Modi government's policies softened the blow of inflation: FM Sitharaman

13 Jul 2022 15:25:32
New Delhi, Jul 13: Finance Minister Nirmala Sitharaman said the timely assistance extended by the government in the form of free rations and cash transfers in the aftermath of the Covid-19 outbreak has helped India minimize inflationary shocks to the poor and the vulnerable.
 

UNDP 
 
The minister cited a report by the United Nations Development Programme on the cost of living crisis in developing countries. It suggested that inflation and supply chain disruptions in the wake of the Ukraine war are unlikely to push India’s population below the poverty line. This is remarkable as a large number of countries, including some of the developed ones like the UK and Italy, have fared much worse than India, showed the report.
 
 
 
The report assessed various scenarios and suggested that inflation will push zero percent of India’s population below the poverty line of $1.90/day. It will push only about 0.02% of the population below the poverty line of $3.30/day and 0.04% of the population below the poverty line of $5.50/day. The government has been providing 5 kg of free rations per person/month under the PM Garib Kalyan Anna Yojana. About 100.3 million metric tonnes of foodgrains were allocated under the scheme, which was estimated to benefit about 80l million from April 2020-September 2022. The free ration scheme, unless extended, will expire in September. The Centre also transferred Rs 500 per month for three months to about 200 million women beneficiaries of the Jan Dhan accounts, the minister said. “The Modi government has, from the beginning of the pandemic, implemented a policy wherein those at the bottom of the pyramid were provided immediate and constant support through food and cash transfers,” Sitharaman said. Extreme poverty in India dropped to 10.2% in the pre-Covid year of 2019 from as much as 22.5% in 2011 and the pace of reduction in rural India has been more dramatic than in urban areas, according to a World Bank working paper. The poverty level in rural and urban areas declined by 14.7 and 7.9 percentage points, respectively, during the 2011-2019 period. While it eased to 11.6% in rural areas in 2019, the urban poverty level stood at 6.3%.
 
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Interestingly, two recent papers have offered various estimates of the poverty levels in India. Extreme poverty in India dropped to 10.2% in the pre-Covid year of 2019 from as much as 22.5% in 2011 and the pace of reduction in rural India has been more dramatic than in urban areas, according to a World Bank working paper, authored by economists Sutirtha Sinha Roy and Roy van der Weide.
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