Liberalisation of Rural Poverty: The Indian Experience
Published By: CDS on eSS | Published Date: March, 01 , 2004A price rise signifies a fall in purchasing power, if there is no
commensurate increase in income. Thus the pertinent question in the
face of the phenomenal rise during the 1990s in the prices of the food
articles, which account for a major chunk of the total expenditure of the
poor, is whether there has been a corresponding increase in the incomes
of the poor. The present paper is a modest attempt at analysing the answer
to this question. Our focus is on the agricultural workers, for whom
wages constitute the principal source of income and the important channel
affecting poverty. There is evidence that rural poverty at the all-India
level and across several States increased significantly especially during
the first 18 months of the reform period. It is argued that the phenomenal
administered price inflation of food articles, thanks to liberalisation
measures, has had much to do with this situation.
[CDS Working Paper 356, March 2004]
Author(s): N. Vijayamohanan Pillai | Posted on: Dec 19, 2006 | Views(2693) | Download (736)