Human
development, poverty and unemployment
1.44 Efforts towards social sector development continued to
focus on the key areas of human development and creation of
social infrastructure. NCMP mandated flagship programmes of
Government witnessed large increases in outlays. These
programmes included the National Rural Employment Guarantee
Scheme, Total Sanitation Campaign, National Rural Health
Mission, Sarva Shiksha Abhiyan (SSA), Mid-day Meal,
Integrated Child Development Services (ICDS), Jawaharlal
Nehru National Urban Renewal Mission and the Rajiv Gandhi
National Drinking Water Mission. Apart from extending their
coverage, implementation continued to focus on the difficult
task of improving their access, delivery and quality of the
social services.
1.45 The importance of the recent efforts at improving
social infrastructure assumes significance in view of
India’s relative rank of 126 (among 177) in 2004, only one
position higher than in 2003, in the UNDP’s global Human
Development Report for 2006. National Family Health Survey
III has pointed out widespread under-nutrition among women
and children which needs to be addressed urgently by the
National Rural Health Mission. Independent surveys on
elementary education in the country have also pointed out
the impossibility of achieving universal elementary
education by the target date of 2007 and the low levels of
achievement of the children passing out of the school
system. SSA needs to garner greater efforts to focus
attention on the achievement of quality education at the
elementary level.
1.46 The results of the NSSO’s 61st Round large-scale
quinquennial survey on employment and unemployment conducted
during 2004-05 throws a lot of light on the heated debate on
jobless growth under reforms. The survey results show how
the annual growth rate of employment, which had declined
from 2.1 per cent during 1983-1994 to 1.6 per cent during
1993-2000, went up to 2.5 per cent during 1999-2005. While
employment has grown faster than before, with the
demographic dynamics and higher labour force participation,
rate of unemployment (as measured by ‘usual principal
status’) also went up marginally from 2.8 per cent to 3.1
per cent during 1999-2000 to 2004-05. While detailed
analysis of the results of the survey is yet to be carried
out, slowing down of the growth of agriculture could be one
of the main reasons for the growth in the unemployment rate.
Furthermore, the worrisome marginal decline in employment in
the organised sector between 1994 and 2004, according to the
Annual Survey of Industry data, has raised some disturbing
issues about optimal regulation and incentives.
1.47 Based on the data on NSSO’s 61st round large scale
sample survey on household consumer expenditure for the year
2004-05, it may be concluded that the incidence of poverty
came down to about 22 per cent in 2004-05 from a level of
26.1 per cent in 1999-2000 in terms of the mixed recall
period (data for five non-food items, namely clothing,
footwear, durable goods, education and institutional medical
expenses are collected from a 365-day recall period and the
consumption data for the remaining items are collected from
a 30 day recall period). Meeting the Tenth Five Year Plan’s
targeted reduction of five percentage points in the poverty
ratio requires about a 1 percentage point further decline in
the ratio in 2005-07.
1.48 India will continue to benefit from the ‘demographic
dividend’ until 2045. India is likely to achieve a Total
Fertility Rate (which is the average number of children a
woman produces during her life time) of 2.1, which is the
replacement level of fertility, in the decade beginning
2010. With a high proportion of the population in the
reproductive age group, the total population, however, will
continue to grow for another 25-35 years before stabilizing
around 2045. Experience of developed countries suggest that
it takes around 35 years for population to stabilize after
achieving the replacement rate; it is only after 35 years
that one generation replaces another.