Human
development, poverty and unemployment
1.60 As
per the United Nations Development Programme’s (UNDP) Human
Development Reports, the value of the Human Development Index
(HDI) – a composite indicator based on income, education and
health – has increased consistently over the years. However,
India’s relative global ranking on this index has remained
at a low of 127 among 177 countries for three years in a row.
The unsatisfactory relative progress, in spite of rapid growth
in income, continued to underscore the need for accelerated
improvements in education and health.
1.61 While
the availability of data for recent periods remains a problem
in both the areas of education and health, there are some
indications of progress, albeit slow, on both fronts. For
example, between 1991-95 to 2001-06, life expectancy at birth
is estimated to have improved from 59.7 years to 63.9 years
for males and from 60.9 years to 66.9 years for females. Similarly,
in education, gross enrolment ratio – the proportion of children
in the 6-14 years age group actually enrolled in elementary
schools – is estimated to have increased progressively from
32.1 in 1950-51 to 82.4 in 2001-02 and further to 84.9 in
2003-04. As on October 2005, number of out-of-school children,
as reported by States/Union Territories (UTs), was down to
95 lakh from 320 lakh in 2001.
1.62 The
latest available official estimate of poverty continues to
be that relating to the year 1999-2000, when the 55th round
large-scale quinquennial sample survey on household consumer
expenditure was conducted by the National Sample Survey Organisation
(NSSO). The survey had estimated a reduction in the incidence
of poverty from 36.0 per cent in 1993-1994 to 26.1 per cent
during 1999-2000. The comparability and the extent of actual
decline were matters of some controversy due to a change in
the methodology for data collection in 1999-2000. While the
results of the 61st round of the large-scale NSSO survey conducted
during 2004-2005 are still awaited, the annual thin-sample
surveys available for the period beyond 1999-2000 point towards
a continued reduction in the incidence of poverty. The results
of the 61st round will clarify whether the rate of decline
in poverty-incidence is in conformity with the trend required
to achieve the Tenth Plan’s targeted reduction in poverty
to 19.3 per cent by 2007.
1.63 The
results of the 60th round NSSO Survey on Employment and Unemployment
situation conducted during January–June 2004 are now available.
The sample size, which is neither large nor small by standards
of the previous NSSO rounds, leaves scope for raising questions
about sampling errors and conclusiveness of the evidence.
Nevertheless, the 60th round estimates the unemployment rate,
based on the current daily status, in 2004, for males at 9.0
per cent (up from 5.6 per cent in 1993-94) in rural areas
and at 8.1 per cent (up from 6.7 per cent in 1993-94) in urban
areas. The corresponding figures for females were 9.3 per
cent (up from 5.6 per cent) in rural areas and 11.7 per cent
(up from 10.5 per cent) in urban areas.