At the $3.65 poverty line, India accounts for 40% of the slight upward revision of the global poverty rate from 23.6% to 24.1%, according to the World Bank September 2023 Global Poverty Update. It is the same update that made the following recent headline in the Indian and Pakistani media about Pakistan: “Pakistan’s 40% Population Lives Below Poverty Line, Says World Bank”. Fact: 45.9% of Indians and 39.4% of Pakistanis live below the $ 3.65-a-day poverty line as of September 2023, according to the latest World Bank global poverty update that takes into account the impact of inflation on poverty rates. But neither the Pakistani media nor India’s compliant “Godi Media” reported it. Nor did they question why poverty in India is growing despite the Modi government’s claim to be “the world’s fastest-growing economy”.
Global Child Poverty Rate. Source: UNICEF
Another recent report by UNICEF that went unnoticed by the media is that the child poverty rate in India far exceeds the rate in Bangladesh and Pakistan: At the $2.15 poverty level, India has 11.5% children under poverty, Pakistan 5.6%, and Bangladesh 5.1%. At a $3.65 poverty level, India has 49.8% of children in poverty, Pakistan 45%, and Bangladesh 35.2%.
Child Poverty Rate By Year By Region From 2013 to 2022. Source: UNICEF
The UNICEF data shows that the South Asia region’s child poverty rate at $2.15 for any year since 2013 drops to about half when India is excluded.
The latest World Bank and UNICEF reports remind me of the famous Indian writer and poet Javed Akhtar who told his audience at a conference in Mumbai earlier this year that he saw “no visible poverty” in Lahore during his multiple visits to Pakistan over the last three decades. Responding to Indian novelist Chetan Bhagat’s query about Pakistan’s economic crisis at ABP’s “Ideas of India Summit 2023” in Mumbai, Akhtar said: “Unlike what you see in Delhi and
Mumbai, I did not see any visible poverty in Lahore”. This was Akhtar’s first interview upon his return to India after attending the “Faiz Festival” in Lahore, Pakistan.
Javed Akhtar at ABP Ideas Summit in Mumbai
Chetan Bhagat began by talking about high inflation, low forex reserves, and the major economic crisis in Pakistan and followed it up by asking Javed Akhtar about the effects he saw on the people in Pakistan. In response, Akhtar said, “Bilkul Nahin (Not at all). In India, you see poverty right in front of you, next door to a billionaire. Maybe it is kept back of the beyond. Only some people are allowed to enter certain areas. But you don’t see it (poverty) on the streets. In India, it is right in front of you…amiri bhi or gharibi bhi (wealth and poverty). Sare kam apke samne hain (It’s all in front of you). Wahan yeh dekhai nahin deta (you don’t see it in Pakistan)”.
Alhamra Arts Center, Lahore, Pakistan
Disappointed by the response, Bhagat suggested that the Indian visitor could have been guided by his hosts through certain routes where he couldn’t see any poverty. Javed Akhtar then said “It’s not possible to hide poverty. I would have seen at least a “jhalak” (glimpse) of it as I always do in Delhi and Mumbai….I have been to Pakistan many times but I have not seen it”.
What Javed Akhtar saw and reported recently is obviously anecdotal evidence. But it is also supported by hard data. Over 75% of the world’s poor deprived of basic living standards (nutrition, cooking fuel, sanitation, and housing) live in India compared to 4.6% in Bangladesh and 4.1% in Pakistan, according to a recently released OPHI/UNDP report on multidimensional poverty. Here’s what the report says: “More than 45.5 million poor people are deprived in only these four indicators (nutrition, cooking fuel, sanitation, and housing). Of those people, 34.4 million live in India, 2.1 million in Bangladesh, and 1.9 million in Pakistan—making this a predominantly South Asian profile”.
Alhamra Arts Center, Lahore, Pakistan
Income Poverty in Bangladesh, India, and Pakistan. Source: Our World in Data
The UNDP poverty report shows that the income poverty (people living on $1.90 or less per day) in Pakistan is 3.6% while it is 22.5% in India and 14.3% in Bangladesh. In terms of the population vulnerable to multidimensional poverty, Pakistan (12.9%) does better than Bangladesh (18.2%) and India (18.7%) However, Pakistan fares worse than India and Bangladesh in multiple dimensions of poverty. The headline multidimensional poverty (MPI) figure for Pakistan (0.198) is worse than for Bangladesh (0.104) and India (0.069). This is primarily due to the education and health deficits in Pakistan. Adults with fewer than 6 years of schooling are considered multidimensionally poor by OPHI/UNDP. Income poverty is not included in the MPI calculations. The data used by OHP/UNDP for MPI calculation is from years 2017/18 for Pakistan and from years 2019/2021 for India.
Multidimensional Poverty in South Asia. Source: UNDP
The Indian government’s reported multidimensional poverty rate of 25.01% is much higher than the OPHI/UNDP estimate of 16.4%. NITI Ayog report released in November 2021 says: “India’s national MPI identifies 25.01 percent of the population as multidimensionally poor”.
Multidimensional Poverty in India. Source: NITI Ayog via IIP
Earlier last year, Global Hunger Index 2022 reported that India ranks 107th for hunger among 121 nations. The nation fares worse than all of its South Asian neighbors except for war-torn Afghanistan ranked 109, according to the the report. Sri Lanka ranks 64, Nepal 81, Bangladesh 84, and Pakistan 99. India and Pakistan have levels of hunger that are considered serious. Both have slipped on the hunger charts from 2021 when India was ranked 101 and Pakistan 92. Seventeen countries, including Bosnia, China, Kuwait, Turkey, and UAE, are collectively ranked between 1 and 17 for having a score of less than five.
Here’s a video of Javed Akhtar’s interview with Chetan Bhagat at ABP’s “Ideas of India Summit 2023”. Please watch from 4:19 to 6:00 minutes.
Thank you for taking the time to read my blog post! really want to believe that you thought it was useful and locked in. I would enormously see the value in your criticism of the substance and composing style. Did the article give important experiences? Was it clear and straightforward? Were there any areas that could be refined?
Your criticism is unquestionably significant to me as it assists me with understanding what reverberates with my perusers and how I can upgrade future posts. Please feel free to share any suggestions or ideas for future topics you’d like me to cover. I anticipate hearing your considerations and proceeding to furnish you with significant substance. Many thanks to you!