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Poverty- Causes, Impact and Way Forward

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Poverty- Causes, Impact and Way Forward

Poverty refers to a condition in which people are unable to meet basic needs such as food, clothing, shelter, education, healthcare and decent livelihood. In India, poverty is not only an economic issue but also a social and developmental challenge because it affects dignity, opportunities and human capabilities.

Causes of Poverty in India

  • Historical and Structural Causes 
    • Colonial Legacy — Deindustrialisation and Extraction 
      • British colonial policy — systematically deindustrialised India — destroying traditional textile, handicraft, and metal industries
      • Drain of wealth — Dadabhai Naoroji — economic surplus extracted from India to Britain 
      • Land revenue systems — Permanent Settlement, Ryotwari — extractive, creating landlessness and indebtedness
      • Destruction of artisan economy — Manchester textile imports — millions of weavers, craftsmen impoverished
      • Infrastructure built for extraction — railways, ports — connecting raw materials to ports — not developing Indian economy
      • Colonial India’s per capita income stagnated for 200 years — impoverishment as deliberate policy outcome
      • Post-independence inherited poverty — colonial legacy bequeathed a poor, agrarian, deindustrialised economy — structural starting point
    • Agrarian Structure — Land Inequality and Landlessness 
      • Highly unequal land distribution — top 10% of rural households own 44%+ of total land area 
      • Landlessness — 40%+ of rural households — entirely dependent on wage labour — extreme vulnerability
      • Land fragmentation — average holding 1.08 hectares — declining — unviable for productive agriculture
      • Sharecropping and tenancy — exploitative arrangements — tenant bears all risk, landlord receives share
      • Absentee landlordism — land owned by urban elites — not productively cultivated
      • Land reform incompleteness — zamindari abolition implemented — ceiling laws poorly enforced — land redistribution minimal
      • Agrarian poverty is structural — without land reform, agricultural incomes remain inadequate for small and marginal farmers
    • Caste System — Structural Exclusion 
      • Caste-based occupational hierarchy — Dalits and Adivasis confined to low-status, low-income occupations
      • Discrimination in labour markets — Dalits paid less, hired last, fired first — for equivalent work
      • Social capital exclusion — upper-caste networks dominating business, government, professions — Dalits excluded
      • Educational discrimination — historically denied education — human capital deficit — intergenerational
      • SC/ST poverty rates — significantly higher than national average 
      • Credit market discrimination — Dalits receiving less institutional credit — more dependent on exploitative moneylenders
      • Caste poverty is not economic in origin — it is socially imposed economic exclusion — market forces alone cannot resolve it
    • Gender Inequality — Feminisation of Poverty 
      • Women’s economic exclusion — low Female Labour Force Participation Rate (FLFPR) 
      • Property rights — women rarely own land or productive assets — collateral-less, credit-excluded
      • Intra-household inequality — within poor households — women and girls receive less nutrition, healthcare, education
      • Early marriage and childbearing — interrupting education and employment — poverty trap mechanism
      • Widowhood — women without land or income rights — instant poverty upon husband’s death
  • Economic Causes
    • Unemployment and Underemployment
      • Lack of adequate employment opportunities is one of the main causes of poverty. Many people remain unemployed or work in low-paid, irregular and informal jobs. Even when people are employed, their income may not be enough to meet basic needs. 
        • Open unemployment — significant — particularly among educated urban youth 
        • Underemployment — disguised unemployment in agriculture — apparent employment but very low productivity
        • Seasonal unemployment — agricultural workers — idle months — income gaps
        • Structural unemployment — skills mismatch — available jobs requiring skills workers don’t have
        • Jobless growth — India’s GDP growing — employment not keeping pace — growth without jobs
        • Informalisation — 90% of workforce in informal economy — low wages, no social protection
          • A large part of India’s workforce is engaged in the informal sector where workers lack job security, minimum wages, social security and health benefits. This makes them vulnerable to poverty even when they are working. 
