India's poverty rate has decreased significantly, with the share of Indians below the World Bank's lower middle-income poverty line falling from over 50% a decade ago to roughly 30% in recent estimates.
A World Bank policy paper suggests evaluating welfare by assessing the distance of people from a reasonable standard of living, rather than just counting those below a poverty line.
Fewer than 10% of Indian workers hold formal jobs with social security, while the majority operate in the informal sector with limited productivity and uncertain earnings.
Youth unemployment is around 45%, and the unemployment rate among graduates is nearly 29%, indicating that education is not always leading to upward mobility.
Detailed Insights:
India's economic growth has not translated into significant mobility for a large portion of the population, leading to a growing "vulnerable middle" class.
Stagnant real wages for salaried workers, despite improved productivity, indicate a fractured link between economic growth and income for many.
Between 2016 and 2021, the manufacturing sector lost approximately 24 million jobs, pushing many workers back into agriculture, which has lower average earnings.
Household financial savings have decreased to about 5% of GDP, while household debt has increased, with credit being used more for basic consumption rather than investment.
India's child wasting rate is the highest globally at 18.7%, and about 35.5% of children under five are stunted, indicating constrained future mobility.
The central economic challenge is shifting from reducing poverty to preventing those who move above the poverty line from being trapped just beyond it.
Addressing this challenge requires expanding productive employment, strengthening the connection between productivity and wages, and ensuring that economic gains are not confined to a narrow segment of the economy.
Key Concepts Involved:
Poverty Line: A threshold of income or consumption used to distinguish between those living in poverty and those who are not.
Vulnerable Middle: A socioeconomic group that has moved above the poverty line but remains susceptible to economic shocks and lacks stable economic security.
Economic Mobility: The ability of individuals or families to improve their economic standing over time, often measured by changes in income or wealth.