58 research outputs found
Programmes to Protect the Hungry: Lessons from India
Evidence on calorie intake and nutritional outcomes establishes that chronic hunger and food insecurity persist today on a mass scale in India. The liberalization-induced policy of narrow targeting of the Public Distribution System (PDS), a programme of food security that provides a minimum quantity of cereals at subsidized prices, has resulted in worsening food insecurity. Recent evidence from the 61st round of the National Sample Survey in 2004-2005 establishes that targeting has led to high rates of exclusion of needy households from the system and clear deterioration of coverage in States like Kerala where the universal PDS was most effective.food security, targeting errors, India, liberalization, public distribution
Barriers to expansion of mass literacy and primary schooling in West Bengal : a study based on primary data from selected villages
This paper examines factors affecting literacy and access to school
education in West Bengal, India, and reports the results of a binomial
probit model estimated with primary data from ten villages of West
Bengal. In the analysis of adult literacy, the significant variables were
sex, caste and occupational status and village location. In the probit
results for educational achievements of children of ages 6 to 16 years in
the same villages, however, occupational status was not statistically
significant. In contemporary West Bengal, we argue, class barriers to
school attendance have become less significant; other features of
educational deprivation persist.
Key words: Education, literacy, India, West Bengal
JEL Classification: I
How have hired workers fared? : a case study of women workers from an Indian village, 1977 to 1999
This paper examines certain aspects of employment among women
workers in hired labour households, drawing on two surveys of
Gokilapuram, a village in south-west Tamil Nadu, India, conducted in
1977 and 1999. The study finds that, first, work participation rates among
women were high. Secondly, a woman was able to gain employment in
1999, on average, for only about six months a year. Thirdly, there was a
distinct shift between 1977 and 1999 in the composition of total
employment available to women Fourthly, while the real wage rate for
women at cash-paid, daily-rated crop operations rose significantly
between 1977 and 1999, the gender gap in wages widened.
JEL Classification: J2, J3, J11
Key words: women, agriculture, wages, work participation rate, Asia,
Indi
Aspects of the Political Economy of Crop Incomes in India
This article intends to evaluate at the farm level, the nature of variation of output prices and input costs in agriculture through the lenses of socio-economic class differentiation. Official systems of the calculation of agricultural costs in India have evolved—with respect to their methodological sophistication and complexity—continuously since the early years of India's Independence. At present, there is a three-tiered system of calculation of input costs for crops, ranging from a base calculation of paid-out costs to a calculation that takes into account the shadow prices of family labor and supervision costs as well as other categories of imputed costs. The study uses detailed information from a unique dataset on agricultural outputs, prices and cost of cultivation for paddy and wheat in five villages of three states of India to (1) estimate actual costs of cultivation and the extent to which minimum support price as declared by the Government of India cover these costs and (2) examine costs of cultivation across socio-economic classes of cultivators. Official statistics deal only with averages across states and all classes, thus ignoring the sharp socio-economic differentiation and inequality prevalent in the Indian countryside
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