly patched up with plastic bags. </font></p><p align="justify"><font >&quot;We have only one quilt -- eight of us sleep under it in winter,&quot; he said, as his children played in the dirt yard outside the hut. &quot;But there's no use in crying -- no one hears us,&quot; he added. </font></p><p align="justify"><font >Like the more than 400 million Indians who have no electricity, Hussein's home has has no lighting and there is no running water in the huts in his village, which lies 60 kilometres (40 miles) from the state capital Lucknow. </font></p><p align="justify"><font >In 1947, in his midnight independence address, India's first prime minister, Jawaharlal Nehru, called for &quot;the ending of poverty and ignorance and disease and inequality of opportunity.&quot; </font></p><p align="justify"><font >It's an end that still seems a long way off. </font></p><p align="justify"><font ><em>JUMP IN NUMBER OF INDIANS BELOW POVERTY LINE </em></font></p><p align="justify"><font >In April, the Planning Commission, India's premier economic policymaking body, raised its estimate of the number of Indians living in poverty -- unable to meet their nutritional needs -- from 28 percent to 37 percent, which is roughly 440 million of the 1.2 billion population. </font></p><p align="justify"><font >A new international Mulitple Poverty Index, developed at Oxford University and measuring a wide range of household-level deprivation, suggests that more people are mired in poverty in just eight Indian states than in the 26 poorest African countries. </font></p><p align="justify"><font >&quot;There are two categories growing in the 'Rising India'... the super rich, and the abysmally poor,&quot; noted newspaper editor M.J. Akbar in a recent column. </font></p><p align="justify"><font >The left-of-centre Congress government was re-elected on a pro-poor platform that promised to do something for its main support base in India's rural hinterlands. </font></p><p align="justify"><font >During its first term, it increased social spending, raising health and education budgets and launched a huge public works program -- the National Rural Employment Guarantee Act -- and a big loan repayment waiver for farmers. </font></p><p align="justify"><font >But Hussein, who does work for local farmers, says he has not managed to obtain a card needed to work in the jobs scheme. Others in the area complain that they only get a few days work with the programme. </font></p><p align="justify"><font >Former premier Rajiv Gandhi once said only 15 percent of development money gets to its intended targets. While things have improved, there is still a lot of &quot;leakage&quot; from poverty programmes. </font></p><p align="justify"><font >The government will spend at least 250 billion dollars on services for the poor in the next five years but a recent report by investment house CLSA Asia Pacific Markets estimated more than 100 billion dollars would be skimmed off. </font></p><p align="justify"><font >&quot;There's personal gain going on at public cost where people who are supposed to look after the interests of the people accumulate large sums,&quot; Anupama Jha, executive director of Transparency International India, said. </font></p><p align="justify"><font >Corruption, she said, is rife -- percolating through government, the private sector, the police and the judiciary. </font></p><p align="justify"><font >&quot;There are signs of deterioration in behaviour where people who have access to money do not feel accountable to the people they represent,&quot; Jha said. </font></p><p align="justify"><font >&quot;The poor are not spared even in the case of targeted programmes&quot; and are often obliged to pay bribes to take advantage of public services, according to a recent study by the group. </font></p><p align="justify"><font ><em>STUCK IN MONEYLENDER TRAP </em></font></p><p align="justify"><font >Hardwari Lal, a labourer who has three children and whose wife is expecting a fourth, says he also has not received the card needed to get work. </font></p><p align="justify"><font >Lal, 32, owes a moneylender who is charging five percent interest a month on a 7,000 rupee (150-dollar) loan he took out for his son's hospital bill. </font></p><p align="justify"><font >&quot;There is only so much I can do,&quot; he said, adding he has no way of feeding his family properly as he can barely keep up with the interest payments let alone make a dent in the principal. </font></p><p align="justify"><font >&quot;So many poor villagers are caught up in this cycle of poverty where they get into difficulty and go to a moneylender,&quot; said local development worker Vikrant Kumar. </font></p><p align="justify"><font >As part of its anti-poverty drive, the government is drafting a Right to Food Act which calls for a government-subsidized minimum of 25 kilograms (55 pounds) of wheat and rice a month for households below the poverty line. </font></p><p align="justify"><font >Hussain feeds his six children two meals a day -- potatoes and wheat chapatis or flat bread -- and eats one meal a day himself. Dal, the mainstay of Indian diets because of its high protein, is too expensive, he says. </font></p><p align="justify"><font >Malnutrition among under-fives in India stands at 43.5 percent -- worse than sub-Saharan Africa -- and only nine percentage points less than when India's &quot;economic miracle&quot; began in 1991. </font></p><p align="justify"><font >During the same period, India's gross domestic product per capita has jumped 50-fold. </font></p><p align="justify"><font >&quot;We have gone from being a food deficit country to a food surplus country, which is a big achievement, but there's a lot to be done in terms of getting the food to people who need it,&quot; said Indian political author Ajoy Bose. </font></p><p align="justify"><font >&quot;You look slightly stupid in claiming to be a major power or even a modern progressive state if you haven't done the very elementary basics for your marginalised population,&quot; Bose said. </font></p><p align="justify"><font >Mountains of grain and vegetables still rot each year due to poor storage and distribution. </font></p><p align="justify"><font >The immense gap between poor and rich has been pointed to by numerous commentators as a factor fuelling a growing Maoist insurgency that has spread across a large swathe of the country and is at its strongest in remote, impoverished regions. </font></p><p align="justify"><font >&quot;It is not just poverty that is increasing, it also the inequality,&quot; said senior Indian communist leader Brinda Karat. </font></p><p align="justify"><font >The government insists it needs double-digit growth to eradicate poverty, but New Delhi-based food and trade policy analyst Devinder Sharma argues that effective distribution of wealth is the real key. </font></p><p align="justify"><font >&quot;We are already on a growth trajectory, but people are getting poorer. Eradicating poverty is not woven into growth,&quot; he said.</font></p><p align="justify"><font ></font></p>', 'lang' => 'English', 'SITE_URL' => 'https://im4change.in/', 'site_title' => 'im4change', 'adminprix' => 'admin' ] $article_current = object(App\Model\Entity\Article) { 'id' => (int) 2521, 'title' => 'Poverty haunts India's economic miracle', 'subheading' => '', 'description' => '<p align="justify"> <font face="arial,helvetica,sans-serif" size="3"></font> </p> <p align="justify"> <br /> <font face="arial,helvetica,sans-serif" size="3">When flames from an open cooking fire raced through Fida Hussein's shack in northern India, it was a disaster for him and his poverty-stricken family. </font> </p> <p align="justify"> <font face="arial,helvetica,sans-serif" size="3">&quot;We have nothing,&quot; said Hussein as he stood in the ruins of his hut through which the sky could be seen between the burnt roof timbers in a remote corner of Uttar Pradesh, India's most populous state. </font> </p> <p align="justify"> <font face="arial,helvetica,sans-serif" size="3">India's number of millionaires grew by 51 percent to 126,700 in 2009, according to US investment bank Merrill Lynch and consultants Capgemini, boosted by a buoyant economy which grew 8.6 percent in the last fiscal quarter. </font> </p> <p align="justify"> <font face="arial,helvetica,sans-serif" size="3">But increasing wealth has not trickled down to the likes of 40-year-old Hussein, a landless labourer whose seamed face is prematurely aged, and his family of six children who have no toys, books or other possessions. </font> </p> <p align="justify"> <font face="arial,helvetica,sans-serif" size="3">&quot;We have no clothes, no furniture,&quot; he said, gesturing to what remained of his burned out shack which he had roughly patched up with plastic bags. </font> </p> <p align="justify"> <font face="arial,helvetica,sans-serif" size="3">&quot;We have only one quilt -- eight of us sleep under it in winter,&quot; he said, as his children played in the dirt yard outside the hut. &quot;But there's no use in crying -- no one hears us,&quot; he added. </font> </p> <p align="justify"> <font face="arial,helvetica,sans-serif" size="3">Like the more than 400 million Indians who have no electricity, Hussein's home has has no lighting and there is no running water in the huts in his village, which lies 60 kilometres (40 miles) from the state capital Lucknow. </font> </p> <p align="justify"> <font face="arial,helvetica,sans-serif" size="3">In 1947, in his midnight independence address, India's first prime minister, Jawaharlal Nehru, called for &quot;the ending of poverty and ignorance and disease and inequality of opportunity.&quot; </font> </p> <p align="justify"> <font face="arial,helvetica,sans-serif" size="3">It's an end that still seems a long way off. </font> </p> <p align="justify"> <font face="arial,helvetica,sans-serif" size="3"><em>JUMP IN NUMBER OF INDIANS BELOW POVERTY LINE </em></font> </p> <p align="justify"> <font face="arial,helvetica,sans-serif" size="3">In April, the Planning Commission, India's premier economic policymaking body, raised its estimate of the number of Indians living in poverty -- unable to meet their nutritional needs -- from 28 percent to 37 percent, which is roughly 440 million of the 1.2 billion population. </font> </p> <p align="justify"> <font face="arial,helvetica,sans-serif" size="3">A new international Mulitple Poverty Index, developed at Oxford University and measuring a wide range of household-level deprivation, suggests that more people are mired in poverty in just eight Indian states than in the 26 poorest African countries. </font> </p> <p align="justify"> <font face="arial,helvetica,sans-serif" size="3">&quot;There are two categories growing in the 'Rising India'... the super rich, and the abysmally poor,&quot; noted newspaper editor M.J. Akbar in a recent column. </font> </p> <p align="justify"> <font face="arial,helvetica,sans-serif" size="3">The left-of-centre Congress government was re-elected on a pro-poor platform that promised to do something for its main support base in India's rural hinterlands. </font> </p> <p align="justify"> <font face="arial,helvetica,sans-serif" size="3">During its first term, it increased social spending, raising health and education budgets and launched a huge public works program -- the National Rural Employment Guarantee Act -- and a big loan repayment waiver for farmers. </font> </p> <p align="justify"> <font face="arial,helvetica,sans-serif" size="3">But Hussein, who does work for local farmers, says he has not managed to obtain a card needed to work in the jobs scheme. Others in the area complain that they only get a few days work with the programme. </font> </p> <p align="justify"> <font face="arial,helvetica,sans-serif" size="3">Former premier Rajiv Gandhi once said only 15 percent of development money gets to its intended targets. While things have improved, there is still a lot of &quot;leakage&quot; from poverty programmes. </font> </p> <p align="justify"> <font face="arial,helvetica,sans-serif" size="3">The government will spend at least 250 billion dollars on services for the poor in the next five years but a recent report by investment house CLSA Asia Pacific Markets estimated more than 100 billion dollars would be skimmed off. </font> </p> <p align="justify"> <font face="arial,helvetica,sans-serif" size="3">&quot;There's personal gain going on at public cost where people who are supposed to look after the interests of the people accumulate large sums,&quot; Anupama Jha, executive director of Transparency International India, said. </font> </p> <p align="justify"> <font face="arial,helvetica,sans-serif" size="3">Corruption, she said, is rife -- percolating through government, the private sector, the police and the judiciary. </font> </p> <p align="justify"> <font face="arial,helvetica,sans-serif" size="3">&quot;There are signs of deterioration in behaviour where people who have access to money do not feel accountable to the people they represent,&quot; Jha said. </font> </p> <p align="justify"> <font face="arial,helvetica,sans-serif" size="3">&quot;The poor are not spared even in the case of targeted programmes&quot; and are often obliged to pay bribes to take advantage of public services, according to a recent study by the group. </font> </p> <p align="justify"> <font face="arial,helvetica,sans-serif" size="3"><em>STUCK IN MONEYLENDER TRAP </em></font> </p> <p align="justify"> <font face="arial,helvetica,sans-serif" size="3">Hardwari Lal, a labourer who has three children and whose wife is expecting a fourth, says he also has not received the card needed to get work. </font> </p> <p align="justify"> <font face="arial,helvetica,sans-serif" size="3">Lal, 32, owes a moneylender who is charging five percent interest a month on a 7,000 rupee (150-dollar) loan he took out for his son's hospital bill. </font> </p> <p align="justify"> <font face="arial,helvetica,sans-serif" size="3">&quot;There is only so much I can do,&quot; he said, adding he has no way of feeding his family properly as he can barely keep up with the interest payments let alone make a dent in the principal. </font> </p> <p align="justify"> <font face="arial,helvetica,sans-serif" size="3">&quot;So many poor villagers are caught up in this cycle of poverty where they get into difficulty and go to a moneylender,&quot; said local development worker Vikrant Kumar. </font> </p> <p align="justify"> <font face="arial,helvetica,sans-serif" size="3">As part of its anti-poverty drive, the government is drafting a Right to Food Act which calls for a government-subsidized minimum of 25 kilograms (55 pounds) of wheat and rice a month for households below the poverty line. </font> </p> <p align="justify"> <font face="arial,helvetica,sans-serif" size="3">Hussain feeds his six children two meals a day -- potatoes and wheat chapatis or flat bread -- and eats one meal a day himself. Dal, the mainstay of Indian diets because of its high protein, is too expensive, he says. </font> </p> <p align="justify"> <font face="arial,helvetica,sans-serif" size="3">Malnutrition among under-fives in India stands at 43.5 percent -- worse than sub-Saharan Africa -- and only nine percentage points less than when India's &quot;economic miracle&quot; began in 1991. </font> </p> <p align="justify"> <font face="arial,helvetica,sans-serif" size="3">During the same period, India's gross domestic product per capita has jumped 50-fold. </font> </p> <p align="justify"> <font face="arial,helvetica,sans-serif" size="3">&quot;We have gone from being a food deficit country to a food surplus country, which is a big achievement, but there's a lot to be done in terms of getting the food to people who need it,&quot; said Indian political author Ajoy Bose. </font> </p> <p align="justify"> <font face="arial,helvetica,sans-serif" size="3">&quot;You look slightly stupid in claiming to be a major power or even a modern progressive state if you haven't done the very elementary basics for your marginalised population,&quot; Bose said. </font> </p> <p align="justify"> <font face="arial,helvetica,sans-serif" size="3">Mountains of grain and vegetables still rot each year due to poor storage and distribution. </font> </p> <p align="justify"> <font face="arial,helvetica,sans-serif" size="3">The immense gap between poor and rich has been pointed to by numerous commentators as a factor fuelling a growing Maoist insurgency that has spread across a large swathe of the country and is at its strongest in remote, impoverished regions. </font> </p> <p align="justify"> <font face="arial,helvetica,sans-serif" size="3">&quot;It is not just poverty that is increasing, it also the inequality,&quot; said senior Indian communist leader Brinda Karat. </font> </p> <p align="justify"> <font face="arial,helvetica,sans-serif" size="3">The government insists it needs double-digit growth to eradicate poverty, but New Delhi-based food and trade policy analyst Devinder Sharma argues that effective distribution of wealth is the real key. </font> </p> <p align="justify"> <font face="arial,helvetica,sans-serif" size="3">&quot;We are already on a growth trajectory, but people are getting poorer. Eradicating poverty is not woven into growth,&quot; he said.