Reforms and inequality

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| One recent example is a study by Bibek Debroy and Laveesh Bhandari, "Exclusive Growth "" Inclusive Inequality". The estimation of state-level poverty incidence by the Planning Commission on the basis of this data has already allowed researchers to conclude that, over the period 1993-94 to 2004-05, success in poverty reduction across states is closely associated with rapid GDP growth. That is a tangible and unambiguous achievement in and of itself. However, the study also finds that inequality, as measured by the Gini coefficient of the distribution of household expenditures, has increased somewhat over the 11 years. Across states, this increase is positively correlated with both the current level of prosperity and the growth rate over the last decade. In other words, richer states tend to have greater inequality, as do states that have grown the fastest over the period. This pattern conforms to the well-known Kuznets Curve, a relationship postulated by the late Nobel Laureate in Economics, Simon Kuznets, which indicates that economic growth is typically accompanied by rising inequality until a certain threshold level of income is crossed, after which it is associated with decreasing inequality. |
| Two important patterns are identified by the study. One, across states, there is an inverse relationship between inequality and the proportion of the labour force that is self-employed. The opportunity to find substitutes for employment in organisations, whether private or public, is apparently an equalising factor and indicates that facilitating self-employment at every level should be a policy objective. The other, across income groups, suggests that real incomes have grown fastest at the top and bottom of the income ladder, leaving the middle segments somewhat behind. The decline of the public sector undoubtedly has something to do with this, but the more significant point is that there is a widening gap between educational attainments at these socio-economic levels and market requirements. Reforms have clearly created lots of opportunities and people at both ends of the income distribution have benefited; however, there is also a large cohort, which risks getting left behind in the absence of adequate and relevant channels of skill creation and upgrade. Sustaining inclusiveness, the study concludes, and quite rightly, requires creating these channels rather than trying to compensate for their absence with handouts of various kinds. |
First Published: Oct 02 2007 | 12:00 AM IST