Poverty in India
Definitions, poverty lines, measurement committees, causes, trends, schemes โ the complete chapter with the latest verified data for UPSC, RBI, NABARD, State PSC, and all competitive exams.
๐ฏ Relevant For: UPSC CSERBI Grade BNABARD Grade ASEBIState PSCCUET PGUGC NETIESIIT JAM
๐ฏ What You Will Learn
- Define poverty โ absolute, relative, and multidimensional
- Trace India’s poverty line from Dadabhai Naoroji to NITI Aayog
- Analyse Lakdawala, Tendulkar, and Rangarajan committee estimates
- Interpret the latest HCES 2022-23 and NITI Aayog MPI 2023-24 data
- Identify causes of poverty in India โ historical and structural
- Evaluate India’s poverty reduction trends since 1950
- Critically analyse major anti-poverty schemes and their coverage
- Distinguish types of poverty and their measurement challenges
India is the world’s 4th largest economy with a GDP of $4.3 trillion and sustaining 7.6% growth. At the same time, according to NITI Aayog’s latest data, 11.28% of Indians โ roughly 165 million people โ were still multidimensionally poor in 2022-23. The Global Hunger Index 2024 ranks India 105th out of 127 nations, flagging “serious” hunger.
Yet the trend is undeniably positive: 24.82 crore (248 million) Indians escaped multidimensional poverty in just 9 years โ between 2013-14 and 2022-23 (NITI Aayog, 2024). India is on track to halve MPI poverty well before the 2030 SDG target. Understanding this paradox โ remarkable progress yet persistent deprivation โ is the heart of this chapter.
Defining Poverty โ Types and Concepts
Before measuring poverty, we must define it. Different definitions lead to very different poverty counts โ which is why India’s poverty estimates vary so widely across methodologies.
A fixed, objective standard below which a person is considered poor โ defined in terms of minimum calories, income, or consumption required to survive. Example: World Bank’s $2.15/day extreme poverty line. A person is poor if their consumption/income falls below this threshold, regardless of what others earn.
Poverty defined relative to the average standard of living in a society. A person is “poor” if they earn significantly less than the median income of the population โ typically below 50โ60% of median income. More common in developed countries. India officially uses absolute poverty concepts for policy.
Poverty measured across multiple non-income dimensions โ health, education, and living standards. A person is MPI-poor if deprived in 3 or more of 10 indicators (OPHI/UNDP methodology). India’s NITI Aayog uses 12 indicators (adding maternal health and bank account access) for the National MPI.
| Type | Definition Basis | Measured By | Key Advantage | Key Limitation |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Absolute Poverty | Fixed minimum survival threshold (income/calories) | Income/consumption surveys; World Bank $2.15/day | Comparable across time; objective | Ignores inequality; doesn’t capture quality of life |
| Relative Poverty | % below median income in a society | Gini Coefficient; income distribution data | Captures social exclusion; relevant to inequality | Difficult to compare across countries; no absolute floor |
| Multidimensional Poverty | Deprivation in health, education, living standards | NFHS data; MPI = H ร A | Most comprehensive; guides specific policy interventions | Data intensive; complex to calculate; subjective weightings |
| Chronic Poverty | Long-term, persistent deprivation โ not temporary | Panel data tracking same households over time | Identifies entrenched poverty; targets structural solutions | Requires longitudinal data; expensive to collect |
| Transient Poverty | Temporary poverty due to shocks (illness, drought) | Household panel surveys; seasonal data | Distinguishes structural from temporary poverty | Hard to separate from chronic poverty statistically |
The earliest poverty estimate for India was made by Dadabhai Naoroji (the “Grand Old Man of India”) in his landmark book Poverty and Un-British Rule in India, published in 1901. He estimated the poverty line at โน16 to โน35 per capita per year at 1867-68 prices โ based on the minimum required for a “bare physical existence.” His “Drain of Wealth” theory argued British colonialism was a root cause of Indian poverty.
Evolution of India’s Poverty Line โ Committee by Committee
India’s official poverty line has been revised multiple times through expert committees. Each revision changed the number of “poor” dramatically โ making this one of the most contentious and frequently tested topics in all competitive exams.
First formal official poverty estimate โ set at โน20 per capita per month (rural) and โน25 per capita per month (urban) at 1960-61 prices. Based on a minimum food basket providing 2,250 calories per day.