</font> </p> <p align="justify"> <font face="arial,helvetica,sans-serif" size="3"></font> </p> ', 'credit_writer' => 'The Economic Times, 18 July, 2010, http://economictimes.indiatimes.com/news/economy/indicators/Poverty-haunts-Indias-economic-miracle/articleshow/6183209.cms', 'article_img' => '', 'article_img_thumb' => '', 'status' => (int) 1, 'show_on_home' => (int) 1, 'lang' => 'EN', 'category_id' => (int) 16, 'tag_keyword' => '', 'seo_url' => 'poverty-haunts-indias-economic-miracle-2605', 'meta_title' => null, 'meta_keywords' => null, 'meta_description' => null, 'noindex' => (int) 0, 'publish_date' => object(Cake\I18n\FrozenDate) {}, 'most_visit_section_id' => null, 'article_big_img' => null, 'liveid' => (int) 2605, 'created' => object(Cake\I18n\FrozenTime) {}, 'modified' => object(Cake\I18n\FrozenTime) {}, 'edate' => '', 'tags' => [ (int) 0 => object(Cake\ORM\Entity) {}, (int) 1 => object(Cake\ORM\Entity) {}, (int) 2 => object(Cake\ORM\Entity) {} ], 'category' => object(App\Model\Entity\Category) {}, '[new]' => false, '[accessible]' => [ '*' => true, 'id' => false ], '[dirty]' => [], '[original]' => [], '[virtual]' => [], '[hasErrors]' => false, '[errors]' => [], '[invalid]' => [], '[repository]' => 'Articles' } $articleid = (int) 2521 $metaTitle = 'LATEST NEWS UPDATES | Poverty haunts India's economic miracle' $metaKeywords = 'Human Development,Human Development,Poverty' $metaDesc = ' When flames from an open cooking fire raced through Fida Hussein's shack in northern India, it was a disaster for him and his poverty-stricken family. &quot;We have nothing,&quot; said Hussein as he stood in the ruins of his hut through...' $disp = '<p align="justify"><font ></font></p><p align="justify"><br /><font >When flames from an open cooking fire raced through Fida Hussein's shack in northern India, it was a disaster for him and his poverty-stricken family. </font></p><p align="justify"><font >&quot;We have nothing,&quot; said Hussein as he stood in the ruins of his hut through which the sky could be seen between the burnt roof timbers in a remote corner of Uttar Pradesh, India's most populous state. </font></p><p align="justify"><font >India's number of millionaires grew by 51 percent to 126,700 in 2009, according to US investment bank Merrill Lynch and consultants Capgemini, boosted by a buoyant economy which grew 8.6 percent in the last fiscal quarter. </font></p><p align="justify"><font >But increasing wealth has not trickled down to the likes of 40-year-old Hussein, a landless labourer whose seamed face is prematurely aged, and his family of six children who have no toys, books or other possessions. </font></p><p align="justify"><font >&quot;We have no clothes, no furniture,&quot; he said, gesturing to what remained of his burned out shack which he had roughly patched up with plastic bags. </font></p><p align="justify"><font >&quot;We have only one quilt -- eight of us sleep under it in winter,&quot; he said, as his children played in the dirt yard outside the hut. &quot;But there's no use in crying -- no one hears us,&quot; he added. </font></p><p align="justify"><font >Like the more than 400 million Indians who have no electricity, Hussein's home has has no lighting and there is no running water in the huts in his village, which lies 60 kilometres (40 miles) from the state capital Lucknow. </font></p><p align="justify"><font >In 1947, in his midnight independence address, India's first prime minister, Jawaharlal Nehru, called for &quot;the ending of poverty and ignorance and disease and inequality of opportunity.&quot; </font></p><p align="justify"><font >It's an end that still seems a long way off. </font></p><p align="justify"><font ><em>JUMP IN NUMBER OF INDIANS BELOW POVERTY LINE </em></font></p><p align="justify"><font >In April, the Planning Commission, India's premier economic policymaking body, raised its estimate of the number of Indians living in poverty -- unable to meet their nutritional needs -- from 28 percent to 37 percent, which is roughly 440 million of the 1.2 billion population. </font></p><p align="justify"><font >A new international Mulitple Poverty Index, developed at Oxford University and measuring a wide range of household-level deprivation, suggests that more people are mired in poverty in just eight Indian states than in the 26 poorest African countries. </font></p><p align="justify"><font >&quot;There are two categories growing in the 'Rising India'... the super rich, and the abysmally poor,&quot; noted newspaper editor M.J. Akbar in a recent column. </font></p><p align="justify"><font >The left-of-centre Congress government was re-elected on a pro-poor platform that promised to do something for its main support base in India's rural hinterlands. </font></p><p align="justify"><font >During its first term, it increased social spending, raising health and education budgets and launched a huge public works program -- the National Rural Employment Guarantee Act -- and a big loan repayment waiver for farmers. </font></p><p align="justify"><font >But Hussein, who does work for local farmers, says he has not managed to obtain a card needed to work in the jobs scheme. Others in the area complain that they only get a few days work with the programme. </font></p><p align="justify"><font >Former premier Rajiv Gandhi once said only 15 percent of development money gets to its intended targets. While things have improved, there is still a lot of &quot;leakage&quot; from poverty programmes. </font></p><p align="justify"><font >The government will spend at least 250 billion dollars on services for the poor in the next five years but a recent report by investment house CLSA Asia Pacific Markets estimated more than 100 billion dollars would be skimmed off. </font></p><p align="justify"><font >&quot;There's personal gain going on at public cost where people who are supposed to look after the interests of the people accumulate large sums,&quot; Anupama Jha, executive director of Transparency International India, said. </font></p><p align="justify"><font >Corruption, she said, is rife -- percolating through government, the private sector, the police and the judiciary. </font></p><p align="justify"><font >&quot;There are signs of deterioration in behaviour where people who have access to money do not feel accountable to the people they represent,&quot; Jha said. </font></p><p align="justify"><font >&quot;The poor are not spared even in the case of targeted programmes&quot; and are often obliged to pay bribes to take advantage of public services, according to a recent study by the group. </font></p><p align="justify"><font ><em>STUCK IN MONEYLENDER TRAP </em></font></p><p align="justify"><font >Hardwari Lal, a labourer who has three children and whose wife is expecting a fourth, says he also has not received the card needed to get work. </font></p><p align="justify"><font >Lal, 32, owes a moneylender who is charging five percent interest a month on a 7,000 rupee (150-dollar) loan he took out for his son's hospital bill. </font></p><p align="justify"><font >&quot;There is only so much I can do,&quot; he said, adding he has no way of feeding his family properly as he can barely keep up with the interest payments let alone make a dent in the principal. </font></p><p align="justify"><font >&quot;So many poor villagers are caught up in this cycle of poverty where they get into difficulty and go to a moneylender,&quot; said local development worker Vikrant Kumar. </font></p><p align="justify"><font >As part of its anti-poverty drive, the government is drafting a Right to Food Act which calls for a government-subsidized minimum of 25 kilograms (55 pounds) of wheat and rice a month for households below the poverty line. </font></p><p align="justify"><font >Hussain feeds his six children two meals a day -- potatoes and wheat chapatis or flat bread -- and eats one meal a day himself. Dal, the mainstay of Indian diets because of its high protein, is too expensive, he says. </font></p><p align="justify"><font >Malnutrition among under-fives in India stands at 43.5 percent -- worse than sub-Saharan Africa -- and only nine percentage points less than when India's &quot;economic miracle&quot; began in 1991. </font></p><p align="justify"><font >During the same period, India's gross domestic product per capita has jumped 50-fold. </font></p><p align="justify"><font >&quot;We have gone from being a food deficit country to a food surplus country, which is a big achievement, but there's a lot to be done in terms of getting the food to people who need it,&quot; said Indian political author Ajoy Bose. </font></p><p align="justify"><font >&quot;You look slightly stupid in claiming to be a major power or even a modern progressive state if you haven't done the very elementary basics for your marginalised population,&quot; Bose said. </font></p><p align="justify"><font >Mountains of grain and vegetables still rot each year due to poor storage and distribution. </font></p><p align="justify"><font >The immense gap between poor and rich has been pointed to by numerous commentators as a factor fuelling a growing Maoist insurgency that has spread across a large swathe of the country and is at its strongest in remote, impoverished regions. </font></p><p align="justify"><font >&quot;It is not just poverty that is increasing, it also the inequality,&quot; said senior Indian communist leader Brinda Karat. </font></p><p align="justify"><font >The government insists it needs double-digit growth to eradicate poverty, but New Delhi-based food and trade policy analyst Devinder Sharma argues that effective distribution of wealth is the real key. </font></p><p align="justify"><font >&quot;We are already on a growth trajectory, but people are getting poorer. Eradicating poverty is not woven into growth,&quot; he said.</font></p><p align="justify"><font ></font></p>' $lang = 'English' $SITE_URL = 'https://im4change.in/' $site_title = 'im4change' $adminprix = 'admin'</pre><pre class="stack-trace">include - APP/Template/Layout/printlayout.ctp, line 8 Cake\View\View::_evaluate() - CORE/src/View/View.php, line 1413 Cake\View\View::_render() - CORE/src/View/View.php, line 1374 Cake\View\View::renderLayout() - CORE/src/View/View.php, line 927 Cake\View\View::render() - CORE/src/View/View.php, line 885 Cake\Controller\Controller::render() - CORE/src/Controller/Controller.php, line 791 Cake\Http\ActionDispatcher::_invoke() - CORE/src/Http/ActionDispatcher.php, line 126 Cake\Http\ActionDispatcher::dispatch() - CORE/src/Http/ActionDispatcher.php, line 94 Cake\Http\BaseApplication::__invoke() - CORE/src/Http/BaseApplication.php, line 235 Cake\Http\Runner::__invoke() - CORE/src/Http/Runner.php, line 65 Cake\Routing\Middleware\RoutingMiddleware::__invoke() - CORE/src/Routing/Middleware/RoutingMiddleware.php, line 162 Cake\Http\Runner::__invoke() - CORE/src/Http/Runner.php, line 65 Cake\Routing\Middleware\AssetMiddleware::__invoke() - CORE/src/Routing/Middleware/AssetMiddleware.php, line 88 Cake\Http\Runner::__invoke() - CORE/src/Http/Runner.php, line 65 Cake\Error\Middleware\ErrorHandlerMiddleware::__invoke() - CORE/src/Error/Middleware/ErrorHandlerMiddleware.php, line 96 Cake\Http\Runner::__invoke() - CORE/src/Http/Runner.php, line 65 Cake\Http\Runner::run() - CORE/src/Http/Runner.php, line 51</pre></div></pre>latest-news-updates/poverty-haunts-indias-economic-miracle-2605.html"/> <meta http-equiv="Content-Type" content="text/html; charset=utf-8"/> <link href="https://im4change.in/css/control.css" rel="stylesheet" type="text/css" media="all"/> <title>LATEST NEWS UPDATES | Poverty haunts India's economic miracle | Im4change.org</title> <meta name="description" content=" When flames from an open cooking fire raced through Fida Hussein's shack in northern India, it was a disaster for him and his poverty-stricken family. "We have nothing," said Hussein as he stood in the ruins of his hut through..."/> <script src="https://im4change.in/js/jquery-1.10.2.js"></script> <script type="text/javascript" src="https://im4change.in/js/jquery-migrate.min.js"></script> <script language="javascript" type="text/javascript"> $(document).ready(function () { var img = $("img")[0]; // Get my img elem var pic_real_width, pic_real_height; $("<img/>") // Make in memory copy of image to avoid css issues .attr("src", $(img).attr("src")) .load(function () { pic_real_width = this.width; // Note: $(this).width() will not pic_real_height = this.height; // work for in memory images. }); }); </script> <style type="text/css"> @media screen { div.divFooter { display: block; } } @media print { .printbutton { display: none !important; } } </style> </head> <body> <table cellpadding="0" cellspacing="0" border="0" width="98%" align="center"> <tr> <td class="top_bg"> <div class="divFooter"> <img src="https://im4change.in/images/logo1.jpg" height="59" border="0" alt="Resource centre on India's rural distress" style="padding-top:14px;"/> </div> </td> </tr> <tr> <td id="topspace"> </td> </tr> <tr id="topspace"> <td> </td> </tr> <tr> <td height="50" style="border-bottom:1px solid #000; padding-top:10px;" class="printbutton"> <form><input type="button" value=" Print this page " onclick="window.print();return false;"/></form> </td> </tr> <tr> <td width="100%"> <h1 class="news_headlines" style="font-style:normal"> <strong>Poverty haunts India's economic miracle</strong></h1> </td> </tr> <tr> <td width="100%" style="font-family:Arial, 'Segoe Script', 'Segoe UI', sans-serif, serif"><font size="3"> <p align="justify"><font ></font></p><p align="justify"><br /><font >When flames from an open cooking fire raced through Fida Hussein's shack in northern India, it was a disaster for him and his poverty-stricken family. </font></p><p align="justify"><font >"We have nothing," said Hussein as he stood in the ruins of his hut through which the sky could be seen between the burnt roof timbers in a remote corner of Uttar Pradesh, India's most populous state. </font></p><p align="justify"><font >India's number of millionaires grew by 51 percent to 126,700 in 2009, according to US investment bank Merrill Lynch and consultants Capgemini, boosted by a buoyant economy which grew 8.6 percent in the last fiscal quarter. </font></p><p align="justify"><font >But increasing wealth has not trickled down to the likes of 40-year-old Hussein, a landless labourer whose seamed face is prematurely aged, and his family of six children who have no toys, books or other possessions. </font></p><p align="justify"><font >"We have no clothes, no furniture," he said, gesturing to what remained of his burned out shack which he had roughly patched up with plastic bags. </font></p><p align="justify"><font >"We have only one quilt -- eight of us sleep under it in winter," he said, as his children played in the dirt yard outside the hut. "But there's no use in crying -- no one hears us," he added. </font></p><p align="justify"><font >Like the more than 400 million Indians who have no electricity, Hussein's home has has no lighting and there is no running water in the huts in his village, which lies 60 kilometres (40 miles) from the state capital Lucknow. </font></p><p align="justify"><font >In 1947, in his midnight independence address, India's first prime minister, Jawaharlal Nehru, called for "the ending of poverty and ignorance and disease and inequality of opportunity." </font></p><p align="justify"><font >It's an end that still seems a long way off. </font></p><p align="justify"><font ><em>JUMP IN NUMBER OF INDIANS BELOW POVERTY LINE </em></font></p><p align="justify"><font >In April, the Planning Commission, India's premier economic policymaking body, raised its estimate of the number of Indians living in poverty -- unable to meet their nutritional needs -- from 28 percent to 37 percent, which is roughly 440 million of the 1.2 billion population. </font></p><p align="justify"><font >A new international Mulitple Poverty Index, developed at Oxford University and measuring a wide range of household-level deprivation, suggests that more people are mired in poverty in just eight Indian states than in the 26 poorest African countries. </font></p><p align="justify"><font >"There are two categories growing in the 'Rising India'... the super rich, and the abysmally poor," noted newspaper editor M.J. Akbar in a recent column. </font></p><p align="justify"><font >The left-of-centre Congress government was re-elected on a pro-poor platform that promised to do something for its main support base in India's rural hinterlands. </font></p><p align="justify"><font >During its first term, it increased social spending, raising health and education budgets and launched a huge public works program -- the National Rural Employment Guarantee Act -- and a big loan repayment waiver for farmers. </font></p><p align="justify"><font >But Hussein, who does work for local farmers, says he has not managed to obtain a card needed to work in the jobs scheme. Others in the area complain that they only get a few days work with the programme. </font></p><p align="justify"><font >Former premier Rajiv Gandhi once said only 15 percent of development money gets to its intended targets. While things have improved, there is still a lot of "leakage" from poverty programmes. </font></p><p align="justify"><font >The government will spend at least 250 billion dollars on services for the poor in the next five years but a recent report by investment house CLSA Asia Pacific Markets estimated more than 100 billion dollars would be skimmed off. </font></p><p align="justify"><font >"There's personal gain going on at public cost where people who are supposed to look after the interests of the people accumulate large sums," Anupama Jha, executive director of Transparency International India, said. </font></p><p align="justify"><font >Corruption, she said, is rife -- percolating through government, the private sector, the police and the judiciary. </font></p><p align="justify"><font >"There are signs of deterioration in behaviour where people who have access to money do not feel accountable to the people they represent," Jha said. </font></p><p align="justify"><font >"The poor are not spared even in the case of targeted programmes" and are often obliged to pay bribes to take advantage of public services, according to a recent study by the group. </font></p><p align="justify"><font ><em>STUCK IN MONEYLENDER TRAP </em></font></p><p align="justify"><font >Hardwari Lal, a labourer who has three children and whose wife is expecting a fourth, says he also has not received the card needed to get work. </font></p><p align="justify"><font >Lal, 32, owes a moneylender who is charging five percent interest a month on a 7,000 rupee (150-dollar) loan he took out for his son's hospital bill. </font></p><p align="justify"><font >"There is only so much I can do," he said, adding he has no way of feeding his family properly as he can barely keep up with the interest payments let alone make a dent in the principal. </font></p><p align="justify"><font >"So many poor villagers are caught up in this cycle of poverty where they get into difficulty and go to a moneylender," said local development worker Vikrant Kumar. </font></p><p align="justify"><font >As part of its anti-poverty drive, the government is drafting a Right to Food Act which calls for a government-subsidized minimum of 25 kilograms (55 pounds) of wheat and rice a month for households below the poverty line. </font></p><p align="justify"><font >Hussain feeds his six children two meals a day -- potatoes and wheat chapatis or flat bread -- and eats one meal a day himself. Dal, the mainstay of Indian diets because of its high protein, is too expensive, he says. </font></p><p align="justify"><font >Malnutrition among under-fives in India stands at 43.5 percent -- worse than sub-Saharan Africa -- and only nine percentage points less than when India's "economic miracle" began in 1991. </font></p><p align="justify"><font >During the same period, India's gross domestic product per capita has jumped 50-fold. </font></p><p align="justify"><font >"We have gone from being a food deficit country to a food surplus country, which is a big achievement, but there's a lot to be done in terms of getting the food to people who need it," said Indian political author Ajoy Bose. </font></p><p align="justify"><font >"You look slightly stupid in claiming to be a major power or even a modern progressive state if you haven't done the very elementary basics for your marginalised population," Bose said. </font></p><p align="justify"><font >Mountains of grain and vegetables still rot each year due to poor storage and distribution. </font></p><p align="justify"><font >The immense gap between poor and rich has been pointed to by numerous commentators as a factor fuelling a growing Maoist insurgency that has spread across a large swathe of the country and is at its strongest in remote, impoverished regions. </font></p><p align="justify"><font >"It is not just poverty that is increasing, it also the inequality," said senior Indian communist leader Brinda Karat. </font></p><p align="justify"><font >The government insists it needs double-digit growth to eradicate poverty, but New Delhi-based food and trade policy analyst Devinder Sharma argues that effective distribution of wealth is the real key. </font></p><p align="justify"><font >"We are already on a growth trajectory, but people are getting poorer. Eradicating poverty is not woven into growth," he said.</font></p><p align="justify"><font ></font></p> </font> </td> </tr> <tr> <td> </td> </tr> <tr> <td height="50" style="border-top:1px solid #000; border-bottom:1px solid #000;padding-top:10px;"> <form><input type="button" value=" Print this page " onclick="window.print();return false;"/></form> </td> </tr> </table></body> </html>' } $reasonPhrase = 'OK'header - [internal], line ?? Cake\Http\ResponseEmitter::emitStatusLine() - CORE/src/Http/ResponseEmitter.php, line 148 Cake\Http\ResponseEmitter::emit() - CORE/src/Http/ResponseEmitter.php, line 54 Cake\Http\Server::emit() - CORE/src/Http/Server.php, line 141 [main] - ROOT/webroot/index.php, line 39
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'' : 'none')">Context</a><pre id="cakeErr67f372e5609df-code" class="cake-code-dump" style="display: none;"><code><span style="color: #000000"><span style="color: #0000BB"></span><span style="color: #007700"><</span><span style="color: #0000BB">head</span><span style="color: #007700">> </span></span></code> <span class="code-highlight"><code><span style="color: #000000"> <link rel="canonical" href="<span style="color: #0000BB"><?php </span><span style="color: #007700">echo </span><span style="color: #0000BB">Configure</span><span style="color: #007700">::</span><span style="color: #0000BB">read</span><span style="color: #007700">(</span><span style="color: #DD0000">'SITE_URL'</span><span style="color: #007700">); </span><span style="color: #0000BB">?><?php </span><span style="color: #007700">echo </span><span style="color: #0000BB">$urlPrefix</span><span style="color: #007700">;</span><span style="color: #0000BB">?><?php </span><span style="color: #007700">echo </span><span style="color: #0000BB">$article_current</span><span style="color: #007700">-></span><span style="color: #0000BB">category</span><span style="color: #007700">-></span><span style="color: #0000BB">slug</span><span style="color: #007700">; </span><span style="color: #0000BB">?></span>/<span style="color: #0000BB"><?php </span><span style="color: #007700">echo </span><span style="color: #0000BB">$article_current</span><span style="color: #007700">-></span><span style="color: #0000BB">seo_url</span><span style="color: #007700">; </span><span style="color: #0000BB">?></span>.html"/> </span></code></span> <code><span style="color: #000000"><span style="color: #0000BB"> </span><span style="color: #007700"><</span><span style="color: #0000BB">meta http</span><span style="color: #007700">-</span><span style="color: #0000BB">equiv</span><span style="color: #007700">=</span><span style="color: #DD0000">"Content-Type" </span><span style="color: #0000BB">content</span><span style="color: #007700">=</span><span style="color: #DD0000">"text/html; charset=utf-8"</span><span style="color: #007700">/> </span></span></code></pre><pre id="cakeErr67f372e5609df-context" class="cake-context" style="display: none;">$viewFile = '/home/brlfuser/public_html/src/Template/Layout/printlayout.ctp' $dataForView = [ 'article_current' => object(App\Model\Entity\Article) { 'id' => (int) 2521, 'title' => 'Poverty haunts India's economic miracle', 'subheading' => '', 'description' => '<p align="justify"> <font face="arial,helvetica,sans-serif" size="3"></font> </p> <p align="justify"> <br /> <font face="arial,helvetica,sans-serif" size="3">When flames from an open cooking fire raced through Fida Hussein's shack in northern India, it was a disaster for him and his poverty-stricken family. </font> </p> <p align="justify"> <font face="arial,helvetica,sans-serif" size="3">&quot;We have nothing,&quot; said Hussein as he stood in the ruins of his hut through which the sky could be seen between the burnt roof timbers in a remote corner of Uttar Pradesh, India's most populous state. </font> </p> <p align="justify"> <font face="arial,helvetica,sans-serif" size="3">India's number of millionaires grew by 51 percent to 126,700 in 2009, according to US investment bank Merrill Lynch and consultants Capgemini, boosted by a buoyant economy which grew 8.6 percent in the last fiscal quarter. </font> </p> <p align="justify"> <font face="arial,helvetica,sans-serif" size="3">But increasing wealth has not trickled down to the likes of 40-year-old Hussein, a landless labourer whose seamed face is prematurely aged, and his family of six children who have no toys, books or other possessions. </font> </p> <p align="justify"> <font face="arial,helvetica,sans-serif" size="3">&quot;We have no clothes, no furniture,&quot; he said, gesturing to what remained of his burned out shack which he had roughly patched up with plastic bags. </font> </p> <p align="justify"> <font face="arial,helvetica,sans-serif" size="3">&quot;We have only one quilt -- eight of us sleep under it in winter,&quot; he said, as his children played in the dirt yard outside the hut. &quot;But there's no use in crying -- no one hears us,&quot; he added. </font> </p> <p align="justify"> <font face="arial,helvetica,sans-serif" size="3">Like the more than 400 million Indians who have no electricity, Hussein's home has has no lighting and there is no running water in the huts in his village, which lies 60 kilometres (40 miles) from the state capital Lucknow. </font> </p> <p align="justify"> <font face="arial,helvetica,sans-serif" size="3">In 1947, in his midnight independence address, India's first prime minister, Jawaharlal Nehru, called for &quot;the ending of poverty and ignorance and disease and inequality of opportunity.&quot; </font> </p> <p align="justify"> <font face="arial,helvetica,sans-serif" size="3">It's an end that still seems a long way off. </font> </p> <p align="justify"> <font face="arial,helvetica,sans-serif" size="3"><em>JUMP IN NUMBER OF INDIANS BELOW POVERTY LINE </em></font> </p> <p align="justify"> <font face="arial,helvetica,sans-serif" size="3">In April, the Planning Commission, India's premier economic policymaking body, raised its estimate of the number of Indians living in poverty -- unable to meet their nutritional needs -- from 28 percent to 37 percent, which is roughly 440 million of the 1.2 billion population. </font> </p> <p align="justify"> <font face="arial,helvetica,sans-serif" size="3">A new international Mulitple Poverty Index, developed at Oxford University and measuring a wide range of household-level deprivation, suggests that more people are mired in poverty in just eight Indian states than in the 26 poorest African countries. </font> </p> <p align="justify"> <font face="arial,helvetica,sans-serif" size="3">&quot;There are two categories growing in the 'Rising India'... the super rich, and the abysmally poor,&quot; noted newspaper editor M.J. Akbar in a recent column. </font> </p> <p align="justify"> <font face="arial,helvetica,sans-serif" size="3">The left-of-centre Congress government was re-elected on a pro-poor platform that promised to do something for its main support base in India's rural hinterlands. </font> </p> <p align="justify"> <font face="arial,helvetica,sans-serif" size="3">During its first term, it increased social spending, raising health and education budgets and launched a huge public works program -- the National Rural Employment Guarantee Act -- and a big loan repayment waiver for farmers. </font> </p> <p align="justify"> <font face="arial,helvetica,sans-serif" size="3">But Hussein, who does work for local farmers, says he has not managed to obtain a card needed to work in the jobs scheme. Others in the area complain that they only get a few days work with the programme. </font> </p> <p align="justify"> <font face="arial,helvetica,sans-serif" size="3">Former premier Rajiv Gandhi once said only 15 percent of development money gets to its intended targets. While things have improved, there is still a lot of &quot;leakage&quot; from poverty programmes. </font> </p> <p align="justify"> <font face="arial,helvetica,sans-serif" size="3">The government will spend at least 250 billion dollars on services for the poor in the next five years but a recent report by investment house CLSA Asia Pacific Markets estimated more than 100 billion dollars would be skimmed off. </font> </p> <p align="justify"> <font face="arial,helvetica,sans-serif" size="3">&quot;There's personal gain going on at public cost where people who are supposed to look after the interests of the people accumulate large sums,&quot; Anupama Jha, executive director of Transparency International India, said. </font> </p> <p align="justify"> <font face="arial,helvetica,sans-serif" size="3">Corruption, she said, is rife -- percolating through government, the private sector, the police and the judiciary. </font> </p> <p align="justify"> <font face="arial,helvetica,sans-serif" size="3">&quot;There are signs of deterioration in behaviour where people who have access to money do not feel accountable to the people they represent,&quot; Jha said. </font> </p> <p align="justify"> <font face="arial,helvetica,sans-serif" size="3">&quot;The poor are not spared even in the case of targeted programmes&quot; and are often obliged to pay bribes to take advantage of public services, according to a recent study by the group. </font> </p> <p align="justify"> <font face="arial,helvetica,sans-serif" size="3"><em>STUCK IN MONEYLENDER TRAP </em></font> </p> <p align="justify"> <font face="arial,helvetica,sans-serif" size="3">Hardwari Lal, a labourer who has three children and whose wife is expecting a fourth, says he also has not received the card needed to get work. </font> </p> <p align="justify"> <font face="arial,helvetica,sans-serif" size="3">Lal, 32, owes a moneylender who is charging five percent interest a month on a 7,000 rupee (150-dollar) loan he took out for his son's hospital bill. </font> </p> <p align="justify"> <font face="arial,helvetica,sans-serif" size="3">&quot;There is only so much I can do,&quot; he said, adding he has no way of feeding his family properly as he can barely keep up with the interest payments let alone make a dent in the principal. </font> </p> <p align="justify"> <font face="arial,helvetica,sans-serif" size="3">&quot;So many poor villagers are caught up in this cycle of poverty where they get into difficulty and go to a moneylender,&quot; said local development worker Vikrant Kumar. </font> </p> <p align="justify"> <font face="arial,helvetica,sans-serif" size="3">As part of its anti-poverty drive, the government is drafting a Right to Food Act which calls for a government-subsidized minimum of 25 kilograms (55 pounds) of wheat and rice a month for households below the poverty line. </font> </p> <p align="justify"> <font face="arial,helvetica,sans-serif" size="3">Hussain feeds his six children two meals a day -- potatoes and wheat chapatis or flat bread -- and eats one meal a day himself. Dal, the mainstay of Indian diets because of its high protein, is too expensive, he says. </font> </p> <p align="justify"> <font face="arial,helvetica,sans-serif" size="3">Malnutrition among under-fives in India stands at 43.5 percent -- worse than sub-Saharan Africa -- and only nine percentage points less than when India's &quot;economic miracle&quot; began in 1991. </font> </p> <p align="justify"> <font face="arial,helvetica,sans-serif" size="3">During the same period, India's gross domestic product per capita has jumped 50-fold. </font> </p> <p align="justify"> <font face="arial,helvetica,sans-serif" size="3">&quot;We have gone from being a food deficit country to a food surplus country, which is a big achievement, but there's a lot to be done in terms of getting the food to people who need it,&quot; said Indian political author Ajoy Bose. </font> </p> <p align="justify"> <font face="arial,helvetica,sans-serif" size="3">&quot;You look slightly stupid in claiming to be a major power or even a modern progressive state if you haven't done the very elementary basics for your marginalised population,&quot; Bose said. </font> </p> <p align="justify"> <font face="arial,helvetica,sans-serif" size="3">Mountains of grain and vegetables still rot each year due to poor storage and distribution. </font> </p> <p align="justify"> <font face="arial,helvetica,sans-serif" size="3">The immense gap between poor and rich has been pointed to by numerous commentators as a factor fuelling a growing Maoist insurgency that has spread across a large swathe of the country and is at its strongest in remote, impoverished regions. </font> </p> <p align="justify"> <font face="arial,helvetica,sans-serif" size="3">&quot;It is not just poverty that is increasing, it also the inequality,&quot; said senior Indian communist leader Brinda Karat. </font> </p> <p align="justify"> <font face="arial,helvetica,sans-serif" size="3">The government insists it needs double-digit growth to eradicate poverty, but New Delhi-based food and trade policy analyst Devinder Sharma argues that effective distribution of wealth is the real key. </font> </p> <p align="justify"> <font face="arial,helvetica,sans-serif" size="3">&quot;We are already on a growth trajectory, but people are getting poorer. Eradicating poverty is not woven into growth,&quot; he said.