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Why is INDIA so Dirty?

More than 415 million people have been lifted out of poverty in India in the last 15 years, out of which more than 140 million people exited poverty in the country just in the last five years, says the Multidimensional Poverty Index (MPI) report released by the United Nations Development Programme (UNDP) .

Just stop harping on your laggard Indian performance on poverty and SDG goals. Your Jaat-Paat caste ridden society has inbuilt problems. Don't compare your country with ours.

Bangladesh, Nepal, Rwanda top India in reducing poverty - study​

By Nita Bhalla, AlertNet
4 MIN READ

NEW DELHI (AlertNet) - Nepal, Bangladesh and Rwanda are “star performers” in reducing the number of poor in their countries compared to larger economies such as India, according to an Oxford University study published on Monday.

All three could be on track to eradicate poverty in 20 years if they keep up their current rate of progress, the data showed.

The study, based on research in 22 countries, said the three nations had the strongest decreases in poverty as recorded by its Multidimensional Poverty Index (MPI) which looks at various indicators including health, education and living standards.

“The success of Nepal and Bangladesh in reducing poverty despite their relatively low income highlights the effectiveness of social policy investments combined with active civil society engagement,” said Sabina Alkire, Director of the Oxford Poverty and Human Development Initiative (OPHI).

Researchers found Nepal’s poor dropped to 44.2 percent of the population in 2011 from 64.7 percent in 2006 - that is 4.1 percentage points per year. While in Bangladesh, poverty rates decreased by 3.2 percentage points per year between 2004 and 2007 and Rwanda by 3.4 annually from 2005 to 2010.

“Countries managed to reduce multidimensional poverty through tackling a range of different deprivations, with no single formula for success emerging from the study,” said an OPHI statement.

“Nepal did the best in areas like nutrition, child mortality, electricity, improved flooring and assets. Rwanda showed the biggest improvement in sanitation and water, and Bangladesh did best in improving sanitation and school attendance.”

INDIA SLOW ON POVERTY?​

The MPI is seen as a more holistic approach to measuring poverty rates than income alone. It is based on 10 indicators such as malnutrition, education and sanitation. If people are deprived in three or more areas, they are identified as “MPI poor”.

India, which is home to around 40 percent of the world’s one billion people living below the poverty line, cut poverty by an average of only 1.2 percentage points annually between 1999 and 2006, said the study.

Nepal, Rwanda and Bangladesh were followed by Ghana, Tanzania, Cambodia and Bolivia. Countries where there had been no statistically significant reduction in poverty were Madagascar, Senegal, Jordan and Peru.

In India, the study said the least progress had been made in the most under developed areas such as Bihar, Madhya Pradesh, Rajasthan, Uttar Pradesh and West Bengal - and among the most marginalised communities such as Muslims, tribals, lower castes and female-headed households.

Even India’s best-performing regions - Kerala and Andhra Pradesh - progressed little more than half as fast as Nepal or Bangladesh in reducing multidimensional poverty.

“If Nepal and Bangladesh continue reducing poverty at the current rate, they will halve MPI in less than 10 years and eradicate it in 20,” said OPHI research officer José Manuel Roche.


“Based on the same assumptions, it will take India 41 years to eradicate acute poverty as measured by the MPI.”
 
Just stop harping on your laggard Indian performance on poverty and SDG goals. Your Jaat-Paat caste ridden society has inbuilt problems. Don't compare your country with ours.

Bangladesh, Nepal, Rwanda top India in reducing poverty - study​

By Nita Bhalla, AlertNet
4 MIN READ

NEW DELHI (AlertNet) - Nepal, Bangladesh and Rwanda are “star performers” in reducing the number of poor in their countries compared to larger economies such as India, according to an Oxford University study published on Monday.

All three could be on track to eradicate poverty in 20 years if they keep up their current rate of progress, the data showed.

