Abstract

AbstractThis article assembles data at the all‐India level and for the village of Palanpur, Uttar Pradesh, to document the growing importance, and influence, of the nonfarm sector in the rural economy between the early 1980s and late 2000s. The suggestion from the combined National Sample Survey and Palanpur data is of a slow process of nonfarm diversification, whose distributional incidence, on the margin, is increasingly pro‐poor. The village‐level analysis documents that the nonfarm sector is not only increasing incomes and reducing poverty, but appears as well to be breaking down long‐standing barriers to mobility among the poorest segments of rural society. Efforts by the government of India to accelerate the process of diversification could thus yield significant returns in terms of declining poverty and increased income mobility. The evidence from Palanpur also shows, however, that at the village‐level a significant increase in income inequality has accompanied diversification away from the farm. A growing literature argues that such a rise in inequality could affect the fabric of village society, the way in which village institutions function and evolve, and the scope for collective action at the village level. Failure to keep such inequalities in check could thus undermine the pro‐poor impacts from the process of structural transformation currently underway in rural India.

Highlights

  • Rural India is home to 70% of the nation’s population and about the same proportion of poor people in the country

  • The aim of this paper is to study the impact of an expansion of non-farm income opportunities on poverty, economic mobility and income inequality at the village level in rural India

  • The paper starts by assembling various National Sample Survey Organisation (NSSO) employment surveys in order to track changes in poverty and the non-farm sector at the all-India level since the early 1980s

Read more

Summary

Introduction

Rural India is home to 70% of the nation’s population and about the same proportion of poor people in the country. The paper starts by assembling various National Sample Survey Organisation (NSSO) employment surveys in order to track changes in poverty and the non-farm sector at the all-India level since the early 1980s.2. It supplements survey-based evidence with insights arising from the detailed study of long-term economic development in a single village, Palanpur, located in western Uttar Pradesh. This village study points to an accelerating impact of rural non-farm diversification on poverty reduction, and rising income and occupational mobility at the village level in India. The study indicates that non-farm diversification is associated with a sharp increase in village-level income inequality

Objectives
Findings
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call