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Macroeconomic Crises and Poverty Monitoring: A Case Study for India

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TLDR
A case study for India finds an explanation for the drop in average household consumption in rural areas occurring in the year after the 1991 stabilization program instigated to deal with a macroeconomic crisis as discussed by the authors.
Abstract
This case study for India finds an explanation for the drop in average household consumption in rural areas occurring in the year after the 1991 stabilization program instigated to deal with a macroeconomic crisis. A number of factors contributed to falling average living standards, including inflation, a drop in agricultural yields, and contraction in the non-farm sector. The same factors resulted in high poverty measures, although there was also a sizable unexplained shift in distribution. Despite their having an unusually rich data base, the authors nevertheless are unable to account for a large share of the increase in measured poverty, and cannot rule out the possibility that it was the result of sampling and non-sampling errors. Only about one-tenth of the measured increase in poverty is explicable in terms of the variables that would be expected to transmit shocks to the household level. Soon after, the poverty measures returned to their previous level. The study cautions users of survey-based welfare indicators not to read too much into a single survey, particularly when (as here) its results are difficult to explain in terms of other data on hand. However, the usefulness of objective socioeconomic survey data for longer-term poverty monitoring should not be thrown into doubt by these results.

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Farm productivity and rural poverty in India

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References
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Journal ArticleDOI

How important to India's poor is the sectoral composition of economic growth?

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors assess how much India's poor shared in the country's economic growth, taking into account its urban-rural and output composition, and find that output growth in the primary and tertiary sectors reduced poverty in both urban and rural areas but that secondary sector growth did not reduce poverty in either.
Posted Content

Poverty and policy

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors point out that typically the highest incidence and severity of poverty are still found in rural areas, especially if ill-watered, and that the policies pursued by most developing countries up to the mid-1980s have been biased against the rural sector in various ways.
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Growth and redistribution components of changes in poverty measures : a decomposition with applications to Brazil and India in the 1980s

TL;DR: In this article, the authors decomposed poverty into growth and redistribution components, and used the methodology to study poverty in Brazil and India during the 1980s, and showed how changes in poverty.
Journal ArticleDOI

Why Have Some Indian States Done Better than Others at Reducing Rural Poverty

TL;DR: In this article, the authors modeled the evolution of average consumption and various poverty measures using pooled state-level data for 1957-91 and found that the same variables that promoted growth in average consumption also helped reduce poverty.
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