The study, based on research in 22 countries, said the three nations had the strongest decreases in poverty as recorded by its Multidimensional Poverty Index (MPI) which looks at various indicators including health, education and living standards.

“The success of Nepal and Bangladesh in reducing poverty despite their relatively low income highlights the effectiveness of social policy investments combined with active civil society engagement,” said Sabina Alkire, Director of the Oxford Poverty and Human Development Initiative (OPHI).

Researchers found Nepal’s poor dropped to 44.2 percent of the population in 2011 from 64.7 percent in 2006 - that is 4.1 percentage points per year. While in Bangladesh, poverty rates decreased by 3.2 percentage points per year between 2004 and 2007 and Rwanda by 3.4 annually from 2005 to 2010.

“Countries managed to reduce multidimensional poverty through tackling a range of different deprivations, with no single formula for success emerging from the study,” said an OPHI statement.


“Nepal did the best in areas like nutrition, child mortality, electricity, improved flooring and assets. Rwanda showed the biggest improvement in sanitation and water, and Bangladesh did best in improving sanitation and school attendance.”

INDIA SLOW ON POVERTY?​

The MPI is seen as a more holistic approach to measuring poverty rates than income alone. It is based on 10 indicators such as malnutrition, education and sanitation. If people are deprived in three or more areas, they are identified as “MPI poor”.

India, which is home to around 40 percent of the world’s one billion people living below the poverty line, cut poverty by an average of only 1.2 percentage points annually between 1999 and 2006, said the study.

Nepal, Rwanda and Bangladesh were followed by Ghana, Tanzania, Cambodia and Bolivia. Countries where there had been no statistically significant reduction in poverty were Madagascar, Senegal, Jordan and Peru.

In India, the study said the least progress had been made in the most under developed areas such as Bihar, Madhya Pradesh, Rajasthan, Uttar Pradesh and West Bengal - and among the most marginalised communities such as Muslims, tribals, lower castes and female-headed households.

Even India’s best-performing regions - Kerala and Andhra Pradesh - progressed little more than half as fast as Nepal or Bangladesh in reducing multidimensional poverty.

“If Nepal and Bangladesh continue reducing poverty at the current rate, they will halve MPI in less than 10 years and eradicate it in 20,” said OPHI research officer José Manuel Roche.

“Based on the same assumptions, it will take India 41 years to eradicate acute poverty as measured by the MPI.”
10 year old article :chilli: :dance3:
 
Just stop harping on your laggard Indian performance on poverty and SDG goals. Your Jaat-Paat caste ridden society has inbuilt problems. Don't compare your country with ours
আমি ত্রিপুরায় থাকি এবং একজন বাঙালি
আমি আমার ভারতকে ভালবাসি 🇮🇳 ❤️
 
10 year old article :chilli: :dance3:

That's because your chaiwala loves to hide recent figures, which after covid - are horrendous.

1669965314330.png


Old story. Enough toilets have been made now

No need to make toilets, just put out lies and propganda using Modi IT Cell.... as usual.
 
That's because your chaiwala loves to hide recent figures, which after covid - are horrendous.


View attachment 902211



No need to make toilets, just put out lies and propganda using Modi IT Cell.... as usual.
@SIPRA

 
it is tragic and despicable that are plenty of billionaires in india who can build a nice clean neighborhood costing them a pocket change. but instead flaunt it while living in the shitole shanty town.
 
it is tragic and despicable that are plenty of billionaires in india who can build a nice clean neighborhood costing them a pocket change. but instead flaunt it while living in the shitole shanty town.

A failure to ensure rights and responsibilities by custom and by equal enforcement of law undermines a respect for the commons.

They should study how Singapore assimilated it’s Malaysian, Indian and Chinese populations under British rule and then post independence to see how the culture developed; how it enforce cultural change to maintain cleanliness.
 
Pakistan and Bangladesh are pretty dirty too in urban areas tbh. Maybe instead of mocking a country take lessons of what to to or what not to do by looking at their performance.
 
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