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Showing posts with label Social Issues. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Social Issues. Show all posts

Friday, January 30, 2015

The dynamics of inequality

Occupational and geographic mobility across the region are bridging income and consumption-related disparities, says the World Bank report, ‘Addressing Inequality in South Asia’. The findings accordingly underscore the role of urbanisation and private sector participation as being critical to mitigating socio-economic disadvantages. Inequality should be understood in terms of monetary and non-monetary dimensions of well-being, contends the report. The share of the poorest 40 per cent of households in total consumption shows that inequality in South Asia is moderate by international standards. The comparison is valid even though estimates elsewhere are based on income per capita. Significantly, but not surprisingly, economic mobility of the recent decades has proved beneficial to the population at large, cutting across traditional divides and challenging stereotypes. This finding, if anything, underscores the positive effects of legal safeguards for the protection of minorities. Indeed, monetary inequality of enormous significance is manifested in India’s highly disproportionate billionaire wealth, amounting to 12 per cent of gross domestic product in 2012. The ratio is considerably large even compared with other countries at a similar level of economic development, says the report.
Conversely, non-monetary indices of well-being pertain to opportunities available to people in the early years, outcomes during adulthood and support systems through the life-cycle. Thus, although it is not the poorest region, South Asia accounts for some of the worst human development outcomes in basic education and health care. Besides the highest rates of infant and child mortality that prevail in many parts of the region, more than 50 per cent of poor children below five years of age in Bangladesh and Nepal are stunted; the proportion for India is over 60 per cent. Pervasive tax avoidance and regressive fuel and electricity subsidies are primarily responsible for the inadequate provisioning of public services. Of no insignificant value is the non-dogmatic stance the report adopts on a fundamental moral question such as inequality. Drawing upon influential academic debates in economics and philosophy, the study argues that the rewards linked to hard work and entrepreneurship serve as incentives to give one’s best and enhance overall well-being. It would be fair to infer that non-monetary inequalities are arbitrary and potentially more detrimental to economic growth over the long term. To bring such ideas into the public and political mainstream would enhance the quality of the debate, and further consolidate contemporary competitive electoral democracies.

Monday, December 01, 2014

Dec 01 2014 : The Times of India (Delhi)
UP, MP, Assam fail to stem infant mortality
New Delhi


Disparity In States Performances Despite Funding
A decade after India committed to a national health policy to provide improved access to healthcare, there is growing inequality in infant health across India. Tamil Nadu, Delhi and Maharashtra have improved on their already superior health outcomes while poorer performing states like Uttar Pradesh, Assam and Madhya Pradesh have slid, a study has found.Lowering of infant mortality rate is a priority of the National Rural Health Mission and part of the UN millennium development goals that India has committed to. In India, IMR has declined from 57 per 1,000 live births in 2006 to 42 per 1,000 live births in 2012.
Think tank Swaniti Initiative's analysis of state-level IMR data from 2006-2012 suggests that despite huge infusion of funds in NRHM, there is growing national disparity in infant health. None of the poorly performing states were able to achieve a rate of decline close to what the best performing states have achieved. The interstate inequity grew between 2006 and 2012, despite NRHM providing additional funding to such states. Out of the seven states with the lowest IMR in 2006, four achieved a de crease of 29% or more.
According to Swaniti “Infant mortality is impacted by access to nutritional food and sanitation. Improving healthcare is insufficient to address the structural causes of high infant mortality .“
For the full report, log on to http:www.timesofindia.com

Thursday, August 21, 2014

Aug 21 2014 : The Times of India (Delhi)
Infertility clinics multiply in India
Mumbai:


The rush to infertility clinics in the country grew annually at 15% between 2010 and 2012 as the number of such clinics rose by 20%, new statistics show.The data was collected by the Indian Society for Assisted Reproduction (ISAR) between 2010 and 2012 for the country's only voluntary registry of infertility clinics. Called the National ART Registry of India (NARI), the three-year data presents a snapshot of how Indians coped with the problem of infertility.
Karnataka leads the number of treatment cycles, followed by Maharashtra and Tamil Nadu. Maharashtra is the leader in the number of clinics.
There is nothing to indicate a rise in the incidence of infertility in India. But the NARI data, said ISAR president Dr Hrishikesh Pai, shows there has been an increase in many newer tech niques: from using frozen embryos to adopting embryos to seeking surrogates.
Most Indians opting for assisted reproductive techniques --almost 64% -preferred to get pregnant using fresh embryos.
This involves women taking special drugs to stimulate ovaries to produce more eggs, which are recovered for fertilization in a petri-dish in a laboratory . The fresh embryos are then transferred into the woman's womb. The most significant aspect of the NARI data is the almost 66% increase in use of frozen embryos in the threeyear period of the study . This indicates that technologies for frozen embryo transfer are improving and patients are opting for frozen transfers without compromising their results,“ said Dr Hrishikesh Pai.
The number of couples seeking surrogacy has also gone up: about 44% from 2010 to 2012. “Many celebrities have spoken up about using surrogates. This has resulted in many Indian couples opening up to the idea of surrogacy, which until recently was only sought after by foreigners,“ said former ISAR president Dr Duru Shah, who flagged off the registry study .
For the full report, log on to http://www.timesofindia.com

Tuesday, August 19, 2014

Aug 19 2014 : The Times of India (Delhi)
8 states report 71% of total infant deaths


Have you ever wondered why infant mortality rate (IMR) and maternal mortality rate (MMR) are going down so slowly in India?
Part of the answer can be found in a recent survey report put out by the Census office. The eight most-poor states surveyed are home to half the country's population.And, it is in these states that 71% of infant deaths, 72% of deaths of children under-five years, and 62% of maternal deaths take place.The key reasons for MMR include not getting proper treatment and child-birth related complications. More than three quarters of pregnant women in these states don't undergo full ante-natal checkup (ANC). They are sup posed to get at least one checkup every three months (three in all), one tetanus injection and iron supplement for at least 100 days. In UP, Bihar and Rajasthan over 90% the women don't get full ANC.
A very large proportion of mothers don't get examined within 48 hours of delivery . In Odisha, this proportion is low at 17% but in Bihar it has touched 40% mark. On both these counts, there has been some improvement in all states since 2011 when a baseline survey was done. But, at this rate it will take years to bring it to acceptable levels.
The reason for children's vulnerability to diseases and death is revealed by two key statistics. From one third to nearly half the infants aged 12 to 23 months don't get fully immunized. In UP 47% infants re main unvaccinated, in Assam 36%. This is despite a huge immunization programme conducted by the government.Full immunization includes TB, DPT, polio and measles.
Iron supplementation is a necessity because nearly half the new borns in our country suffer from anemia, as do their mothers. Again, three quarters or more children reported not receiving IFA tablets in the last six months, except Bihar where 66% did not get them.The numbers are staggering: in four states over 80% children were not getting the life giving supplement.
The states covered in the survey are: UP , Bihar, Rajasthan, MP , Chhattisgarh, Jharkhand, Odisha, Uttarakhand and Assam.
For the full report, log on to http://www.timesofindia.com