        • Unemployment and underemployment directly cause poverty — inadequate income for basic needs
    • Low Agricultural Productivity and Agrarian Distress 
      •  A large section of India’s population still depends on agriculture. However, small landholdings, dependence on monsoon, lack of irrigation, poor access to credit, low mechanisation and price fluctuations keep farm incomes low. 
        • Productivity gap — Indian agricultural yields below global benchmarks — low income per hectare
        • Input prices rising faster than output prices — farmer net income declining
        • Monsoon dependence — 60% rainfed agriculture — crop failure destroying annual income
        • Indebtedness — small farmers borrowing for inputs — unable to repay from thin margins
        • MSP-market gap — MSP announced — procurement not reaching most farmers — market prices often below MSP
        • Post-harvest losses — 30–40% — reducing effective income from production
    • Inadequate Human Capital — Education and Health 
      • Poor access to quality education and skill training reduces employability. Lack of skills forces many people into low-wage manual or informal work, creating a cycle of poverty. 
      • Illness reduces earning capacity and increases household expenditure. Poor families often spend a large share of income on healthcare, pushing them further into poverty. 
        • Education poverty — poor quality schooling — learning outcomes poor (ASER reports) — skills not building
        • Health poverty — high out-of-pocket expenditure — medical catastrophes pushing families below poverty line
        • Nutrition poverty — stunting , wasting , anaemia ( women) — productivity loss
        • Intergenerational trap — poor parents cannot invest in children’s education and health — reproducing poverty
        • Public service quality — government schools and hospitals — poor — rich access private, poor stuck with dysfunctional public system
        • First-generation learners — without parental educational capital — dropout rates high — human capital deficit perpetuated
    • Financial Exclusion 
      • Credit exclusion — poor households without collateral — institutional credit denied — moneylender dependence
      • Insurance exclusion — crop failure, illness, accident — without insurance — one shock = poverty
      • Savings exclusion — no safe savings mechanism — unable to build assets
      • Exploitation — moneylenders charging 24–60% interest — debt trap — poverty deepening mechanism
      • Financial exclusion means poor cannot invest in productive assets — perpetuating income poverty 
    • Regional Imbalances 
      • Certain regions suffer from weak infrastructure, poor industrial development, low agricultural productivity and limited access to public services. This creates pockets of persistent poverty in rural, tribal and backward areas. 
    • Inflation and Rising Cost of Living 
      • Increase in prices of food, fuel, housing, education and healthcare affects the poor more severely because they spend a larger share of their income on basic necessities. 
  • Governance and Institutional Causes 
    • Weak Governance and Corruption 
      • Leakage from welfare programs — PDS, MGNREGS— benefits not reaching poor
      • Corruption at delivery level — ration shop dealers, MGNREGS contractors — diverting entitlements
      • Administrative exclusion — complex procedures — poor unable to access entitled benefits
      • Fake beneficiaries — non-poor capturing poverty programs — crowding out genuine poor
      • Inspector raj — harassment of small businesses — raising cost of formal economic activity for poor entrepreneurs
      • Poor public service delivery — education, health, water — dysfunctional services failing poor — rich can exit to private
    • Inadequate Social Protection 
      • Coverage gaps — largest poverty programs not covering all poor — targeting errors
      • Benefit inadequacy — amounts transferred — insufficient for basic needs
      • Fragmentation — multiple central government schemes — poor navigating complexity — many missing entitlements
      • MGNREGS underfunding — demand exceeds supply — poor workers denied guaranteed employment
      • Portability — social protection not following migrant workers — losing benefits on migration
      • Exclusion errors — genuine poor excluded from BPL lists — arbitrary, outdated, inaccurate targeting
  • Environmental and Climate Causes 
    • Environmental Degradation and Climate Vulnerability 
      • Forest degradation — tribal communities dependent on forest — NTFP decline — income reduction
      • Water scarcity — declining groundwater, erratic rainfall — agricultural income loss
      • Soil degradation — declining fertility — productivity loss — income reduction
      • Climate change — most severe impact on poor — small farmers, fisher folk, coastal communities
      • Disaster vulnerability — floods, droughts, cyclones — poor in risk-prone areas — assets destroyed
      • Environmental poverty trap — poor depend on natural resources — degradation reduces income — pushes further into poverty — further degrading resources
  • Demographic Causes
    • Population Pressure 
      • Rapid population growth increases pressure on land, jobs, public services and household income. Larger families with limited income often face difficulty in providing proper nutrition, education and healthcare to all members. 
