URBAN POVERTY

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URBAN POVERTY

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Obvious need is to reduce, if not remove, the need to live in slum conditions ... and the poor be provided low cost urban transport to their places of work. ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: URBAN POVERTY


1
URBAN POVERTY
  • A PRESENTATION AT THE NATIONAL COLLOQUIUM
    ORGANISED BY ARC AND JANAGRAHA
  • BY
  • Abhijit Sengupta

2
Increasing Urbanisation
  • 1951 2001
    Growth Rate
  •  
  • India population 361 m 1027 m 2.8 times
  •  
  • Urban population 62 m 285 m 4.6 times
  •  
  • In 1987/88, in towns with population below 50,000
    the of poor was 47, while for cities above I
    million the ratio was 27. In 1993/94 these were
    43 and 20 respectively.

3
  • Therefore
  • Is there a need to concentrate on a particular
    type of urban area in an effort to reduce
    poverty?
  • Is it appropriate to have two distinct
    approaches, one, say for the Class I cities, and
    another, more rural economy oriented for the
    small towns?
  • In terms of facilities, too, is it possible that
    land for urban development is easier to obtain in
    smaller towns than in large cities?

4
  • Living in a slum is a proxy for urban poverty may
    not exactly related. Dharavi has incomes from 300
    to 300,000.
  • Urban population below the poverty line dropped
  •  
  • 1987/88 1993/94 1999/2000
  • 75.2 m 76.3 m 67.1 m
  • 38.2 32.2 23.6
  • But overall slum population grew from 26 million
    in 1981 to 46.2 million in 1991 and then to 61.8
    million in 2001.

5
Beneficiary Identification
  • The poverty alleviation mission of the Government
    of Kerala in 1993, Kudumbashree, combined nine
    diverse social and economic criteria as
    indicators.
  • In 2000, the poverty index was modified, based on
    feedback, and this time, one of the factors was
    families without colour television.
  • Different criteria eg 1 of MDGs, 24000 of
    Karnataka DMA, 17000 of DFCS

6
  • Therefore
  • Should there be a single set of criteria for
    measuring urban poverty?
  • Should not these be modified for regional
    requirements?
  • Should the nodal Ministry of Housing and Urban
    Poverty Alleviation be required to fix such
    common criteria?
  • How should these criteria be dovetailed into or
    made to run parallel to - the international
    standard of 1 per day?

7
Capacity to Alleviate Poverty
  • When the 74th amendment to the Constitution
    devolved power, resources and responsibility to
    local bodies, various concomitant requirements
    were not considered.
  • Due to the poor quality of our middle and higher
    education, much of our municipal administration
    is run by people with little or no skills in
    strategic thinking, managerial ability and
    administrative acumen, or even language skills
    for that matter.
  • The UNDP supported project of the Ministry of
    Urban Poverty Alleviation aims to build capacity
    of the urban local bodies to improve service
    management and delivery and has a long list of
    other aims. But underfunded and therefore
    inadequate.
  •  
  • There is no programme of the Ministry that
    concentrates on this essential requirement.

8
  • Therefore
  • What should be the approach of government towards
    capacity building of government and urban local
    bodies staff in specific terms? What is the
    position regarding the Ministrys proposed Urban
    Academy?
  • What should be the approach towards NGOs and
    parastatals in this respect?
  • Can the Ministry of HRD and the Ministry of UEPA
    work together on this, and if so who should
    coordinate? Is special funding possible/appropriat
    e?

9
Poverty Reduction
  • Spread manufacturing and services sector
    enterprises into small towns. Added advantage of
    reducing influx into large cities.
  • Need to depend on IT related work, low setting up
    costs, but human and power supply capacities to
    be built up.
  • Agro based industries obvious for small towns.
  • Use other boom sectors of the economy where low
    skilled self employment would be possible. The
    semi-skilled needs of the construction and real
    estate sector must be met through job oriented
    schooling.

10
Credit and employment programmes
  • How successful in reducing individual poverty.
    The Swarna Jayanti Shahari Rozgar Yojana (SJSRY)
    launched in December 1997 has two components
    the self employment (USEP) and the wage
    employment (UWEP).
  • Rs 822 crores in 8 years for
  • -         skills training to a little over 8 lakh
    persons,
  • -         forming about 1.5 lakh Thrift and
    Credit Societies,
  • -         nearly 44000 womens groups (DWCUA),
  • -         assisting nearly one lakh micro
    enterprises under the USEP
  • -         and creating 5.6 crore mandays of work
    for a population of nearly 7 crore poor people.
  • Proposal for the creation of a national level
    Apex Bank for Urban Development to provide credit
    for urban poor. How should this function ?