</font> </p> <p align="justify"> <font face="arial,helvetica,sans-serif" size="3"></font> </p> ', 'credit_writer' => 'The Economic Times, 18 July, 2010, http://economictimes.indiatimes.com/news/economy/indicators/Poverty-haunts-Indias-economic-miracle/articleshow/6183209.cms', 'article_img' => '', 'article_img_thumb' => '', 'status' => (int) 1, 'show_on_home' => (int) 1, 'lang' => 'EN', 'category_id' => (int) 16, 'tag_keyword' => '', 'seo_url' => 'poverty-haunts-indias-economic-miracle-2605', 'meta_title' => null, 'meta_keywords' => null, 'meta_description' => null, 'noindex' => (int) 0, 'publish_date' => object(Cake\I18n\FrozenDate) {}, 'most_visit_section_id' => null, 'article_big_img' => null, 'liveid' => (int) 2605, 'created' => object(Cake\I18n\FrozenTime) {}, 'modified' => object(Cake\I18n\FrozenTime) {}, 'edate' => '', 'tags' => [ [maximum depth reached] ], 'category' => object(App\Model\Entity\Category) {}, '[new]' => false, '[accessible]' => [ [maximum depth reached] ], '[dirty]' => [[maximum depth reached]], '[original]' => [[maximum depth reached]], '[virtual]' => [[maximum depth reached]], '[hasErrors]' => false, '[errors]' => [[maximum depth reached]], '[invalid]' => [[maximum depth reached]], '[repository]' => 'Articles' }, 'articleid' => (int) 2521, 'metaTitle' => 'LATEST NEWS UPDATES | Poverty haunts India's economic miracle', 'metaKeywords' => 'Human Development,Human Development,Poverty', 'metaDesc' => ' When flames from an open cooking fire raced through Fida Hussein's shack in northern India, it was a disaster for him and his poverty-stricken family. &quot;We have nothing,&quot; said Hussein as he stood in the ruins of his hut through...', 'disp' => '<p align="justify"><font ></font></p><p align="justify"><br /><font >When flames from an open cooking fire raced through Fida Hussein's shack in northern India, it was a disaster for him and his poverty-stricken family. </font></p><p align="justify"><font >&quot;We have nothing,&quot; said Hussein as he stood in the ruins of his hut through which the sky could be seen between the burnt roof timbers in a remote corner of Uttar Pradesh, India's most populous state. </font></p><p align="justify"><font >India's number of millionaires grew by 51 percent to 126,700 in 2009, according to US investment bank Merrill Lynch and consultants Capgemini, boosted by a buoyant economy which grew 8.6 percent in the last fiscal quarter. </font></p><p align="justify"><font >But increasing wealth has not trickled down to the likes of 40-year-old Hussein, a landless labourer whose seamed face is prematurely aged, and his family of six children who have no toys, books or other possessions. </font></p><p align="justify"><font >&quot;We have no clothes, no furniture,&quot; he said, gesturing to what remained of his burned out shack which he had roughly patched up with plastic bags. </font></p><p align="justify"><font >&quot;We have only one quilt -- eight of us sleep under it in winter,&quot; he said, as his children played in the dirt yard outside the hut. &quot;But there's no use in crying -- no one hears us,&quot; he added. </font></p><p align="justify"><font >Like the more than 400 million Indians who have no electricity, Hussein's home has has no lighting and there is no running water in the huts in his village, which lies 60 kilometres (40 miles) from the state capital Lucknow. </font></p><p align="justify"><font >In 1947, in his midnight independence address, India's first prime minister, Jawaharlal Nehru, called for &quot;the ending of poverty and ignorance and disease and inequality of opportunity.&quot; </font></p><p align="justify"><font >It's an end that still seems a long way off. </font></p><p align="justify"><font ><em>JUMP IN NUMBER OF INDIANS BELOW POVERTY LINE </em></font></p><p align="justify"><font >In April, the Planning Commission, India's premier economic policymaking body, raised its estimate of the number of Indians living in poverty -- unable to meet their nutritional needs -- from 28 percent to 37 percent, which is roughly 440 million of the 1.2 billion population. </font></p><p align="justify"><font >A new international Mulitple Poverty Index, developed at Oxford University and measuring a wide range of household-level deprivation, suggests that more people are mired in poverty in just eight Indian states than in the 26 poorest African countries. </font></p><p align="justify"><font >&quot;There are two categories growing in the 'Rising India'... the super rich, and the abysmally poor,&quot; noted newspaper editor M.J. Akbar in a recent column. </font></p><p align="justify"><font >The left-of-centre Congress government was re-elected on a pro-poor platform that promised to do something for its main support base in India's rural hinterlands. </font></p><p align="justify"><font >During its first term, it increased social spending, raising health and education budgets and launched a huge public works program -- the National Rural Employment Guarantee Act -- and a big loan repayment waiver for farmers. </font></p><p align="justify"><font >But Hussein, who does work for local farmers, says he has not managed to obtain a card needed to work in the jobs scheme. Others in the area complain that they only get a few days work with the programme. </font></p><p align="justify"><font >Former premier Rajiv Gandhi once said only 15 percent of development money gets to its intended targets. While things have improved, there is still a lot of &quot;leakage&quot; from poverty programmes. </font></p><p align="justify"><font >The government will spend at least 250 billion dollars on services for the poor in the next five years but a recent report by investment house CLSA Asia Pacific Markets estimated more than 100 billion dollars would be skimmed off. </font></p><p align="justify"><font >&quot;There's personal gain going on at public cost where people who are supposed to look after the interests of the people accumulate large sums,&quot; Anupama Jha, executive director of Transparency International India, said. </font></p><p align="justify"><font >Corruption, she said, is rife -- percolating through government, the private sector, the police and the judiciary. </font></p><p align="justify"><font >&quot;There are signs of deterioration in behaviour where people who have access to money do not feel accountable to the people they represent,&quot; Jha said. </font></p><p align="justify"><font >&quot;The poor are not spared even in the case of targeted programmes&quot; and are often obliged to pay bribes to take advantage of public services, according to a recent study by the group. </font></p><p align="justify"><font ><em>STUCK IN MONEYLENDER TRAP </em></font></p><p align="justify"><font >Hardwari Lal, a labourer who has three children and whose wife is expecting a fourth, says he also has not received the card needed to get work. </font></p><p align="justify"><font >Lal, 32, owes a moneylender who is charging five percent interest a month on a 7,000 rupee (150-dollar) loan he took out for his son's hospital bill. </font></p><p align="justify"><font >&quot;There is only so much I can do,&quot; he said, adding he has no way of feeding his family properly as he can barely keep up with the interest payments let alone make a dent in the principal. </font></p><p align="justify"><font >&quot;So many poor villagers are caught up in this cycle of poverty where they get into difficulty and go to a moneylender,&quot; said local development worker Vikrant Kumar. </font></p><p align="justify"><font >As part of its anti-poverty drive, the government is drafting a Right to Food Act which calls for a government-subsidized minimum of 25 kilograms (55 pounds) of wheat and rice a month for households below the poverty line. </font></p><p align="justify"><font >Hussain feeds his six children two meals a day -- potatoes and wheat chapatis or flat bread -- and eats one meal a day himself. Dal, the mainstay of Indian diets because of its high protein, is too expensive, he says. </font></p><p align="justify"><font >Malnutrition among under-fives in India stands at 43.5 percent -- worse than sub-Saharan Africa -- and only nine percentage points less than when India's &quot;economic miracle&quot; began in 1991. </font></p><p align="justify"><font >During the same period, India's gross domestic product per capita has jumped 50-fold. </font></p><p align="justify"><font >&quot;We have gone from being a food deficit country to a food surplus country, which is a big achievement, but there's a lot to be done in terms of getting the food to people who need it,&quot; said Indian political author Ajoy Bose. </font></p><p align="justify"><font >&quot;You look slightly stupid in claiming to be a major power or even a modern progressive state if you haven't done the very elementary basics for your marginalised population,&quot; Bose said. </font></p><p align="justify"><font >Mountains of grain and vegetables still rot each year due to poor storage and distribution. </font></p><p align="justify"><font >The immense gap between poor and rich has been pointed to by numerous commentators as a factor fuelling a growing Maoist insurgency that has spread across a large swathe of the country and is at its strongest in remote, impoverished regions. </font></p><p align="justify"><font >&quot;It is not just poverty that is increasing, it also the inequality,&quot; said senior Indian communist leader Brinda Karat. </font></p><p align="justify"><font >The government insists it needs double-digit growth to eradicate poverty, but New Delhi-based food and trade policy analyst Devinder Sharma argues that effective distribution of wealth is the real key. </font></p><p align="justify"><font >&quot;We are already on a growth trajectory, but people are getting poorer. Eradicating poverty is not woven into growth,&quot; he said.</font></p><p align="justify"><font ></font></p>', 'lang' => 'English', 'SITE_URL' => 'https://im4change.in/', 'site_title' => 'im4change', 'adminprix' => 'admin' ] $article_current = object(App\Model\Entity\Article) { 'id' => (int) 2521, 'title' => 'Poverty haunts India's economic miracle', 'subheading' => '', 'description' => '<p align="justify"> <font face="arial,helvetica,sans-serif" size="3"></font> </p> <p align="justify"> <br /> <font face="arial,helvetica,sans-serif" size="3">When flames from an open cooking fire raced through Fida Hussein's shack in northern India, it was a disaster for him and his poverty-stricken family. </font> </p> <p align="justify"> <font face="arial,helvetica,sans-serif" size="3">&quot;We have nothing,&quot; said Hussein as he stood in the ruins of his hut through which the sky could be seen between the burnt roof timbers in a remote corner of Uttar Pradesh, India's most populous state. </font> </p> <p align="justify"> <font face="arial,helvetica,sans-serif" size="3">India's number of millionaires grew by 51 percent to 126,700 in 2009, according to US investment bank Merrill Lynch and consultants Capgemini, boosted by a buoyant economy which grew 8.6 percent in the last fiscal quarter. </font> </p> <p align="justify"> <font face="arial,helvetica,sans-serif" size="3">But increasing wealth has not trickled down to the likes of 40-year-old Hussein, a landless labourer whose seamed face is prematurely aged, and his family of six children who have no toys, books or other possessions. </font> </p> <p align="justify"> <font face="arial,helvetica,sans-serif" size="3">&quot;We have no clothes, no furniture,&quot; he said, gesturing to what remained of his burned out shack which he had roughly patched up with plastic bags. </font> </p> <p align="justify"> <font face="arial,helvetica,sans-serif" size="3">&quot;We have only one quilt -- eight of us sleep under it in winter,&quot; he said, as his children played in the dirt yard outside the hut. &quot;But there's no use in crying -- no one hears us,&quot; he added. </font> </p> <p align="justify"> <font face="arial,helvetica,sans-serif" size="3">Like the more than 400 million Indians who have no electricity, Hussein's home has has no lighting and there is no running water in the huts in his village, which lies 60 kilometres (40 miles) from the state capital Lucknow. </font> </p> <p align="justify"> <font face="arial,helvetica,sans-serif" size="3">In 1947, in his midnight independence address, India's first prime minister, Jawaharlal Nehru, called for &quot;the ending of poverty and ignorance and disease and inequality of opportunity.&quot; </font> </p> <p align="justify"> <font face="arial,helvetica,sans-serif" size="3">It's an end that still seems a long way off. </font> </p> <p align="justify"> <font face="arial,helvetica,sans-serif" size="3"><em>JUMP IN NUMBER OF INDIANS BELOW POVERTY LINE </em></font> </p> <p align="justify"> <font face="arial,helvetica,sans-serif" size="3">In April, the Planning Commission, India's premier economic policymaking body, raised its estimate of the number of Indians living in poverty -- unable to meet their nutritional needs -- from 28 percent to 37 percent, which is roughly 440 million of the 1.2 billion population. </font> </p> <p align="justify"> <font face="arial,helvetica,sans-serif" size="3">A new international Mulitple Poverty Index, developed at Oxford University and measuring a wide range of household-level deprivation, suggests that more people are mired in poverty in just eight Indian states than in the 26 poorest African countries. </font> </p> <p align="justify"> <font face="arial,helvetica,sans-serif" size="3">&quot;There are two categories growing in the 'Rising India'... the super rich, and the abysmally poor,&quot; noted newspaper editor M.J. Akbar in a recent column. </font> </p> <p align="justify"> <font face="arial,helvetica,sans-serif" size="3">The left-of-centre Congress government was re-elected on a pro-poor platform that promised to do something for its main support base in India's rural hinterlands. </font> </p> <p align="justify"> <font face="arial,helvetica,sans-serif" size="3">During its first term, it increased social spending, raising health and education budgets and launched a huge public works program -- the National Rural Employment Guarantee Act -- and a big loan repayment waiver for farmers. </font> </p> <p align="justify"> <font face="arial,helvetica,sans-serif" size="3">But Hussein, who does work for local farmers, says he has not managed to obtain a card needed to work in the jobs scheme. Others in the area complain that they only get a few days work with the programme. </font> </p> <p align="justify"> <font face="arial,helvetica,sans-serif" size="3">Former premier Rajiv Gandhi once said only 15 percent of development money gets to its intended targets. While things have improved, there is still a lot of &quot;leakage&quot; from poverty programmes. </font> </p> <p align="justify"> <font face="arial,helvetica,sans-serif" size="3">The government will spend at least 250 billion dollars on services for the poor in the next five years but a recent report by investment house CLSA Asia Pacific Markets estimated more than 100 billion dollars would be skimmed off. </font> </p> <p align="justify"> <font face="arial,helvetica,sans-serif" size="3">&quot;There's personal gain going on at public cost where people who are supposed to look after the interests of the people accumulate large sums,&quot; Anupama Jha, executive director of Transparency International India, said. </font> </p> <p align="justify"> <font face="arial,helvetica,sans-serif" size="3">Corruption, she said, is rife -- percolating through government, the private sector, the police and the judiciary. </font> </p> <p align="justify"> <font face="arial,helvetica,sans-serif" size="3">&quot;There are signs of deterioration in behaviour where people who have access to money do not feel accountable to the people they represent,&quot; Jha said. </font> </p> <p align="justify"> <font face="arial,helvetica,sans-serif" size="3">&quot;The poor are not spared even in the case of targeted programmes&quot; and are often obliged to pay bribes to take advantage of public services, according to a recent study by the group. </font> </p> <p align="justify"> <font face="arial,helvetica,sans-serif" size="3"><em>STUCK IN MONEYLENDER TRAP </em></font> </p> <p align="justify"> <font face="arial,helvetica,sans-serif" size="3">Hardwari Lal, a labourer who has three children and whose wife is expecting a fourth, says he also has not received the card needed to get work. </font> </p> <p align="justify"> <font face="arial,helvetica,sans-serif" size="3">Lal, 32, owes a moneylender who is charging five percent interest a month on a 7,000 rupee (150-dollar) loan he took out for his son's hospital bill. </font> </p> <p align="justify"> <font face="arial,helvetica,sans-serif" size="3">&quot;There is only so much I can do,&quot; he said, adding he has no way of feeding his family properly as he can barely keep up with the interest payments let alone make a dent in the principal. </font> </p> <p align="justify"> <font face="arial,helvetica,sans-serif" size="3">&quot;So many poor villagers are caught up in this cycle of poverty where they get into difficulty and go to a moneylender,&quot; said local development worker Vikrant Kumar. </font> </p> <p align="justify"> <font face="arial,helvetica,sans-serif" size="3">As part of its anti-poverty drive, the government is drafting a Right to Food Act which calls for a government-subsidized minimum of 25 kilograms (55 pounds) of wheat and rice a month for households below the poverty line. </font> </p> <p align="justify"> <font face="arial,helvetica,sans-serif" size="3">Hussain feeds his six children two meals a day -- potatoes and wheat chapatis or flat bread -- and eats one meal a day himself. Dal, the mainstay of Indian diets because of its high protein, is too expensive, he says. </font> </p> <p align="justify"> <font face="arial,helvetica,sans-serif" size="3">Malnutrition among under-fives in India stands at 43.5 percent -- worse than sub-Saharan Africa -- and only nine percentage points less than when India's &quot;economic miracle&quot; began in 1991. </font> </p> <p align="justify"> <font face="arial,helvetica,sans-serif" size="3">During the same period, India's gross domestic product per capita has jumped 50-fold. </font> </p> <p align="justify"> <font face="arial,helvetica,sans-serif" size="3">&quot;We have gone from being a food deficit country to a food surplus country, which is a big achievement, but there's a lot to be done in terms of getting the food to people who need it,&quot; said Indian political author Ajoy Bose. </font> </p> <p align="justify"> <font face="arial,helvetica,sans-serif" size="3">&quot;You look slightly stupid in claiming to be a major power or even a modern progressive state if you haven't done the very elementary basics for your marginalised population,&quot; Bose said. </font> </p> <p align="justify"> <font face="arial,helvetica,sans-serif" size="3">Mountains of grain and vegetables still rot each year due to poor storage and distribution. </font> </p> <p align="justify"> <font face="arial,helvetica,sans-serif" size="3">The immense gap between poor and rich has been pointed to by numerous commentators as a factor fuelling a growing Maoist insurgency that has spread across a large swathe of the country and is at its strongest in remote, impoverished regions. </font> </p> <p align="justify"> <font face="arial,helvetica,sans-serif" size="3">&quot;It is not just poverty that is increasing, it also the inequality,&quot; said senior Indian communist leader Brinda Karat. </font> </p> <p align="justify"> <font face="arial,helvetica,sans-serif" size="3">The government insists it needs double-digit growth to eradicate poverty, but New Delhi-based food and trade policy analyst Devinder Sharma argues that effective distribution of wealth is the real key. </font> </p> <p align="justify"> <font face="arial,helvetica,sans-serif" size="3">&quot;We are already on a growth trajectory, but people are getting poorer. Eradicating poverty is not woven into growth,&quot; he said.