How China Beat Extreme Poverty; And What Lessons It Holds For India
- October 11, 2022
- Posted by: OptimizeIAS Team
- Category: DPN Topics
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How China Beat Extreme Poverty; And What Lessons It Holds For India
Subject: Economy
Context–
- According to the latest World Bank report on global poverty,India has the most number of poor people (5.6 crores).
- The report found that the number of Indians living in extreme poverty— surviving on less than Rs 46 a day — increased by 56 million (5.6 crores) in 2020.
- Further, it states that close to 600 million Indians survive on less than Rs 84 a day.
- China, comparable in population size, alleviated poverty at historically unprecedented speed and scale between 1978 and 2018.
What is extreme poverty? How is it defined?
- The World Bank (WB): Anyone living on less than $2.15 a day is considered to be living in extreme poverty. About 648 million people globally were in this situation in 2019.
- The very first international poverty line — a dollar a day — was constructed in 1990 using the 1985 prices.
- It was then raised to $1.08 a day in 1993, $1.25 a day in 2005 and $1.90 a day in 2011. The $2.15 one is based on 2017 prices.
What did China achieve?
- The World Bank found that between 1978 and 2018,China’s poverty head-count dropped from 770million to 5.5 million people.
- It means that on average, for 40 years on the trot, every year China pulled 19 million people out of extreme poverty.
- In doing so, it accounted for almost 75 per cent of the global drop in the number of people living in extreme poverty in this period.
- In 2021, China declared that it has eradicated extreme poverty according to the national poverty threshold, lifting 765 million people since 1978, and that it has built a “moderately prosperous society in all respects”.
How did China do it?
- China’s poverty reduction success relied on mainly on two pillars-
- The first pillar was rapid economic growth, supported by broad- based economic transformation.
- Reforms began in the agricultural sector, where poor people could benefit directly from improvements in productivity associated with the introduction of market incentives.
- The development of low-skilled,labour intensive industries provided a source of employment for workers released from agriculture.
- Urbanisation helped migrants take advantage of the new opportunities in the cities, and migrant transfers boosted incomes of their relatives remaining in the villages.
- Public investment in infrastructure improved living conditions in rural areas but also connected them with urban and export markets.
- The second pillar was government policies to alleviate poverty, which initially targeted areas disadvantaged by geography and a lack of economic opportunities, but subsequently focused on poor households irrespective of location.
- A component of these policies was social protection policies for poor households, including programmes in social assistance, insurance, and welfare.
Other factors-
- China’s size necessitated decentralised implementation arrangements, with significant scope for local experimentation and a high degree of competition among local governments.
- China also benefited from favourable conditions at the time of opening up, such as a relatively high level of human capital endowments.
- In 1949,7 percent of those aged 15–64 had completed primary school in China.
- Massive investment in education and expansion of health care since the 1950s resulted in real achievements: in 1978, the infant mortality rate was 52 per 1,000 births, less than half of the average in China’s income group; life expectancy at birth at 66 years far exceeded that of other developing countries; the primary school enrollment rate was 96 per cent; and the secondary school enrollment rate was 49.9 percent.