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This article was first published 13 years ago

The SAD state of 'other' India

Last updated on: September 20, 2011 11:17 IST

Image: Rajasthani women, dressed in traditional attire, at the Pushkar fair in Rajasthan.
Photographs: Reuters

While it is true that India is witnessing booming economic growth -- the projected 8 per cent growth rate is one of the highest in the world -- it is equally true that many Indians continue to struggle to make ends meet.

Out of a population of 1.2 billion, about 400 million are still living on a dollar a day; basic amenities, such as sanitation, are grossly inadequate; healthcare and education sectors, especially in rural areas, are failing to meet demand; and migration to cities continues to increase every year.

There are many reasons for this woeful state, but the major ones are bad governance, corruption, short-sighted policies and the convoluted political system.

So, while prices of all commodities continue to rise and inflation refuses to come down, our politicians are becoming multi-millionaires, some of them in less than two years time in government.

Let us have a look at the other India.

...

The sad state of rural India

Image: Buddhist monks perform 'chams', or a mask dance, during the Ladakh festival in Phyang west of Leh.
Photographs: Reuters

Fact-sheet

Population: 1.21 billion

Population growth: 1.34 per cent

Urban population: 30 per cent

Rate of urbanisation: 2.4 per cent

Infant mortality rate: 47.57 deaths per 1,000 live births

Life expectancy at birth: 66.8 years

Literacy rate: 61 per cent

School life expectancy: 10 years

Education expenditure: 3.1 per cent

...

The sad state of rural India

Image: Tourists participate in white water rafting in the Chenab River in Thathri, north of Jammu.
Photographs: Reuters

Education

Gross enrolment rate in pre-school: 18 per cent

Drop out rates: 48 per cent in elementary education

Infrastructure: 24 per cent schools do not have proper buildings and eight per cent do not have drinking water facilities

Standard of education: Eight per cent aged 7 to 12 cannot read a paragraph

Participation: At the lower secondary level (grades nine and 10), enrolment rate is 52 per cent, while at the senior secondary level (grades 11 and 12), it is 28 per cent

Access: Number of secondary schools is almost half the number of upper primary schools available in the country

Private education: Share of private institutions is seven per cent, upper primary 21 per cent and secondary 32 per cent

(Source: Fortress Team Research)

...

The sad state of rural India

Image: Farmers carry watermelons across Ganga in Allahabad.
Photographs: Reuters

Healthcare

Growth of healthcare: 16 per cent in the 1990s

Value of the sector: $34 billion

Projected growth: $40 billion by 2012

Share of private sector: 80 per cent of total spending.

Private firms are now thought to provide about 60 per cent of all outpatient care and as much as 40 per cent of all in-patient care.

It is estimated that nearly 70 per cent of all hospitals and 40 per cent of hospital beds are in the private sector

Public hospitals: Of the 15,393 hospitals in 2002, two-thirds are in the public sector

Community health centres: India needs 74,150 community health centres per million but has less than half that number

...

The sad state of rural India

Image: Villagers sell flower garlands at a wholesale market in Kolkata.
Photographs: Reuters

Laboratories: 11 states do not have laboratories for testing drugs, and more than half of existing laboratories are not properly equipped or staffed

Hospital beds in urban areas: 178.78 per 100,000

Hospital beds in rural areas: 9.85 per 100,000

Hospitals in urban areas: 3.6 per 100,000

Hospitals in rural areas: 0.36 per 100,000

Dispensaries in urban areas: 3.6 per 100,000

Dispensaries in rural areas: 1.49 per 100,000

Indebtedness: It is estimated that 20 million fall below the poverty line each year because of indebtedness due to healthcare needs

(Source: PricewaterhouseCoopers)

...

The sad state of rural India

Image: White tigers swim in a pond on a hot day at the zoological park in Hyderabad.
Photographs: Reuters

Unemployment

Unemployment rate: 9.4 per cent of the total labour force, not the total population

Unemployed: 40 million

Total population in working age of 15-59: 63.5 per cent

Male unemployment: 8 per cent

Female unemployment: 14.6 per cent

Urban unemployment: 7.3 per cent

Rural unemployment: 10.1 per cent

State with highest unemployment: Goa

(Source: Labour Bureau, Government of India)

...

The sad state of rural India

Image: A vendor sells earthen water pots at her roadside shop on a hot day in Chandigarh.
Photographs: Reuters

Slums

Total slum population: 40 million

Population living in slums: 4 per cent

Children aged between 0-6 living in slums: 5 million

Growth of slums in India: 697 million in 1990, 923 million in 2000 and 2 billion by 2030

Top cities with slum population: 55 per cent in Mumbai, 44 per cent Meerut and 40 per cent in Pune

...

The sad state of rural India

Image: A procession of decorated elephants during 'Trichur Pooram' festival at Trichur district in Kerala.
Photographs: Reuters

Sanitation

Population without sanitation: 600 million

Percentage with sanitation: 55 per cent

Population in rural areas without sanitation: 74 per cent

Sewers built to handle three million of New Delhi s population

Sewers handling 14 million of New Delhi's population

Percentage of wastewater treated in India: 30 per cent

Water pollution: Three-fourths of surface water is polluted

Investment in rural sanitation in 2004: $90 million

Investment in rural sanitation in 2008: $280 million

(Source: Asian Development Bank)

...

The sad state of rural India

Image: People walk inside Kashmir
Photographs: Reuters

Urbanisation

One of the biggest challenges facing India is the rapid, and unchecked, growth of urban areas. From New Delhi to Chennai to Kolkata, cities are growing at breakneck speed and that is putting enormous pressure on the existing infrastructure.

The rapid growth is also testing the social fabric of these cities. So, while the original inhabitants of cities like Mumbai and Kolkata blame  the continuous influx of outsiders for the overcrowding, do these migrants have a choice?

From the government to private corporations and everybody in between is focused solely on urban areas, while completely ignoring any kind of development in rural areas.

And, it is not only the metros that are witnessing influx of people; even cities like Lucknow are creaking under the overload.

So, what is the solution? As long as people in rural areas do not have access to good schools, to functioning hospitals to electricity, to employment opportunities, etc, they would continue to move to cities.

The government can go on pouring money on infrastructure projects in urban areas, but as long as it does not focus on rural areas, all projects will fall well short of demand.

Let us have a look at growth in population in four major cities: Bengaluru, New Delhi, Chennai and Mumbai.

...

The sad state of rural India

Image: Foreign devotees chant at the confluence of Ganga and the Bay of Bengal on Sagar Island, south of Kolkata.
Photographs: Reuters

Bengaluru

Population in 2011: 9.59 million

Growth rate: 46.68 per cent

...

The sad state of rural India

Image: A boy jumps off a promenade into Ganga in Varanasi.
Photographs: Reuters

New Delhi

Population in 2011: 16.80 million

Growth rate: 20.96 per cent

...

The sad state of rural India

Image: A photographer takes a picture of a monkey near Amarnath in Jammu.
Photographs: Reuters

Chennai

Population in 2011: 5.30 million

Growth rate: 7.65 per cent

...

The sad state of rural India

Image: A horse-drawn carriage carrying tourists moves past the Taj Mahal hotel in Mumbai.
Photographs: Reuters

Mumbai

Population in 2011: 20.50 million

Growth rate: 4.2 per cent