  • Social Causes
    • Social Exclusion 
      • Caste, gender, disability, tribal identity and regional backwardness often limit access to education, jobs, land, credit and public services. As a result, poverty becomes deeper among SCs, STs, women-headed households and minorities. 
    • Unequal Distribution of Resources 
      • Land, capital, education and employment opportunities are unevenly distributed. This inequality prevents weaker sections from improving their economic condition and keeps poverty concentrated among marginalised communities.

Impact

  • Low Human Development 
    • Poverty leads to poor nutrition, weak health outcomes, low literacy and poor access to quality education. This reduces human development and limits individual capabilities. 
  • Malnutrition and Hunger
    • Poor households often lack access to nutritious food. This results in undernutrition, stunting, wasting, anaemia and low immunity, especially among children and women.
      • Nutrition-productivity trap — malnourished workers less productive — lower income — less nutrition — cycle
      • India carries double burden — malnutrition among poor + obesity among rich — inequality manifested in bodies
  • Poor Educational Outcomes
    • Children from poor families may drop out of school due to financial pressure, lack of support, child labour or poor access to quality schools. This continues the intergenerational cycle of poverty.
      • Dropout — poor children leaving school — for labour or family duties — human capital destruction
      • Learning poverty — attending school but not learning — quality-excluded — formal education without substance
      • Intergenerational cycle — uneducated poor parents — children not supported — reproducing illiteracy
      • Skill deficit — poor youth without education — cannot access formal employment — trapped in informal low-wage work
  • Poor Health Outcomes
    • Poverty increases vulnerability to diseases due to poor sanitation, unsafe drinking water, overcrowded housing and lack of healthcare access. Out-of-pocket expenditure on health can further push families into poverty.
      • Maternal mortality — poor women without skilled birth attendance — avoidable deaths
      • Child mortality — under-5 mortality — highest in poorest quintiles — poverty kills children
      • Disease burden — TB, malaria, diarrhoea — diseases of poverty — preventable with income and sanitation
      • Mental health — chronic stress of poverty — depression, anxiety — unaddressed burden
  • Child Labour and Exploitation
    • Poor families may send children to work instead of school to supplement household income. This deprives children of education and exposes them to exploitation.
    • Child labour — 10+ million child labourers — poverty forcing children to work — education sacrificed 
  • Economic Growth Constraint 
    • Demand constraint — extremely poor — not participating in consumer economy — market size limited
    • Productivity loss — malnourished, unskilled, unhealthy workforce — economic output below potential
    • Talent waste — poverty preventing talented poor from realising potential — economy losing human capital
    • Investment in crime — poverty pushing youth toward crime — economic cost of policing, incarceration, crime damage
    • Healthcare costs — poverty-related disease — preventable burden on health system — fiscal cost
    • Poverty trap — poor cannot save, invest, or accumulate capital — structural drag on growth
  • Fiscal and Public Finance Implications 
    • Poverty program expenditure — food subsidy, MGNREGS, PM-KISAN, housing — significant fiscal burden
    • NFSA food subsidy — ₹2+ lakh crore annually — fiscal cost
    • Health expenditure — preventable poverty-related disease — public health cost
    • Law enforcement — poverty-crime nexus — policing, judiciary, incarceration — fiscal cost
    • Lost tax revenue — poor not participating in formal economy — tax base narrower than potential
    • Subsidy dependence — politically entrenched — fiscally difficult to rationalise even as effectiveness questioned
  • Social Cohesion and Inequality 
    • Poverty deepens inequality and social exclusion. It limits the ability of poor people to participate equally in economic, political and social life. 
    • Extreme deprivation can create frustration, alienation and social tensions. Poverty may contribute to crime, migration distress, unrest and vulnerability to radicalisation. 