</font> </p> <p align="justify"> <font face="arial,helvetica,sans-serif" size="3"></font> </p> ', 'credit_writer' => 'The Economic Times, 18 July, 2010, http://economictimes.indiatimes.com/news/economy/indicators/Poverty-haunts-Indias-economic-miracle/articleshow/6183209.cms', 'article_img' => '', 'article_img_thumb' => '', 'status' => (int) 1, 'show_on_home' => (int) 1, 'lang' => 'EN', 'category_id' => (int) 16, 'tag_keyword' => '', 'seo_url' => 'poverty-haunts-indias-economic-miracle-2605', 'meta_title' => null, 'meta_keywords' => null, 'meta_description' => null, 'noindex' => (int) 0, 'publish_date' => object(Cake\I18n\FrozenDate) {}, 'most_visit_section_id' => null, 'article_big_img' => null, 'liveid' => (int) 2605, 'created' => object(Cake\I18n\FrozenTime) {}, 'modified' => object(Cake\I18n\FrozenTime) {}, 'edate' => '', 'tags' => [ (int) 0 => object(Cake\ORM\Entity) {}, (int) 1 => object(Cake\ORM\Entity) {}, (int) 2 => object(Cake\ORM\Entity) {} ], 'category' => object(App\Model\Entity\Category) {}, '[new]' => false, '[accessible]' => [ '*' => true, 'id' => false ], '[dirty]' => [], '[original]' => [], '[virtual]' => [], '[hasErrors]' => false, '[errors]' => [], '[invalid]' => [], '[repository]' => 'Articles' } $articleid = (int) 2521 $metaTitle = 'LATEST NEWS UPDATES | Poverty haunts India's economic miracle' $metaKeywords = 'Human Development,Human Development,Poverty' $metaDesc = ' When flames from an open cooking fire raced through Fida Hussein's shack in northern India, it was a disaster for him and his poverty-stricken family. &quot;We have nothing,&quot; said Hussein as he stood in the ruins of his hut through...' $disp = '<p align="justify"><font ></font></p><p align="justify"><br /><font >When flames from an open cooking fire raced through Fida Hussein's shack in northern India, it was a disaster for him and his poverty-stricken family. </font></p><p align="justify"><font >&quot;We have nothing,&quot; said Hussein as he stood in the ruins of his hut through which the sky could be seen between the burnt roof timbers in a remote corner of Uttar Pradesh, India's most populous state. </font></p><p align="justify"><font >India's number of millionaires grew by 51 percent to 126,700 in 2009, according to US investment bank Merrill Lynch and consultants Capgemini, boosted by a buoyant economy which grew 8.6 percent in the last fiscal quarter. </font></p><p align="justify"><font >But increasing wealth has not trickled down to the likes of 40-year-old Hussein, a landless labourer whose seamed face is prematurely aged, and his family of six children who have no toys, books or other possessions. </font></p><p align="justify"><font >&quot;We have no clothes, no furniture,&quot; he said, gesturing to what remained of his burned out shack which he had roughly patched up with plastic bags. </font></p><p align="justify"><font >&quot;We have only one quilt -- eight of us sleep under it in winter,&quot; he said, as his children played in the dirt yard outside the hut. &quot;But there's no use in crying -- no one hears us,&quot; he added. </font></p><p align="justify"><font >Like the more than 400 million Indians who have no electricity, Hussein's home has has no lighting and there is no running water in the huts in his village, which lies 60 kilometres (40 miles) from the state capital Lucknow. </font></p><p align="justify"><font >In 1947, in his midnight independence address, India's first prime minister, Jawaharlal Nehru, called for &quot;the ending of poverty and ignorance and disease and inequality of opportunity.&quot; </font></p><p align="justify"><font >It's an end that still seems a long way off. </font></p><p align="justify"><font ><em>JUMP IN NUMBER OF INDIANS BELOW POVERTY LINE </em></font></p><p align="justify"><font >In April, the Planning Commission, India's premier economic policymaking body, raised its estimate of the number of Indians living in poverty -- unable to meet their nutritional needs -- from 28 percent to 37 percent, which is roughly 440 million of the 1.2 billion population. </font></p><p align="justify"><font >A new international Mulitple Poverty Index, developed at Oxford University and measuring a wide range of household-level deprivation, suggests that more people are mired in poverty in just eight Indian states than in the 26 poorest African countries. </font></p><p align="justify"><font >&quot;There are two categories growing in the 'Rising India'... the super rich, and the abysmally poor,&quot; noted newspaper editor M.J. Akbar in a recent column. </font></p><p align="justify"><font >The left-of-centre Congress government was re-elected on a pro-poor platform that promised to do something for its main support base in India's rural hinterlands. </font></p><p align="justify"><font >During its first term, it increased social spending, raising health and education budgets and launched a huge public works program -- the National Rural Employment Guarantee Act -- and a big loan repayment waiver for farmers. </font></p><p align="justify"><font >But Hussein, who does work for local farmers, says he has not managed to obtain a card needed to work in the jobs scheme. Others in the area complain that they only get a few days work with the programme. </font></p><p align="justify"><font >Former premier Rajiv Gandhi once said only 15 percent of development money gets to its intended targets. While things have improved, there is still a lot of &quot;leakage&quot; from poverty programmes. </font></p><p align="justify"><font >The government will spend at least 250 billion dollars on services for the poor in the next five years but a recent report by investment house CLSA Asia Pacific Markets estimated more than 100 billion dollars would be skimmed off. </font></p><p align="justify"><font >&quot;There's personal gain going on at public cost where people who are supposed to look after the interests of the people accumulate large sums,&quot; Anupama Jha, executive director of Transparency International India, said. </font></p><p align="justify"><font >Corruption, she said, is rife -- percolating through government, the private sector, the police and the judiciary. </font></p><p align="justify"><font >&quot;There are signs of deterioration in behaviour where people who have access to money do not feel accountable to the people they represent,&quot; Jha said. </font></p><p align="justify"><font >&quot;The poor are not spared even in the case of targeted programmes&quot; and are often obliged to pay bribes to take advantage of public services, according to a recent study by the group. </font></p><p align="justify"><font ><em>STUCK IN MONEYLENDER TRAP </em></font></p><p align="justify"><font >Hardwari Lal, a labourer who has three children and whose wife is expecting a fourth, says he also has not received the card needed to get work. </font></p><p align="justify"><font >Lal, 32, owes a moneylender who is charging five percent interest a month on a 7,000 rupee (150-dollar) loan he took out for his son's hospital bill. </font></p><p align="justify"><font >&quot;There is only so much I can do,&quot; he said, adding he has no way of feeding his family properly as he can barely keep up with the interest payments let alone make a dent in the principal. </font></p><p align="justify"><font >&quot;So many poor villagers are caught up in this cycle of poverty where they get into difficulty and go to a moneylender,&quot; said local development worker Vikrant Kumar. </font></p><p align="justify"><font >As part of its anti-poverty drive, the government is drafting a Right to Food Act which calls for a government-subsidized minimum of 25 kilograms (55 pounds) of wheat and rice a month for households below the poverty line. </font></p><p align="justify"><font >Hussain feeds his six children two meals a day -- potatoes and wheat chapatis or flat bread -- and eats one meal a day himself. Dal, the mainstay of Indian diets because of its high protein, is too expensive, he says. </font></p><p align="justify"><font >Malnutrition among under-fives in India stands at 43.5 percent -- worse than sub-Saharan Africa -- and only nine percentage points less than when India's &quot;economic miracle&quot; began in 1991. </font></p><p align="justify"><font >During the same period, India's gross domestic product per capita has jumped 50-fold. </font></p><p align="justify"><font >&quot;We have gone from being a food deficit country to a food surplus country, which is a big achievement, but there's a lot to be done in terms of getting the food to people who need it,&quot; said Indian political author Ajoy Bose. </font></p><p align="justify"><font >&quot;You look slightly stupid in claiming to be a major power or even a modern progressive state if you haven't done the very elementary basics for your marginalised population,&quot; Bose said. </font></p><p align="justify"><font >Mountains of grain and vegetables still rot each year due to poor storage and distribution. </font></p><p align="justify"><font >The immense gap between poor and rich has been pointed to by numerous commentators as a factor fuelling a growing Maoist insurgency that has spread across a large swathe of the country and is at its strongest in remote, impoverished regions. </font></p><p align="justify"><font >&quot;It is not just poverty that is increasing, it also the inequality,&quot; said senior Indian communist leader Brinda Karat. </font></p><p align="justify"><font >The government insists it needs double-digit growth to eradicate poverty, but New Delhi-based food and trade policy analyst Devinder Sharma argues that effective distribution of wealth is the real key. </font></p><p align="justify"><font >&quot;We are already on a growth trajectory, but people are getting poorer. Eradicating poverty is not woven into growth,&quot; he said.</font></p><p align="justify"><font ></font></p>' $lang = 'English' $SITE_URL = 'https://im4change.in/' $site_title = 'im4change' $adminprix = 'admin'</pre><pre class="stack-trace">include - APP/Template/Layout/printlayout.ctp, line 8 Cake\View\View::_evaluate() - CORE/src/View/View.php, line 1413 Cake\View\View::_render() - CORE/src/View/View.php, line 1374 Cake\View\View::renderLayout() - CORE/src/View/View.php, line 927 Cake\View\View::render() - CORE/src/View/View.php, line 885 Cake\Controller\Controller::render() - CORE/src/Controller/Controller.php, line 791 Cake\Http\ActionDispatcher::_invoke() - CORE/src/Http/ActionDispatcher.php, line 126 Cake\Http\ActionDispatcher::dispatch() - CORE/src/Http/ActionDispatcher.php, line 94 Cake\Http\BaseApplication::__invoke() - CORE/src/Http/BaseApplication.php, line 235 Cake\Http\Runner::__invoke() - CORE/src/Http/Runner.php, line 65 Cake\Routing\Middleware\RoutingMiddleware::__invoke() - CORE/src/Routing/Middleware/RoutingMiddleware.php, line 162 Cake\Http\Runner::__invoke() - CORE/src/Http/Runner.php, line 65 Cake\Routing\Middleware\AssetMiddleware::__invoke() - CORE/src/Routing/Middleware/AssetMiddleware.php, line 88 Cake\Http\Runner::__invoke() - CORE/src/Http/Runner.php, line 65 Cake\Error\Middleware\ErrorHandlerMiddleware::__invoke() - CORE/src/Error/Middleware/ErrorHandlerMiddleware.php, line 96 Cake\Http\Runner::__invoke() - CORE/src/Http/Runner.php, line 65 Cake\Http\Runner::run() - CORE/src/Http/Runner.php, line 51</pre></div></pre>latest-news-updates/poverty-haunts-indias-economic-miracle-2605.html"/> <meta http-equiv="Content-Type" content="text/html; charset=utf-8"/> <link href="https://im4change.in/css/control.css" rel="stylesheet" type="text/css" media="all"/> <title>LATEST NEWS UPDATES | Poverty haunts India's economic miracle | Im4change.org</title> <meta name="description" content=" When flames from an open cooking fire raced through Fida Hussein's shack in northern India, it was a disaster for him and his poverty-stricken family. "We have nothing," said Hussein as he stood in the ruins of his hut through..."/> <script src="https://im4change.in/js/jquery-1.10.2.js"></script> <script type="text/javascript" src="https://im4change.in/js/jquery-migrate.min.js"></script> <script language="javascript" type="text/javascript"> $(document).ready(function () { var img = $("img")[0]; // Get my img elem var pic_real_width, pic_real_height; $("<img/>") // Make in memory copy of image to avoid css issues .attr("src", $(img).attr("src")) .load(function () { pic_real_width = this.width; // Note: $(this).width() will not pic_real_height = this.height; // work for in memory images. }); }); </script> <style type="text/css"> @media screen { div.divFooter { display: block; } } @media print { .printbutton { display: none !important; } } </style> </head> <body> <table cellpadding="0" cellspacing="0" border="0" width="98%" align="center"> <tr> <td class="top_bg"> <div class="divFooter"> <img src="https://im4change.in/images/logo1.jpg" height="59" border="0" alt="Resource centre on India's rural distress" style="padding-top:14px;"/> </div> </td> </tr> <tr> <td id="topspace"> </td> </tr> <tr id="topspace"> <td> </td> </tr> <tr> <td height="50" style="border-bottom:1px solid #000; padding-top:10px;" class="printbutton"> <form><input type="button" value=" Print this page " onclick="window.print();return false;"/></form> </td> </tr> <tr> <td width="100%"> <h1 class="news_headlines" style="font-style:normal"> <strong>Poverty haunts India's economic miracle</strong></h1> </td> </tr> <tr> <td width="100%" style="font-family:Arial, 'Segoe Script', 'Segoe UI', sans-serif, serif"><font size="3"> <p align="justify"><font ></font></p><p align="justify"><br /><font >When flames from an open cooking fire raced through Fida Hussein's shack in northern India, it was a disaster for him and his poverty-stricken family. </font></p><p align="justify"><font >"We have nothing," said Hussein as he stood in the ruins of his hut through which the sky could be seen between the burnt roof timbers in a remote corner of Uttar Pradesh, India's most populous state. </font></p><p align="justify"><font >India's number of millionaires grew by 51 percent to 126,700 in 2009, according to US investment bank Merrill Lynch and consultants Capgemini, boosted by a buoyant economy which grew 8.6 percent in the last fiscal quarter. </font></p><p align="justify"><font >But increasing wealth has not trickled down to the likes of 40-year-old Hussein, a landless labourer whose seamed face is prematurely aged, and his family of six children who have no toys, books or other possessions. </font></p><p align="justify"><font >"We have no clothes, no furniture," he said, gesturing to what remained of his burned out shack which he had roughly patched up with plastic bags. </font></p><p align="justify"><font >"We have only one quilt -- eight of us sleep under it in winter," he said, as his children played in the dirt yard outside the hut. "But there's no use in crying -- no one hears us," he added. </font></p><p align="justify"><font >Like the more than 400 million Indians who have no electricity, Hussein's home has has no lighting and there is no running water in the huts in his village, which lies 60 kilometres (40 miles) from the state capital Lucknow. </font></p><p align="justify"><font >In 1947, in his midnight independence address, India's first prime minister, Jawaharlal Nehru, called for "the ending of poverty and ignorance and disease and inequality of opportunity." </font></p><p align="justify"><font >It's an end that still seems a long way off. </font></p><p align="justify"><font ><em>JUMP IN NUMBER OF INDIANS BELOW POVERTY LINE </em></font></p><p align="justify"><font >In April, the Planning Commission, India's premier economic policymaking body, raised its estimate of the number of Indians living in poverty -- unable to meet their nutritional needs -- from 28 percent to 37 percent, which is roughly 440 million of the 1.2 billion population. </font></p><p align="justify"><font >A new international Mulitple Poverty Index, developed at Oxford University and measuring a wide range of household-level deprivation, suggests that more people are mired in poverty in just eight Indian states than in the 26 poorest African countries. </font></p><p align="justify"><font >"There are two categories growing in the 'Rising India'... the super rich, and the abysmally poor," noted newspaper editor M.J. Akbar in a recent column. </font></p><p align="justify"><font >The left-of-centre Congress government was re-elected on a pro-poor platform that promised to do something for its main support base in India's rural hinterlands. </font></p><p align="justify"><font >During its first term, it increased social spending, raising health and education budgets and launched a huge public works program -- the National Rural Employment Guarantee Act -- and a big loan repayment waiver for farmers. </font></p><p align="justify"><font >But Hussein, who does work for local farmers, says he has not managed to obtain a card needed to work in the jobs scheme. Others in the area complain that they only get a few days work with the programme. </font></p><p align="justify"><font >Former premier Rajiv Gandhi once said only 15 percent of development money gets to its intended targets. While things have improved, there is still a lot of "leakage" from poverty programmes. </font></p><p align="justify"><font >The government will spend at least 250 billion dollars on services for the poor in the next five years but a recent report by investment house CLSA Asia Pacific Markets estimated more than 100 billion dollars would be skimmed off. </font></p><p align="justify"><font >"There's personal gain going on at public cost where people who are supposed to look after the interests of the people accumulate large sums," Anupama Jha, executive director of Transparency International India, said. </font></p><p align="justify"><font >Corruption, she said, is rife -- percolating through government, the private sector, the police and the judiciary. </font></p><p align="justify"><font >"There are signs of deterioration in behaviour where people who have access to money do not feel accountable to the people they represent," Jha said. </font></p><p align="justify"><font >"The poor are not spared even in the case of targeted programmes" and are often obliged to pay bribes to take advantage of public services, according to a recent study by the group. </font></p><p align="justify"><font ><em>STUCK IN MONEYLENDER TRAP </em></font></p><p align="justify"><font >Hardwari Lal, a labourer who has three children and whose wife is expecting a fourth, says he also has not received the card needed to get work. </font></p><p align="justify"><font >Lal, 32, owes a moneylender who is charging five percent interest a month on a 7,000 rupee (150-dollar) loan he took out for his son's hospital bill. </font></p><p align="justify"><font >"There is only so much I can do," he said, adding he has no way of feeding his family properly as he can barely keep up with the interest payments let alone make a dent in the principal. </font></p><p align="justify"><font >"So many poor villagers are caught up in this cycle of poverty where they get into difficulty and go to a moneylender," said local development worker Vikrant Kumar. </font></p><p align="justify"><font >As part of its anti-poverty drive, the government is drafting a Right to Food Act which calls for a government-subsidized minimum of 25 kilograms (55 pounds) of wheat and rice a month for households below the poverty line. </font></p><p align="justify"><font >Hussain feeds his six children two meals a day -- potatoes and wheat chapatis or flat bread -- and eats one meal a day himself. Dal, the mainstay of Indian diets because of its high protein, is too expensive, he says. </font></p><p align="justify"><font >Malnutrition among under-fives in India stands at 43.5 percent -- worse than sub-Saharan Africa -- and only nine percentage points less than when India's "economic miracle" began in 1991. </font></p><p align="justify"><font >During the same period, India's gross domestic product per capita has jumped 50-fold. </font></p><p align="justify"><font >"We have gone from being a food deficit country to a food surplus country, which is a big achievement, but there's a lot to be done in terms of getting the food to people who need it," said Indian political author Ajoy Bose. </font></p><p align="justify"><font >"You look slightly stupid in claiming to be a major power or even a modern progressive state if you haven't done the very elementary basics for your marginalised population," Bose said. </font></p><p align="justify"><font >Mountains of grain and vegetables still rot each year due to poor storage and distribution. </font></p><p align="justify"><font >The immense gap between poor and rich has been pointed to by numerous commentators as a factor fuelling a growing Maoist insurgency that has spread across a large swathe of the country and is at its strongest in remote, impoverished regions. </font></p><p align="justify"><font >"It is not just poverty that is increasing, it also the inequality," said senior Indian communist leader Brinda Karat. </font></p><p align="justify"><font >The government insists it needs double-digit growth to eradicate poverty, but New Delhi-based food and trade policy analyst Devinder Sharma argues that effective distribution of wealth is the real key. </font></p><p align="justify"><font >"We are already on a growth trajectory, but people are getting poorer. Eradicating poverty is not woven into growth," he said.</font></p><p align="justify"><font ></font></p> </font> </td> </tr> <tr> <td> </td> </tr> <tr> <td height="50" style="border-top:1px solid #000; border-bottom:1px solid #000;padding-top:10px;"> <form><input type="button" value=" Print this page " onclick="window.print();return false;"/></form> </td> </tr> </table></body> </html>' } $cookies = [] $values = [ (int) 0 => 'text/html; charset=UTF-8' ] $name = 'Content-Type' $first = true $value = 'text/html; charset=UTF-8'header - [internal], line ?? Cake\Http\ResponseEmitter::emitHeaders() - CORE/src/Http/ResponseEmitter.php, line 181 Cake\Http\ResponseEmitter::emit() - CORE/src/Http/ResponseEmitter.php, line 55 Cake\Http\Server::emit() - CORE/src/Http/Server.php, line 141 [main] - ROOT/webroot/index.php, line 39
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$viewFile = '/home/brlfuser/public_html/src/Template/Layout/printlayout.ctp' $dataForView = [ 'article_current' => object(App\Model\Entity\Article) { 'id' => (int) 2521, 'title' => 'Poverty haunts India's economic miracle', 'subheading' => '', 'description' => '<p align="justify"> <font face="arial,helvetica,sans-serif" size="3"></font> </p> <p align="justify"> <br /> <font face="arial,helvetica,sans-serif" size="3">When flames from an open cooking fire raced through Fida Hussein's shack in northern India, it was a disaster for him and his poverty-stricken family. </font> </p> <p align="justify"> <font face="arial,helvetica,sans-serif" size="3">"We have nothing," said Hussein as he stood in the ruins of his hut through which the sky could be seen between the burnt roof timbers in a remote corner of Uttar Pradesh, India's most populous state. </font> </p> <p align="justify"> <font face="arial,helvetica,sans-serif" size="3">India's number of millionaires grew by 51 percent to 126,700 in 2009, according to US investment bank Merrill Lynch and consultants Capgemini, boosted by a buoyant economy which grew 8.6 percent in the last fiscal quarter. </font> </p> <p align="justify"> <font face="arial,helvetica,sans-serif" size="3">But increasing wealth has not trickled down to the likes of 40-year-old Hussein, a landless labourer whose seamed face is prematurely aged, and his family of six children who have no toys, books or other possessions. </font> </p> <p align="justify"> <font face="arial,helvetica,sans-serif" size="3">"We have no clothes, no furniture," he said, gesturing to what remained of his burned out shack which he had roughly patched up with plastic bags. </font> </p> <p align="justify"> <font face="arial,helvetica,sans-serif" size="3">"We have only one quilt -- eight of us sleep under it in winter," he said, as his children played in the dirt yard outside the hut. "But there's no use in crying -- no one hears us," he added. </font> </p> <p align="justify"> <font face="arial,helvetica,sans-serif" size="3">Like the more than 400 million Indians who have no electricity, Hussein's home has has no lighting and there is no running water in the huts in his village, which lies 60 kilometres (40 miles) from the state capital Lucknow. </font> </p> <p align="justify"> <font face="arial,helvetica,sans-serif" size="3">In 1947, in his midnight independence address, India's first prime minister, Jawaharlal Nehru, called for "the ending of poverty and ignorance and disease and inequality of opportunity." </font> </p> <p align="justify"> <font face="arial,helvetica,sans-serif" size="3">It's an end that still seems a long way off. </font> </p> <p align="justify"> <font face="arial,helvetica,sans-serif" size="3"><em>JUMP IN NUMBER OF INDIANS BELOW POVERTY LINE </em></font> </p> <p align="justify"> <font face="arial,helvetica,sans-serif" size="3">In April, the Planning Commission, India's premier economic policymaking body, raised its estimate of the number of Indians living in poverty -- unable to meet their nutritional needs -- from 28 percent to 37 percent, which is roughly 440 million of the 1.2 billion population. </font> </p> <p align="justify"> <font face="arial,helvetica,sans-serif" size="3">A new international Mulitple Poverty Index, developed at Oxford University and measuring a wide range of household-level deprivation, suggests that more people are mired in poverty in just eight Indian states than in the 26 poorest African countries. </font> </p> <p align="justify"> <font face="arial,helvetica,sans-serif" size="3">"There are two categories growing in the 'Rising India'... the super rich, and the abysmally poor," noted newspaper editor M.J. Akbar in a recent column. </font> </p> <p align="justify"> <font face="arial,helvetica,sans-serif" size="3">The left-of-centre Congress government was re-elected on a pro-poor platform that promised to do something for its main support base in India's rural hinterlands. </font> </p> <p align="justify"> <font face="arial,helvetica,sans-serif" size="3">During its first term, it increased social spending, raising health and education budgets and launched a huge public works program -- the National Rural Employment Guarantee Act -- and a big loan repayment waiver for farmers. </font> </p> <p align="justify"> <font face="arial,helvetica,sans-serif" size="3">But Hussein, who does work for local farmers, says he has not managed to obtain a card needed to work in the jobs scheme. Others in the area complain that they only get a few days work with the programme. </font> </p> <p align="justify"> <font face="arial,helvetica,sans-serif" size="3">Former premier Rajiv Gandhi once said only 15 percent of development money gets to its intended targets. While things have improved, there is still a lot of "leakage" from poverty programmes. </font> </p> <p align="justify"> <font face="arial,helvetica,sans-serif" size="3">The government will spend at least 250 billion dollars on services for the poor in the next five years but a recent report by investment house CLSA Asia Pacific Markets estimated more than 100 billion dollars would be skimmed off. </font> </p> <p align="justify"> <font face="arial,helvetica,sans-serif" size="3">"There's personal gain going on at public cost where people who are supposed to look after the interests of the people accumulate large sums," Anupama Jha, executive director of Transparency International India, said. </font> </p> <p align="justify"> <font face="arial,helvetica,sans-serif" size="3">Corruption, she said, is rife -- percolating through government, the private sector, the police and the judiciary. </font> </p> <p align="justify"> <font face="arial,helvetica,sans-serif" size="3">"There are signs of deterioration in behaviour where people who have access to money do not feel accountable to the people they represent," Jha said. </font> </p> <p align="justify"> <font face="arial,helvetica,sans-serif" size="3">"The poor are not spared even in the case of targeted programmes" and are often obliged to pay bribes to take advantage of public services, according to a recent study by the group. </font> </p> <p align="justify"> <font face="arial,helvetica,sans-serif" size="3"><em>STUCK IN MONEYLENDER TRAP </em></font> </p> <p align="justify"> <font face="arial,helvetica,sans-serif" size="3">Hardwari Lal, a labourer who has three children and whose wife is expecting a fourth, says he also has not received the card needed to get work. </font> </p> <p align="justify"> <font face="arial,helvetica,sans-serif" size="3">Lal, 32, owes a moneylender who is charging five percent interest a month on a 7,000 rupee (150-dollar) loan he took out for his son's hospital bill. </font> </p> <p align="justify"> <font face="arial,helvetica,sans-serif" size="3">"There is only so much I can do," he said, adding he has no way of feeding his family properly as he can barely keep up with the interest payments let alone make a dent in the principal. </font> </p> <p align="justify"> <font face="arial,helvetica,sans-serif" size="3">"So many poor villagers are caught up in this cycle of poverty where they get into difficulty and go to a moneylender," said local development worker Vikrant Kumar. </font> </p> <p align="justify"> <font face="arial,helvetica,sans-serif" size="3">As part of its anti-poverty drive, the government is drafting a Right to Food Act which calls for a government-subsidized minimum of 25 kilograms (55 pounds) of wheat and rice a month for households below the poverty line. </font> </p> <p align="justify"> <font face="arial,helvetica,sans-serif" size="3">Hussain feeds his six children two meals a day -- potatoes and wheat chapatis or flat bread -- and eats one meal a day himself. Dal, the mainstay of Indian diets because of its high protein, is too expensive, he says. </font> </p> <p align="justify"> <font face="arial,helvetica,sans-serif" size="3">Malnutrition among under-fives in India stands at 43.5 percent -- worse than sub-Saharan Africa -- and only nine percentage points less than when India's "economic miracle" began in 1991. </font> </p> <p align="justify"> <font face="arial,helvetica,sans-serif" size="3">During the same period, India's gross domestic product per capita has jumped 50-fold. </font> </p> <p align="justify"> <font face="arial,helvetica,sans-serif" size="3">"We have gone from being a food deficit country to a food surplus country, which is a big achievement, but there's a lot to be done in terms of getting the food to people who need it," said Indian political author Ajoy Bose. </font> </p> <p align="justify"> <font face="arial,helvetica,sans-serif" size="3">"You look slightly stupid in claiming to be a major power or even a modern progressive state if you haven't done the very elementary basics for your marginalised population," Bose said. </font> </p> <p align="justify"> <font face="arial,helvetica,sans-serif" size="3">Mountains of grain and vegetables still rot each year due to poor storage and distribution. </font> </p> <p align="justify"> <font face="arial,helvetica,sans-serif" size="3">The immense gap between poor and rich has been pointed to by numerous commentators as a factor fuelling a growing Maoist insurgency that has spread across a large swathe of the country and is at its strongest in remote, impoverished regions. </font> </p> <p align="justify"> <font face="arial,helvetica,sans-serif" size="3">"It is not just poverty that is increasing, it also the inequality," said senior Indian communist leader Brinda Karat. </font> </p> <p align="justify"> <font face="arial,helvetica,sans-serif" size="3">The government insists it needs double-digit growth to eradicate poverty, but New Delhi-based food and trade policy analyst Devinder Sharma argues that effective distribution of wealth is the real key. </font> </p> <p align="justify"> <font face="arial,helvetica,sans-serif" size="3">"We are already on a growth trajectory, but people are getting poorer. Eradicating poverty is not woven into growth," he said.