Approach: Calorie-based minimum consumptionRecommended calorie norms of 2,400 calories/day for rural areas and 2,100 calories/day for urban areas. Poverty line defined as the per capita expenditure required to achieve these norms. Became the basis for Planning Commission estimates through the 1990s.
Rural: 2,400 cal | Urban: 2,100 cal per dayRevised the methodology โ recommended using Consumer Price Index for Agricultural Labourers (CPIAL) for rural and Consumer Price Index for Industrial Workers (CPIIW) for urban areas to update poverty lines over time. Poverty line set as: Rural โน49/person/month; Urban โน57/person/month (at 1973-74 prices).
Poverty (2004-05): Rural 28.3% | Urban 25.7% | Total 27.5%Most widely used and tested committee. Shifted from calorie-norms to consumption expenditure โ included food, education, and health expenditures. Recommended state-specific poverty lines using Mixed Reference Period (MRP) consumption data from NSSO. Poverty line: Rural โน816/person/month (โน27/day); Urban โน1,000/person/month (โน33/day) at 2011-12 prices.
Poverty (2011-12): 21.9% (269.3 million people below poverty line)Criticized the Tendulkar line as too low. Recommended a higher poverty threshold based on separate caloric, protein, fat norms PLUS non-food expenditure (education, health, clothing, shelter). New line: Rural โน972/person/month (โน32/day); Urban โน1,407/person/month (โน47/day) at 2011-12 prices.
Poverty (2011-12): 29.5% (363 million) โ much higher than TendulkarIndia has shifted from income/calorie-based to multidimensional poverty tracking via the National MPI (12 indicators). The Household Consumption Expenditure Survey (HCES) 2022-23 provides new consumption data after an 11-year gap. Based on HCES, SBI Research and NITI Aayog CEO suggest poverty as low as 4โ5% (rural 7.2%, urban 4.6%), though scholars debate this figure. MPI-based poverty: 11.28% in 2022-23.
MPI Poverty 2022-23: 11.28% | MPI Value declined from 0.117 to 0.066 (2015-21)| Committee | Rural Poverty Line (โน/month) | Urban Poverty Line (โน/month) | % BPL (2011-12) | Number BPL |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Tendulkar (2009) | โน816 | โน1,000 | 21.9% | 269 million |
| Rangarajan (2014) | โน972 | โน1,407 | 29.5% | 363 million |
| World Bank ($2.15/day PPP) | ~โน178/day equivalent | Same | ~16โ17% | ~215 million |
The same data (2011-12 NSSO survey) gives dramatically different poverty counts depending on the methodology. This is why India’s poverty estimates are so contested. Tendulkar gives the “official” figure; Rangarajan gives a higher one. Neither is currently being officially updated โ India now uses the MPI approach.
Latest Poverty Data โ HCES 2022-23 & MPI 2023-24
After an 11-year gap (the 2017-18 NSSO survey was cancelled), the Household Consumption Expenditure Survey (HCES) 2022-23 โ released in February 2024 โ provides fresh data on India’s poverty levels.
๐ฎ๐ณ India’s Poverty Data โ Latest Verified (2022-24)
India’s poverty is deeply regional. The 5 states with highest MPI poverty (Bihar, Jharkhand, UP, MP, Meghalaya) together account for a disproportionate share of India’s poor. UP alone lifted 5.94 crore people out of MPI poverty between 2013-14 and 2022-23 โ the largest absolute reduction of any state. Bihar (3.77 crore), MP (2.30 crore), and Rajasthan (1.87 crore) followed. Meanwhile, Kerala, Goa, and Sikkim have near-negligible MPI poverty levels. (NITI Aayog Discussion Paper, 2024)
Causes of Poverty in India
Poverty in India is not a single problem with a single cause โ it is a complex web of historical, structural, social, and economic factors that reinforce each other. Understanding the root causes is essential for designing effective policy.
Colonial Legacy & Deindustrialisation
British rule systematically drained India’s wealth โ Dadabhai Naoroji’s “Drain Theory” estimated โน500 crore+ annually. Local industries (textiles, handicrafts) were destroyed. India became a raw material exporter and finished goods importer, impoverishing artisans and weavers.
