NEW DELHI: India may have reduced extreme poverty far more effectively than most of us are aware of. The last official data is eight years old. In 2011, 268 million people were surviving on less than $1.90 a day, the

measure for extreme poverty. The next round of data on household consumption is likely to come out in June, and it may well show a drastic drop in the number of poor.

India’s chief statistician Pravin Srivastava told TOI that the household consumption data will be published in June. Poverty estimates are derived from household consumption data.

According to the World Data Lab — which monitors global poverty using advanced statistical models — less than 50 million Indians may be living on less than $1.90 a day now. “The soon-to-be-largest country in the world has been reducing extreme poverty fast and the world may have underestimated India’s achievements. India’s last household survey of 2017/18 (to be released in 2019) captures household consumption more comprehensively — it will include an adjustment for owner-occupied housing and measure other items in accordance with common

practices,” a report by thinktank Brookings said.

Economists said rapid economic growth and the use of technology for social sector programmes have helped make a significant dent in extreme poverty in the country.

“As such there has been a decline in poverty for quite some time. Since 2004-05 there is a sustained decline in extreme poverty,” said N R Bhanumurthy, professor at the National Institute of Public Finance and Policy.

He said the inclusive growth policies pursued by successive governments and the use of

schemes for delivery of social sector programmes such as MNREGA,

and other such schemes have made a significant difference.

Bhanumurthy also backed calls for faster collection and processing of data for better evidence-based policy decisions. “There is a need to strengthen the statistical system. It has been neglected by successive governments,” he said.

Former chief statistician of India, Pronab Sen, said the results of the World Lab data may prove right if the share of additional resources going to the poor remain constant. “But over the last few years or so it has been coming down,” he said.

“World Data Lab anticipates the effects of these methodological adjustments will result in a level of extreme poverty in India today of 50 million people, which will come down to 40 million (a poverty rate of below 3%) by end 2019,” the Brookings report said. In June 2018, TOI had reported that India is no more the country with the largest number of poor. That dubious distinction belongs to Nigeria.

To project the household expenditure for 2018, the World Data Lab used the growth rates to

from the

survey.

The data also showed that India will be out of the list of top 10 countries in terms of extreme poverty by 2030. African countries will represent nine of the top 10 countries by that year.