      • Rising inequality — poverty alongside extreme wealth — social tension 
      • Social mobility blockage — poor unable to move up — aspirations frustrated — resentment
      • Communal mobilisation — economic desperation making poor vulnerable to identity-based political mobilisation
      • Migration-induced urbanisation — distress migration — urban slum growth — social infrastructure strain
      • Naxalism and Left-Wing Extremism — in tribal, poor regions — poverty as recruitment ground 
      • Marginalisation — Dalits, Adivasis — poverty + social discrimination — compounded exclusion
  • Political Economy Implications 
    • Populism — political parties exploiting poverty with freebies — short-term relief without structural solution
    • Vote bank politics — poor as electoral constituency — poverty maintained for political benefit
    • Welfare without empowerment — political incentive to keep poor dependent on state — not enable independence
    • Electoral volatility — poor swing voters — responsive to immediate economic concerns — policy instability
    • Criminalisation of politics — poor constituencies — more vulnerable to money and muscle power 
  • Gender and Social Justice Implications 
    • Feminisation of poverty — women disproportionately poor — gender-poverty intersection
    • Domestic violence — economic stress — increasing violence against women
    • Girl child — education and nutrition — compromised first during household poverty
    • Child marriage — economic strategy — reducing household burden — poverty driving social harm
    • Bonded labour — debt bondage — poor families — modern slavery — economic desperation
    • Trafficking — poverty the primary vulnerability — economic desperation enabling exploitation
    • Intergenerational Poverty — Children born in poor families often face poor nutrition, poor schooling and lack of opportunities. As a result, poverty passes from one generation to another.
  • Poverty-Environment Nexus 
    • Overexploitation of natural resources — poor dependent on forest, water, land — no alternatives
    • Firewood dependence — poor without clean cooking fuel — deforestation — indoor air pollution — health cost
    • Open defecation — poverty + lack of sanitation infrastructure — public health and dignity
    • Climate change vulnerability — poor most exposed to climate impacts — least able to adapt
    • Environmental degradation feedback — poverty → resource overuse → degradation → deeper poverty — vicious cycle
    • Green growth impossibility — poverty-environment trade-off — poor prioritising survival over sustainability
  • Weak Democratic Participation
    • Poverty reduces people’s ability to access information, assert rights and participate meaningfully in democratic processes. It may also increase dependence on patronage politics.

Way Forward

  • Structural Economic Transformation 
    • Inclusive Growth Strategy 
      • Pursue labour-intensive economic growth — not capital-intensive jobless growth
        • Poverty reduction should be linked with creation of stable and decent employment. India needs labour-intensive growth in sectors such as manufacturing, construction, textiles, food processing, tourism, logistics and services. 
      • Develop rural non-farm economy — agro-processing, rural industry, services — diversifying rural income
      • Promote cluster development — artisan clusters, rural enterprises — collective efficiency
      • Develop value chain integration — poor producers connecting to markets — reducing middlemen
      • Promote cooperative movement — Amul model — collective enterprises owned by poor producers
      • Develop social enterprise ecosystem — businesses solving poverty — not just charities
      • Promote Entrepreneurship and Self-Employment — Small businesses, SHGs, start-ups, street vendors and rural enterprises should be supported through credit, training, market linkage and digital platforms.