Agrarian Distress & Low Productivity
45.5% of India’s workforce depends on agriculture, which contributes only ~18% of GDP. Small and fragmented landholdings, low mechanisation, dependence on monsoon, lack of irrigation, and inadequate credit access keep rural incomes chronically low.
Rising Inequality
India’s growth since 1991 has been unequal โ the top 10% captured disproportionate gains. Gini coefficient of ~0.35 understates real wealth concentration (top 1% own ~40% of national wealth). “Jobless growth” left the poor behind even as GDP soared.
Low Human Capital โ Education & Health
Poor quality of education (ASER reports: many Class 5 students cannot read Class 2 text), low literacy especially among women, inadequate healthcare access โ these trap poor families in poverty across generations. India’s R&D spending is only 0.64% of GDP.
Social Exclusion โ Caste, Gender, Tribe
Scheduled Castes and Scheduled Tribes face systematic discrimination in employment, credit, and education. ST poverty rate was 49.5% (rural) in 2011-12, nearly double the national average. Gender discrimination compounds poverty โ women’s LFPR is only ~37%.
Rapid Population Growth (Historical)
India’s population growth from 361 million (1951) to 1.44 billion (2024) strained resources. Per capita income growth was diluted by population expansion, especially in high-fertility states like Bihar and UP where poverty remains highest.
Unemployment & Underemployment
India’s formal employment generation has lagged behind labour force growth. “Disguised unemployment” in agriculture โ where more people are engaged than needed (marginal product of labour โ zero) โ keeps rural incomes at subsistence level.
Health Shocks & Catastrophic Expenditure
A single medical emergency pushes millions below poverty line each year โ India’s out-of-pocket health spending is among the highest globally (~60% of total health expenditure). This is why Ayushman Bharat’s โน5 lakh health cover is so crucial for the poor.
Economist Ragnar Nurkse described the “Vicious Circle of Poverty” โ a self-reinforcing trap: Low income โ Low savings โ Low investment โ Low capital formation โ Low productivity โ Low income. Breaking this cycle requires external intervention (government, aid, or credit) to “inject” investment. This theoretical framework is frequently asked in UPSC Mains, UGC NET, and IES.
Poverty Trends in India โ The Big Picture
India’s poverty reduction story is one of the most dramatic in human history โ and also one of the most debated. Let’s examine what the data actually shows.
| Year | Tendulkar % BPL | Rangarajan % BPL | World Bank $2.15/day | Key Context |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1993-94 | 45.3% | โ | ~49% | Post-liberalisation; reforms just beginning |
| 2004-05 | 37.2% | โ | ~38% | NDA โ UPA transition; MGNREGA launched 2005 |
| 2009-10 | 29.6% | 38.2% | ~32% | RTE Act 2009; NFSM; fastest decline period |
| 2011-12 | 21.9% | 29.5% | ~22% | Last NSSO survey used for official poverty line |
| 2013-14 | โ | โ | โ | MPI: 29.17% (NITI Aayog projected) |
| 2019-21 | โ | โ | โ | MPI: 14.96% (NFHS-5 based) |
| 2022-23 | โ | โ | ~5% (new line) | MPI: 11.28%; HCES 2022-23 released |
Between 2005-06 and 2015-16, India reduced multidimensional poverty at an annual rate of 7.69%. This accelerated to 10.66% per year between 2015-16 and 2019-21. India is one of only four countries globally to have halved its MPI value โ and is on track to achieve SDG Target 1.2 (halving multidimensional poverty) well before the 2030 deadline. (NITI Aayog Discussion Paper, 2024; OPHI/UNDP verification)
Major Anti-Poverty Schemes โ India’s Policy Toolkit
India runs the world’s largest welfare architecture โ covering food, employment, housing, health, and financial inclusion. These schemes are among the most frequently tested topics in every competitive exam. Know them cold.