</font> </p> <p align="justify"> <font face="arial,helvetica,sans-serif" size="3"></font> </p> ', 'credit_writer' => 'The Economic Times, 18 July, 2010, http://economictimes.indiatimes.com/news/economy/indicators/Poverty-haunts-Indias-economic-miracle/articleshow/6183209.cms', 'article_img' => '', 'article_img_thumb' => '', 'status' => (int) 1, 'show_on_home' => (int) 1, 'lang' => 'EN', 'category_id' => (int) 16, 'tag_keyword' => '', 'seo_url' => 'poverty-haunts-indias-economic-miracle-2605', 'meta_title' => null, 'meta_keywords' => null, 'meta_description' => null, 'noindex' => (int) 0, 'publish_date' => object(Cake\I18n\FrozenDate) {}, 'most_visit_section_id' => null, 'article_big_img' => null, 'liveid' => (int) 2605, 'created' => object(Cake\I18n\FrozenTime) {}, 'modified' => object(Cake\I18n\FrozenTime) {}, 'edate' => '', 'tags' => [ [maximum depth reached] ], 'category' => object(App\Model\Entity\Category) {}, '[new]' => false, '[accessible]' => [ [maximum depth reached] ], '[dirty]' => [[maximum depth reached]], '[original]' => [[maximum depth reached]], '[virtual]' => [[maximum depth reached]], '[hasErrors]' => false, '[errors]' => [[maximum depth reached]], '[invalid]' => [[maximum depth reached]], '[repository]' => 'Articles' }, 'articleid' => (int) 2521, 'metaTitle' => 'LATEST NEWS UPDATES | Poverty haunts India's economic miracle', 'metaKeywords' => 'Human Development,Human Development,Poverty', 'metaDesc' => ' When flames from an open cooking fire raced through Fida Hussein's shack in northern India, it was a disaster for him and his poverty-stricken family. "We have nothing," said Hussein as he stood in the ruins of his hut through...', 'disp' => '<p align="justify"><font ></font></p><p align="justify"><br /><font >When flames from an open cooking fire raced through Fida Hussein's shack in northern India, it was a disaster for him and his poverty-stricken family. </font></p><p align="justify"><font >"We have nothing," said Hussein as he stood in the ruins of his hut through which the sky could be seen between the burnt roof timbers in a remote corner of Uttar Pradesh, India's most populous state. </font></p><p align="justify"><font >India's number of millionaires grew by 51 percent to 126,700 in 2009, according to US investment bank Merrill Lynch and consultants Capgemini, boosted by a buoyant economy which grew 8.6 percent in the last fiscal quarter. </font></p><p align="justify"><font >But increasing wealth has not trickled down to the likes of 40-year-old Hussein, a landless labourer whose seamed face is prematurely aged, and his family of six children who have no toys, books or other possessions. </font></p><p align="justify"><font >"We have no clothes, no furniture," he said, gesturing to what remained of his burned out shack which he had roughly patched up with plastic bags. </font></p><p align="justify"><font >"We have only one quilt -- eight of us sleep under it in winter," he said, as his children played in the dirt yard outside the hut. "But there's no use in crying -- no one hears us," he added. </font></p><p align="justify"><font >Like the more than 400 million Indians who have no electricity, Hussein's home has has no lighting and there is no running water in the huts in his village, which lies 60 kilometres (40 miles) from the state capital Lucknow. </font></p><p align="justify"><font >In 1947, in his midnight independence address, India's first prime minister, Jawaharlal Nehru, called for "the ending of poverty and ignorance and disease and inequality of opportunity." </font></p><p align="justify"><font >It's an end that still seems a long way off. </font></p><p align="justify"><font ><em>JUMP IN NUMBER OF INDIANS BELOW POVERTY LINE </em></font></p><p align="justify"><font >In April, the Planning Commission, India's premier economic policymaking body, raised its estimate of the number of Indians living in poverty -- unable to meet their nutritional needs -- from 28 percent to 37 percent, which is roughly 440 million of the 1.2 billion population. </font></p><p align="justify"><font >A new international Mulitple Poverty Index, developed at Oxford University and measuring a wide range of household-level deprivation, suggests that more people are mired in poverty in just eight Indian states than in the 26 poorest African countries. </font></p><p align="justify"><font >"There are two categories growing in the 'Rising India'... the super rich, and the abysmally poor," noted newspaper editor M.J. Akbar in a recent column. </font></p><p align="justify"><font >The left-of-centre Congress government was re-elected on a pro-poor platform that promised to do something for its main support base in India's rural hinterlands. </font></p><p align="justify"><font >During its first term, it increased social spending, raising health and education budgets and launched a huge public works program -- the National Rural Employment Guarantee Act -- and a big loan repayment waiver for farmers. </font></p><p align="justify"><font >But Hussein, who does work for local farmers, says he has not managed to obtain a card needed to work in the jobs scheme. Others in the area complain that they only get a few days work with the programme. </font></p><p align="justify"><font >Former premier Rajiv Gandhi once said only 15 percent of development money gets to its intended targets. While things have improved, there is still a lot of "leakage" from poverty programmes. </font></p><p align="justify"><font >The government will spend at least 250 billion dollars on services for the poor in the next five years but a recent report by investment house CLSA Asia Pacific Markets estimated more than 100 billion dollars would be skimmed off. </font></p><p align="justify"><font >"There's personal gain going on at public cost where people who are supposed to look after the interests of the people accumulate large sums," Anupama Jha, executive director of Transparency International India, said. </font></p><p align="justify"><font >Corruption, she said, is rife -- percolating through government, the private sector, the police and the judiciary. </font></p><p align="justify"><font >"There are signs of deterioration in behaviour where people who have access to money do not feel accountable to the people they represent," Jha said. </font></p><p align="justify"><font >"The poor are not spared even in the case of targeted programmes" and are often obliged to pay bribes to take advantage of public services, according to a recent study by the group. </font></p><p align="justify"><font ><em>STUCK IN MONEYLENDER TRAP </em></font></p><p align="justify"><font >Hardwari Lal, a labourer who has three children and whose wife is expecting a fourth, says he also has not received the card needed to get work. </font></p><p align="justify"><font >Lal, 32, owes a moneylender who is charging five percent interest a month on a 7,000 rupee (150-dollar) loan he took out for his son's hospital bill. </font></p><p align="justify"><font >"There is only so much I can do," he said, adding he has no way of feeding his family properly as he can barely keep up with the interest payments let alone make a dent in the principal. </font></p><p align="justify"><font >"So many poor villagers are caught up in this cycle of poverty where they get into difficulty and go to a moneylender," said local development worker Vikrant Kumar. </font></p><p align="justify"><font >As part of its anti-poverty drive, the government is drafting a Right to Food Act which calls for a government-subsidized minimum of 25 kilograms (55 pounds) of wheat and rice a month for households below the poverty line. </font></p><p align="justify"><font >Hussain feeds his six children two meals a day -- potatoes and wheat chapatis or flat bread -- and eats one meal a day himself. Dal, the mainstay of Indian diets because of its high protein, is too expensive, he says. </font></p><p align="justify"><font >Malnutrition among under-fives in India stands at 43.5 percent -- worse than sub-Saharan Africa -- and only nine percentage points less than when India's "economic miracle" began in 1991. </font></p><p align="justify"><font >During the same period, India's gross domestic product per capita has jumped 50-fold. </font></p><p align="justify"><font >"We have gone from being a food deficit country to a food surplus country, which is a big achievement, but there's a lot to be done in terms of getting the food to people who need it," said Indian political author Ajoy Bose. </font></p><p align="justify"><font >"You look slightly stupid in claiming to be a major power or even a modern progressive state if you haven't done the very elementary basics for your marginalised population," Bose said. </font></p><p align="justify"><font >Mountains of grain and vegetables still rot each year due to poor storage and distribution. </font></p><p align="justify"><font >The immense gap between poor and rich has been pointed to by numerous commentators as a factor fuelling a growing Maoist insurgency that has spread across a large swathe of the country and is at its strongest in remote, impoverished regions. </font></p><p align="justify"><font >"It is not just poverty that is increasing, it also the inequality," said senior Indian communist leader Brinda Karat. </font></p><p align="justify"><font >The government insists it needs double-digit growth to eradicate poverty, but New Delhi-based food and trade policy analyst Devinder Sharma argues that effective distribution of wealth is the real key. </font></p><p align="justify"><font >"We are already on a growth trajectory, but people are getting poorer. Eradicating poverty is not woven into growth," he said.</font></p><p align="justify"><font ></font></p>', 'lang' => 'English', 'SITE_URL' => 'https://im4change.in/', 'site_title' => 'im4change', 'adminprix' => 'admin' ] $article_current = object(App\Model\Entity\Article) { 'id' => (int) 2521, 'title' => 'Poverty haunts India's economic miracle', 'subheading' => '', 'description' => '<p align="justify"> <font face="arial,helvetica,sans-serif" size="3"></font> </p> <p align="justify"> <br /> <font face="arial,helvetica,sans-serif" size="3">When flames from an open cooking fire raced through Fida Hussein's shack in northern India, it was a disaster for him and his poverty-stricken family. </font> </p> <p align="justify"> <font face="arial,helvetica,sans-serif" size="3">"We have nothing," said Hussein as he stood in the ruins of his hut through which the sky could be seen between the burnt roof timbers in a remote corner of Uttar Pradesh, India's most populous state. </font> </p> <p align="justify"> <font face="arial,helvetica,sans-serif" size="3">India's number of millionaires grew by 51 percent to 126,700 in 2009, according to US investment bank Merrill Lynch and consultants Capgemini, boosted by a buoyant economy which grew 8.6 percent in the last fiscal quarter. </font> </p> <p align="justify"> <font face="arial,helvetica,sans-serif" size="3">But increasing wealth has not trickled down to the likes of 40-year-old Hussein, a landless labourer whose seamed face is prematurely aged, and his family of six children who have no toys, books or other possessions. </font> </p> <p align="justify"> <font face="arial,helvetica,sans-serif" size="3">"We have no clothes, no furniture," he said, gesturing to what remained of his burned out shack which he had roughly patched up with plastic bags. </font> </p> <p align="justify"> <font face="arial,helvetica,sans-serif" size="3">"We have only one quilt -- eight of us sleep under it in winter," he said, as his children played in the dirt yard outside the hut. "But there's no use in crying -- no one hears us," he added. </font> </p> <p align="justify"> <font face="arial,helvetica,sans-serif" size="3">Like the more than 400 million Indians who have no electricity, Hussein's home has has no lighting and there is no running water in the huts in his village, which lies 60 kilometres (40 miles) from the state capital Lucknow. </font> </p> <p align="justify"> <font face="arial,helvetica,sans-serif" size="3">In 1947, in his midnight independence address, India's first prime minister, Jawaharlal Nehru, called for "the ending of poverty and ignorance and disease and inequality of opportunity." </font> </p> <p align="justify"> <font face="arial,helvetica,sans-serif" size="3">It's an end that still seems a long way off. </font> </p> <p align="justify"> <font face="arial,helvetica,sans-serif" size="3"><em>JUMP IN NUMBER OF INDIANS BELOW POVERTY LINE </em></font> </p> <p align="justify"> <font face="arial,helvetica,sans-serif" size="3">In April, the Planning Commission, India's premier economic policymaking body, raised its estimate of the number of Indians living in poverty -- unable to meet their nutritional needs -- from 28 percent to 37 percent, which is roughly 440 million of the 1.2 billion population. </font> </p> <p align="justify"> <font face="arial,helvetica,sans-serif" size="3">A new international Mulitple Poverty Index, developed at Oxford University and measuring a wide range of household-level deprivation, suggests that more people are mired in poverty in just eight Indian states than in the 26 poorest African countries. </font> </p> <p align="justify"> <font face="arial,helvetica,sans-serif" size="3">"There are two categories growing in the 'Rising India'... the super rich, and the abysmally poor," noted newspaper editor M.J. Akbar in a recent column. </font> </p> <p align="justify"> <font face="arial,helvetica,sans-serif" size="3">The left-of-centre Congress government was re-elected on a pro-poor platform that promised to do something for its main support base in India's rural hinterlands. </font> </p> <p align="justify"> <font face="arial,helvetica,sans-serif" size="3">During its first term, it increased social spending, raising health and education budgets and launched a huge public works program -- the National Rural Employment Guarantee Act -- and a big loan repayment waiver for farmers. </font> </p> <p align="justify"> <font face="arial,helvetica,sans-serif" size="3">But Hussein, who does work for local farmers, says he has not managed to obtain a card needed to work in the jobs scheme. Others in the area complain that they only get a few days work with the programme. </font> </p> <p align="justify"> <font face="arial,helvetica,sans-serif" size="3">Former premier Rajiv Gandhi once said only 15 percent of development money gets to its intended targets. While things have improved, there is still a lot of "leakage" from poverty programmes. </font> </p> <p align="justify"> <font face="arial,helvetica,sans-serif" size="3">The government will spend at least 250 billion dollars on services for the poor in the next five years but a recent report by investment house CLSA Asia Pacific Markets estimated more than 100 billion dollars would be skimmed off. </font> </p> <p align="justify"> <font face="arial,helvetica,sans-serif" size="3">"There's personal gain going on at public cost where people who are supposed to look after the interests of the people accumulate large sums," Anupama Jha, executive director of Transparency International India, said. </font> </p> <p align="justify"> <font face="arial,helvetica,sans-serif" size="3">Corruption, she said, is rife -- percolating through government, the private sector, the police and the judiciary. </font> </p> <p align="justify"> <font face="arial,helvetica,sans-serif" size="3">"There are signs of deterioration in behaviour where people who have access to money do not feel accountable to the people they represent," Jha said. </font> </p> <p align="justify"> <font face="arial,helvetica,sans-serif" size="3">"The poor are not spared even in the case of targeted programmes" and are often obliged to pay bribes to take advantage of public services, according to a recent study by the group. </font> </p> <p align="justify"> <font face="arial,helvetica,sans-serif" size="3"><em>STUCK IN MONEYLENDER TRAP </em></font> </p> <p align="justify"> <font face="arial,helvetica,sans-serif" size="3">Hardwari Lal, a labourer who has three children and whose wife is expecting a fourth, says he also has not received the card needed to get work. </font> </p> <p align="justify"> <font face="arial,helvetica,sans-serif" size="3">Lal, 32, owes a moneylender who is charging five percent interest a month on a 7,000 rupee (150-dollar) loan he took out for his son's hospital bill. </font> </p> <p align="justify"> <font face="arial,helvetica,sans-serif" size="3">"There is only so much I can do," he said, adding he has no way of feeding his family properly as he can barely keep up with the interest payments let alone make a dent in the principal. </font> </p> <p align="justify"> <font face="arial,helvetica,sans-serif" size="3">"So many poor villagers are caught up in this cycle of poverty where they get into difficulty and go to a moneylender," said local development worker Vikrant Kumar. </font> </p> <p align="justify"> <font face="arial,helvetica,sans-serif" size="3">As part of its anti-poverty drive, the government is drafting a Right to Food Act which calls for a government-subsidized minimum of 25 kilograms (55 pounds) of wheat and rice a month for households below the poverty line. </font> </p> <p align="justify"> <font face="arial,helvetica,sans-serif" size="3">Hussain feeds his six children two meals a day -- potatoes and wheat chapatis or flat bread -- and eats one meal a day himself. Dal, the mainstay of Indian diets because of its high protein, is too expensive, he says. </font> </p> <p align="justify"> <font face="arial,helvetica,sans-serif" size="3">Malnutrition among under-fives in India stands at 43.5 percent -- worse than sub-Saharan Africa -- and only nine percentage points less than when India's "economic miracle" began in 1991. </font> </p> <p align="justify"> <font face="arial,helvetica,sans-serif" size="3">During the same period, India's gross domestic product per capita has jumped 50-fold. </font> </p> <p align="justify"> <font face="arial,helvetica,sans-serif" size="3">"We have gone from being a food deficit country to a food surplus country, which is a big achievement, but there's a lot to be done in terms of getting the food to people who need it," said Indian political author Ajoy Bose. </font> </p> <p align="justify"> <font face="arial,helvetica,sans-serif" size="3">"You look slightly stupid in claiming to be a major power or even a modern progressive state if you haven't done the very elementary basics for your marginalised population," Bose said. </font> </p> <p align="justify"> <font face="arial,helvetica,sans-serif" size="3">Mountains of grain and vegetables still rot each year due to poor storage and distribution. </font> </p> <p align="justify"> <font face="arial,helvetica,sans-serif" size="3">The immense gap between poor and rich has been pointed to by numerous commentators as a factor fuelling a growing Maoist insurgency that has spread across a large swathe of the country and is at its strongest in remote, impoverished regions. </font> </p> <p align="justify"> <font face="arial,helvetica,sans-serif" size="3">"It is not just poverty that is increasing, it also the inequality," said senior Indian communist leader Brinda Karat. </font> </p> <p align="justify"> <font face="arial,helvetica,sans-serif" size="3">The government insists it needs double-digit growth to eradicate poverty, but New Delhi-based food and trade policy analyst Devinder Sharma argues that effective distribution of wealth is the real key. </font> </p> <p align="justify"> <font face="arial,helvetica,sans-serif" size="3">"We are already on a growth trajectory, but people are getting poorer. Eradicating poverty is not woven into growth," he said.