11
  • Therefore
  • Should there be different approaches - at least
    in emphasis - for small towns and large
    agglomerations in tackling poverty alleviation?
  • How should skills development be looked at?
    Should school curriculum in certain
    localities/government schools compulsorily
    include vocational education for services sector
    jobs? How should these be dovetailed into the
    local urban processes?
  • Can there be special learning programmes for slum
    dwellers to encourage information seeking and job
    matching?
  • What incentives should be provided for the
    creation of jobs to the private sector in semi
    urban areas/peri-urban areas/small towns?
  • Should there be a national level banking approach
    for the urban poor? How should micro credit be
    garnered and made available for the urban poor?
    Is there any other appropriate approach? How far
    is self help group approach successful, and can
    it be expanded exponentially?

12
Urban Services, Slum Redevelopment and Housing
  • Related aspects of urban poverty
    infrastructure, housing and other services.
    Obvious need is to reduce, if not remove, the
    need to live in slum conditions for 67 million
    people.
  • But
  • -The total annual investment needs of water
    supply, sanitation and roads sectors at Rs.
    28,036 crores per year on an average during
    1996-2006.
  • -Plan allocations for Urban Development have been
    in the range of only 2 of the total Five Year
    Plans. (Does this not suggest concentrate efforts
    targeted only in poor areas? ) --Although the
    ratio of urban to rural poor is 13.5, the
    ratio of funding for poverty programmes is
    135, that is ten times more.

13
  • Slums often cover expensive land in the heart of
    urban centres. And the demand for such land
    often can lead to further marginalization of the
    urban poor. The 430 acres of Dharavi is a case in
    point. (Can this be a strength, a point of
    leverage?)
  • -Tendency for the urban poor is to drift into
    city outskirts, and peri-urban habitations
    require special focus.
  • -Class divide between the affluent city dweller
    and his poor service provider. Should affluent
    citizens live in their own localities and the
    poor be provided low cost urban transport to
    their places of work., in rich urban pockets the
    urban body may not be required to spend on civic
    services in posh localities but concentrate on
    the poorer sections of the city

14
  • In the US, local government increasingly
    privatized. In 1965, less than 1 of all US
    citizens lived in private communities in 2005
    rose to 18 i.e. 55 million people in homeowners
    associations. Since 1980, about half of all
    housing in the USA has been on this pattern. New
    posh private housing colonies of
    Delhi/Noida/Gurgaon, Bangalore etc. step in this
    direction.
  • Is this the direction of the future, is it the
    right direction? On the other hand would this not
    further encourage and legitimize ghettos? This
    trend is based on the approach of reducing the
    externality of poverty in the lives of the urban
    rich. But, this might be acceptable if and only
    if, the city authorities could and would ensure a
    better quality of life and better services for
    the poor and the destitute a big question mark.

15
  • Immediate need is to improve the existing living
    conditions of the urban poor in slums. Various
    models available - which, administratively, would
    be able to blend the best of a public private
    partnership, and which would ensure the
    sustainable development of our slums?
  • Should whole new townships be built to
    rehabilitate slum dwellers?
  • Should the existing slum be completely remodeled?
    Which is more feasible? Financial limitations
    need to be considered.

16
  • Therefore
  • What should be the approach of the ULB towards
    individual slums, combining the requirements of
    dignified habitation and sustainable livelihood?
    Can this be documented in a transparent manner
    and made known to the slum dweller who is
    ultimately the central stakeholder in this entire
    process?
  • How can funding for urban infrastructure and
    poverty alleviation be increased to provide
    sufficiently for the huge sums required to
    provide adequate facilities for the urban poor?
  • Can high cost realty deals be taxed with cess to
    provide housing for the urban poor?
  • What should be policy approach towards urban land
    use and the management of urban poverty given
    issues of habitation location and services
    provision?
  • How should urban services be developed to cater
    to the needs of the peri-urban poor?

17
  • Thank you
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