PM-KISAN
MGNREGA
Ayushman Bharat (PM-JAY)
NFSA / PMGKAY
PMAY-G & PMAY-U
Jal Jeevan Mission
PMUY
JAM Trinity (JDY-Aadhaar-Mobile)
| Scheme | Year | Ministry | Target Group | Approach |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| MGNREGA | 2005 | Rural Development | All rural households | Rights-based employment guarantee |
| NFSA / PMGKAY | 2013 / 2020 | Consumer Affairs / Food | 75% rural, 50% urban | Food security / targeted PDS reform |
| PM-KISAN | 2019 | Agriculture | All landholding farmers | Direct income transfer (DBT) |
| Ayushman Bharat (PM-JAY) | 2018 | Health & Family Welfare | Bottom 40% families | Health insurance (secondary/tertiary care) |
| PMAY-G | 2016 | Rural Development | Rural BPL / houseless | Housing (pucca houses with toilet, electricity) |
| PMUY | 2016 | Petroleum & Natural Gas | BPL women | Free LPG connection |
| Jal Jeevan Mission | 2019 | Jal Shakti | Rural households | Tap water (Functional Household Tap Connection) |
| PM Jan Dhan Yojana (PMJDY) | 2014 | Finance (DFS) | All unbanked households | Financial inclusion; enables DBT |
| NRLM / DAY-NRLM | 2011 | Rural Development | Rural poor women | Self Help Groups; livelihoods; microfinance |
| Swachh Bharat Mission | 2014 | Housing / Jal Shakti | Rural & urban | Sanitation (ODF โ Open Defecation Free) |
Poverty vs. Inequality โ Two Related But Distinct Problems
India’s poverty may be falling, but its inequality is rising. These are related but distinct problems โ and understanding the distinction is critical for exam answers and policy analysis.
| Dimension | Poverty | Inequality |
|---|---|---|
| Definition | Deprivation below a minimum threshold | Gap between rich and poor โ relative distribution |
| Measure | Headcount ratio, MPI, poverty gap | Gini Coefficient, Palma ratio, income shares |
| India trend | Declining (MPI: 29.17% โ 11.28%) | Rising (Top 1% own ~40% of wealth) |
| Paradox | Absolute deprivation is falling | Relative gap is widening simultaneously |
| Policy implication | Welfare schemes, employment, food security | Progressive taxation, wealth redistribution, social spending |
Between 1990 and 2021, the top 1% of Indians captured 22% of income growth, while the bottom 50% received only 13% (World Inequality Report 2022). Yet in the same period, absolute poverty โ measured by income, calories, or MPI โ fell dramatically. This is the paradox of India’s “growth-without-equitable-development”: more people are above the poverty line, but the distance between the poorest and wealthiest has grown. The JAM trinity, DBT, and direct transfer schemes are attempts to bridge this gap, but structural inequality in asset ownership remains deep.
โ ๏ธ Common Exam Mistakes
๐ก Chapter 6 โ Key Takeaways
- 1Absolute poverty = fixed minimum threshold. Relative poverty = below median income. Multidimensional poverty = deprived in 3+ of 10 MPI indicators. India officially uses absolute + MPI approaches.
- 2Poverty line evolution: Naoroji (1867) โ Alagh Committee 1979 (calorie norms: 2,400 rural / 2,100 urban) โ Lakdawala (1993) โ Tendulkar (2009): โน816 rural, โน1,000 urban โ Rangarajan (2014): โน972 rural, โน1,407 urban.
- 32011-12 BPL: Tendulkar = 21.9% (269M); Rangarajan = 29.5% (363M). Same data, different methodology โ a critical distinction.
- 4NITI Aayog MPI 2024: MPI poverty declined from 29.17% (2013-14) to 11.28% (2022-23). 24.82 crore people lifted out of MPI poverty in 9 years.
- 5Bihar (highest MPI poverty), Kerala (lowest MPI poverty). UP lifted most people โ 5.94 crore between 2013-14 and 2022-23.
- 6Key causes: colonial deindustrialisation, agrarian distress, inequality, low human capital, caste/gender discrimination, unemployment, health shocks. Nurkse’s Vicious Circle of Poverty.
- 7MGNREGA: 100 days guaranteed to each RURAL HOUSEHOLD (not individual). PMGKAY: Free 5kg grain/person to 81.35 crore (extended to 2028). PM-KISAN: โน6,000/year to 11+ crore farmers.
- 8JAM Trinity (Jan Dhan + Aadhaar + Mobile): Enables DBT, reduces leakages, brings welfare directly to beneficiaries. 51+ crore Jan Dhan accounts opened.
โก Rapid Recall โ Exam MCQ Facts
๐ฏ Chapter 6 Assessment โ Poverty in India
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