The Poverty Line (English, Paperback, Subramanian)
The Oxford India Short Introductions are concise, stimulating, and accessible guides to different aspects of India. Combining authoritative analysis, new ideas, and diverse perspectives, they discuss subjects which are topical yet enduring, as also emerging areas of study and debate.
Poverty alleviation and socio-economic equality have largely remained the prime focus of India's rapid growth-driven economic processes. This short introduction brings together systematic academic research on an area of extensive debate and divergence-the identification and specification of the poverty line.
The book undertakes a nuanced analysis of:
the measurement of poverty and its associated complexities
the importance of a uniform poverty standard, and the major concerns posed by current policies
the US and the World Bank approaches to poverty assessment
the linkages between economic welfare policies and drawing the poverty line
Through comparative theoretical approach and econometric analyses, it critically reviews and interprets the Indian experience of poverty estimation over the last fifty years; identifies the challenges; and suggests suitable policy interventions towards a more comprehensive approach.
About The Author
S. Subramanian is Professor, Madras Institute of Development Studies. He has published Rights, Deprivation, and Disparity: Essays in Concepts and Measurement (2006) and Poverty, Inequality, and Population: Essays in Development and Applied Measurement (2010) with OUP.
Table Of Contents
Acknowledgements
1: Introduction
2: Identifying the Income-Poor: Some Background Considerations
3: The Poverty Line in India
4: Poverty Thresholds Elsewhere: The US and the World Bank Approaches
5: The Source of the Difficulty: An Attempt at Elucidation
6: Conclusion;
Appendix 1
Appendix 2
Appendix 3
References
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Sep, 2014