</font> </p> <p align="justify"> <font face="arial,helvetica,sans-serif" size="3"></font> </p> ', 'credit_writer' => 'The Economic Times, 18 July, 2010, http://economictimes.indiatimes.com/news/economy/indicators/Poverty-haunts-Indias-economic-miracle/articleshow/6183209.cms', 'article_img' => '', 'article_img_thumb' => '', 'status' => (int) 1, 'show_on_home' => (int) 1, 'lang' => 'EN', 'category_id' => (int) 16, 'tag_keyword' => '', 'seo_url' => 'poverty-haunts-indias-economic-miracle-2605', 'meta_title' => null, 'meta_keywords' => null, 'meta_description' => null, 'noindex' => (int) 0, 'publish_date' => object(Cake\I18n\FrozenDate) {}, 'most_visit_section_id' => null, 'article_big_img' => null, 'liveid' => (int) 2605, 'created' => object(Cake\I18n\FrozenTime) {}, 'modified' => object(Cake\I18n\FrozenTime) {}, 'edate' => '', 'tags' => [ (int) 0 => object(Cake\ORM\Entity) {}, (int) 1 => object(Cake\ORM\Entity) {}, (int) 2 => object(Cake\ORM\Entity) {} ], 'category' => object(App\Model\Entity\Category) {}, '[new]' => false, '[accessible]' => [ '*' => true, 'id' => false ], '[dirty]' => [], '[original]' => [], '[virtual]' => [], '[hasErrors]' => false, '[errors]' => [], '[invalid]' => [], '[repository]' => 'Articles' } $articleid = (int) 2521 $metaTitle = 'LATEST NEWS UPDATES | Poverty haunts India's economic miracle' $metaKeywords = 'Human Development,Human Development,Poverty' $metaDesc = ' When flames from an open cooking fire raced through Fida Hussein's shack in northern India, it was a disaster for him and his poverty-stricken family. "We have nothing," said Hussein as he stood in the ruins of his hut through...' $disp = '<p align="justify"><font ></font></p><p align="justify"><br /><font >When flames from an open cooking fire raced through Fida Hussein's shack in northern India, it was a disaster for him and his poverty-stricken family. </font></p><p align="justify"><font >"We have nothing," said Hussein as he stood in the ruins of his hut through which the sky could be seen between the burnt roof timbers in a remote corner of Uttar Pradesh, India's most populous state. </font></p><p align="justify"><font >India's number of millionaires grew by 51 percent to 126,700 in 2009, according to US investment bank Merrill Lynch and consultants Capgemini, boosted by a buoyant economy which grew 8.6 percent in the last fiscal quarter. </font></p><p align="justify"><font >But increasing wealth has not trickled down to the likes of 40-year-old Hussein, a landless labourer whose seamed face is prematurely aged, and his family of six children who have no toys, books or other possessions. </font></p><p align="justify"><font >"We have no clothes, no furniture," he said, gesturing to what remained of his burned out shack which he had roughly patched up with plastic bags. </font></p><p align="justify"><font >"We have only one quilt -- eight of us sleep under it in winter," he said, as his children played in the dirt yard outside the hut. "But there's no use in crying -- no one hears us," he added. </font></p><p align="justify"><font >Like the more than 400 million Indians who have no electricity, Hussein's home has has no lighting and there is no running water in the huts in his village, which lies 60 kilometres (40 miles) from the state capital Lucknow. </font></p><p align="justify"><font >In 1947, in his midnight independence address, India's first prime minister, Jawaharlal Nehru, called for "the ending of poverty and ignorance and disease and inequality of opportunity." </font></p><p align="justify"><font >It's an end that still seems a long way off. </font></p><p align="justify"><font ><em>JUMP IN NUMBER OF INDIANS BELOW POVERTY LINE </em></font></p><p align="justify"><font >In April, the Planning Commission, India's premier economic policymaking body, raised its estimate of the number of Indians living in poverty -- unable to meet their nutritional needs -- from 28 percent to 37 percent, which is roughly 440 million of the 1.2 billion population. </font></p><p align="justify"><font >A new international Mulitple Poverty Index, developed at Oxford University and measuring a wide range of household-level deprivation, suggests that more people are mired in poverty in just eight Indian states than in the 26 poorest African countries. </font></p><p align="justify"><font >"There are two categories growing in the 'Rising India'... the super rich, and the abysmally poor," noted newspaper editor M.J. Akbar in a recent column. </font></p><p align="justify"><font >The left-of-centre Congress government was re-elected on a pro-poor platform that promised to do something for its main support base in India's rural hinterlands. </font></p><p align="justify"><font >During its first term, it increased social spending, raising health and education budgets and launched a huge public works program -- the National Rural Employment Guarantee Act -- and a big loan repayment waiver for farmers. </font></p><p align="justify"><font >But Hussein, who does work for local farmers, says he has not managed to obtain a card needed to work in the jobs scheme. Others in the area complain that they only get a few days work with the programme. </font></p><p align="justify"><font >Former premier Rajiv Gandhi once said only 15 percent of development money gets to its intended targets. While things have improved, there is still a lot of "leakage" from poverty programmes. </font></p><p align="justify"><font >The government will spend at least 250 billion dollars on services for the poor in the next five years but a recent report by investment house CLSA Asia Pacific Markets estimated more than 100 billion dollars would be skimmed off. </font></p><p align="justify"><font >"There's personal gain going on at public cost where people who are supposed to look after the interests of the people accumulate large sums," Anupama Jha, executive director of Transparency International India, said. </font></p><p align="justify"><font >Corruption, she said, is rife -- percolating through government, the private sector, the police and the judiciary. </font></p><p align="justify"><font >"There are signs of deterioration in behaviour where people who have access to money do not feel accountable to the people they represent," Jha said. </font></p><p align="justify"><font >"The poor are not spared even in the case of targeted programmes" and are often obliged to pay bribes to take advantage of public services, according to a recent study by the group. </font></p><p align="justify"><font ><em>STUCK IN MONEYLENDER TRAP </em></font></p><p align="justify"><font >Hardwari Lal, a labourer who has three children and whose wife is expecting a fourth, says he also has not received the card needed to get work. </font></p><p align="justify"><font >Lal, 32, owes a moneylender who is charging five percent interest a month on a 7,000 rupee (150-dollar) loan he took out for his son's hospital bill. </font></p><p align="justify"><font >"There is only so much I can do," he said, adding he has no way of feeding his family properly as he can barely keep up with the interest payments let alone make a dent in the principal. </font></p><p align="justify"><font >"So many poor villagers are caught up in this cycle of poverty where they get into difficulty and go to a moneylender," said local development worker Vikrant Kumar. </font></p><p align="justify"><font >As part of its anti-poverty drive, the government is drafting a Right to Food Act which calls for a government-subsidized minimum of 25 kilograms (55 pounds) of wheat and rice a month for households below the poverty line. </font></p><p align="justify"><font >Hussain feeds his six children two meals a day -- potatoes and wheat chapatis or flat bread -- and eats one meal a day himself. Dal, the mainstay of Indian diets because of its high protein, is too expensive, he says. </font></p><p align="justify"><font >Malnutrition among under-fives in India stands at 43.5 percent -- worse than sub-Saharan Africa -- and only nine percentage points less than when India's "economic miracle" began in 1991. </font></p><p align="justify"><font >During the same period, India's gross domestic product per capita has jumped 50-fold. </font></p><p align="justify"><font >"We have gone from being a food deficit country to a food surplus country, which is a big achievement, but there's a lot to be done in terms of getting the food to people who need it," said Indian political author Ajoy Bose. </font></p><p align="justify"><font >"You look slightly stupid in claiming to be a major power or even a modern progressive state if you haven't done the very elementary basics for your marginalised population," Bose said. </font></p><p align="justify"><font >Mountains of grain and vegetables still rot each year due to poor storage and distribution. </font></p><p align="justify"><font >The immense gap between poor and rich has been pointed to by numerous commentators as a factor fuelling a growing Maoist insurgency that has spread across a large swathe of the country and is at its strongest in remote, impoverished regions. </font></p><p align="justify"><font >"It is not just poverty that is increasing, it also the inequality," said senior Indian communist leader Brinda Karat. </font></p><p align="justify"><font >The government insists it needs double-digit growth to eradicate poverty, but New Delhi-based food and trade policy analyst Devinder Sharma argues that effective distribution of wealth is the real key. </font></p><p align="justify"><font >"We are already on a growth trajectory, but people are getting poorer. Eradicating poverty is not woven into growth," he said.</font></p><p align="justify"><font ></font></p>' $lang = 'English' $SITE_URL = 'https://im4change.in/' $site_title = 'im4change' $adminprix = 'admin'
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Poverty haunts India's economic miracle |
"We have nothing," said Hussein as he stood in the ruins of his hut through which the sky could be seen between the burnt roof timbers in a remote corner of Uttar Pradesh, India's most populous state. India's number of millionaires grew by 51 percent to 126,700 in 2009, according to US investment bank Merrill Lynch and consultants Capgemini, boosted by a buoyant economy which grew 8.6 percent in the last fiscal quarter. But increasing wealth has not trickled down to the likes of 40-year-old Hussein, a landless labourer whose seamed face is prematurely aged, and his family of six children who have no toys, books or other possessions. "We have no clothes, no furniture," he said, gesturing to what remained of his burned out shack which he had roughly patched up with plastic bags. "We have only one quilt -- eight of us sleep under it in winter," he said, as his children played in the dirt yard outside the hut. "But there's no use in crying -- no one hears us," he added. Like the more than 400 million Indians who have no electricity, Hussein's home has has no lighting and there is no running water in the huts in his village, which lies 60 kilometres (40 miles) from the state capital Lucknow. In 1947, in his midnight independence address, India's first prime minister, Jawaharlal Nehru, called for "the ending of poverty and ignorance and disease and inequality of opportunity." It's an end that still seems a long way off. JUMP IN NUMBER OF INDIANS BELOW POVERTY LINE In April, the Planning Commission, India's premier economic policymaking body, raised its estimate of the number of Indians living in poverty -- unable to meet their nutritional needs -- from 28 percent to 37 percent, which is roughly 440 million of the 1.2 billion population. A new international Mulitple Poverty Index, developed at Oxford University and measuring a wide range of household-level deprivation, suggests that more people are mired in poverty in just eight Indian states than in the 26 poorest African countries. "There are two categories growing in the 'Rising India'... the super rich, and the abysmally poor," noted newspaper editor M.J. Akbar in a recent column. The left-of-centre Congress government was re-elected on a pro-poor platform that promised to do something for its main support base in India's rural hinterlands. During its first term, it increased social spending, raising health and education budgets and launched a huge public works program -- the National Rural Employment Guarantee Act -- and a big loan repayment waiver for farmers. But Hussein, who does work for local farmers, says he has not managed to obtain a card needed to work in the jobs scheme. Others in the area complain that they only get a few days work with the programme. Former premier Rajiv Gandhi once said only 15 percent of development money gets to its intended targets. While things have improved, there is still a lot of "leakage" from poverty programmes. The government will spend at least 250 billion dollars on services for the poor in the next five years but a recent report by investment house CLSA Asia Pacific Markets estimated more than 100 billion dollars would be skimmed off. "There's personal gain going on at public cost where people who are supposed to look after the interests of the people accumulate large sums," Anupama Jha, executive director of Transparency International India, said. Corruption, she said, is rife -- percolating through government, the private sector, the police and the judiciary. "There are signs of deterioration in behaviour where people who have access to money do not feel accountable to the people they represent," Jha said. "The poor are not spared even in the case of targeted programmes" and are often obliged to pay bribes to take advantage of public services, according to a recent study by the group. STUCK IN MONEYLENDER TRAP Hardwari Lal, a labourer who has three children and whose wife is expecting a fourth, says he also has not received the card needed to get work. Lal, 32, owes a moneylender who is charging five percent interest a month on a 7,000 rupee (150-dollar) loan he took out for his son's hospital bill. "There is only so much I can do," he said, adding he has no way of feeding his family properly as he can barely keep up with the interest payments let alone make a dent in the principal. "So many poor villagers are caught up in this cycle of poverty where they get into difficulty and go to a moneylender," said local development worker Vikrant Kumar. As part of its anti-poverty drive, the government is drafting a Right to Food Act which calls for a government-subsidized minimum of 25 kilograms (55 pounds) of wheat and rice a month for households below the poverty line. Hussain feeds his six children two meals a day -- potatoes and wheat chapatis or flat bread -- and eats one meal a day himself. Dal, the mainstay of Indian diets because of its high protein, is too expensive, he says. Malnutrition among under-fives in India stands at 43.5 percent -- worse than sub-Saharan Africa -- and only nine percentage points less than when India's "economic miracle" began in 1991. During the same period, India's gross domestic product per capita has jumped 50-fold. "We have gone from being a food deficit country to a food surplus country, which is a big achievement, but there's a lot to be done in terms of getting the food to people who need it," said Indian political author Ajoy Bose. "You look slightly stupid in claiming to be a major power or even a modern progressive state if you haven't done the very elementary basics for your marginalised population," Bose said. Mountains of grain and vegetables still rot each year due to poor storage and distribution. The immense gap between poor and rich has been pointed to by numerous commentators as a factor fuelling a growing Maoist insurgency that has spread across a large swathe of the country and is at its strongest in remote, impoverished regions. "It is not just poverty that is increasing, it also the inequality," said senior Indian communist leader Brinda Karat. The government insists it needs double-digit growth to eradicate poverty, but New Delhi-based food and trade policy analyst Devinder Sharma argues that effective distribution of wealth is the real key. "We are already on a growth trajectory, but people are getting poorer. Eradicating poverty is not woven into growth," he said. |