    • Regional Convergence 
      • Focus public investment in BIMARU states — Bihar, UP, MP, Rajasthan — poverty-concentrated
      • Develop special packages — aspirational districts — convergent intervention
      • Strengthen fiscal federalism — more resources to poor states — Finance Commission formula
      • Develop regional industrial corridors — bringing manufacturing employment to poor states
      • Promote Eastern India development — Bihar, Jharkhand, Odisha — agricultural potential, untapped resources
      • Develop tribal sub-regions — dedicated economic development — forest economy, mineral royalties
  • Structural and Foundational Interventions 
    • Land and Asset Reform — Addressing Root Causes 
      • Implement land ceiling laws — genuinely — redistribute surplus land to landless
      • Develop land titling — clear, digitised, transferable — enabling land as productive and financial asset
      • Promote women’s land rights — joint titling — female property ownership
      • Develop common property resource management — forests, water — protecting poor’s natural asset base
      • Promote community land trusts — protecting poor from land alienation
      • Implement tribal land rights — Forest Rights Act — full implementation — livelihood security
    • Agrarian Transformation 
      • Invest in agricultural productivity — irrigation, HYVs, technology — raising farm income
      • Implement crop diversification — beyond rice-wheat — higher value, more nutritious crops
      • Develop agricultural market reform — APMC, e-NAM — reducing intermediary exploitation
      • Scale FPO (Farmer Producer Organisations) — collective bargaining — better prices
      • Strengthen crop insurance (PMFBY) — genuine risk protection — preventing catastrophic income loss
      • Develop agro-processing — value addition — higher income per unit agricultural output
    • Reducing Regional Imbalances
      • Backward, tribal, aspirational and border districts need better infrastructure, schools, hospitals, connectivity, credit access and employment opportunities. Region-specific development can reduce pockets of chronic poverty.
  • Economic Empowerment Interventions 
    • Employment and Livelihood Generation 
      • Develop urban employment guarantee — extending MGNREGS model — urban poor protection
      • Scale skill development — demand-linked, quality, placement-assured — employability improvement
      • Promote MSME development — small enterprise credit, market access — mass employment creation
      • Develop labour-intensive manufacturing — PLI for textiles, footwear, food processing — semi-skilled employment
      • Promote green jobs — solar installation, waste management, sustainable agriculture — new livelihood opportunities
    • Financial Inclusion — Complete the Last Mile 
      • Universalise Jan Dhan accounts — active usage — not just account opening
      • Scale MUDRA loans — microenterprise credit — graduated credit ladder for poor entrepreneurs
      • Develop agricultural credit reform — reach small farmers — tenant farmers — collateral-free
      • Scale SHG-Bank Linkage — women’s collective credit — expand to underserved regions
      • Promote crop and health insurance — universal — preventing poverty from shocks
      • Develop digital financial literacy — enabling poor to use financial services effectively
    • Skill Development and Employability
      • Poor households need access to market-relevant skills, digital literacy and vocational training. 
      • Skill programmes should be linked with actual placement, apprenticeships and self-employment opportunities.
  • Social Protection Architecture 
    • Strengthening the Social Protection Floor 
      • Develop universal social protection floor — minimum income guarantee — below which no one falls
      • Reform PDS — universalise in poorest states — nutritional adequacy — include millets, pulses
      • Strengthen MGNREGS (now VB-G RAM G (Viksit Bharat–Guarantee for Rozgar and Ajeevika Mission)) as automatic stabiliser — expanding automatically during economic downturns
      • Develop portable social protection — benefits following migrant workers — Aadhaar-linked portability
      • Implement unified beneficiary database — eliminating both exclusion and inclusion errors
      • Develop social registry — real-time updating — capturing newly poor — not relying on decade-old BPL surveys
    • Direct Income Support 
      • Expand PM-KISAN — ₹6,000/year — increase quantum — extend to tenant farmers
      • Develop Universal Basic Income (UBI) pilots — evidence generation — targeted geographic experiments
      • Reform subsidy architecture — DBT replacing in-kind — reducing leakage — improving targeting
      • Develop livelihood support packages — combining income transfer with skill, credit, market access
      • Strengthen widow, elderly, disabled pensions — adequate amounts, universal coverage
      • Promote conditional cash transfers — education, health behaviours — linking transfers to human capital investment
  • Human Development Investments 
    • Education — Breaking the Intergenerational Trap 
      • Implement NEP 2020 — foundational literacy and numeracy — quality from ground up
      • Universalise quality early childhood education — anganwadis to vibrant learning centres
      • Address learning poverty — not just enrollment — outcome orientation
      • Scale mid-day meal — nutrition + education attendance incentive
      • Develop residential schools for tribal children — Eklavya Model — quality education in remote areas
      • Strengthen scholarship programs — merit cum means — enabling talented poor to access quality education
    • Health — Universal Health Coverage 
      • Implement Ayushman Bharat fully — universal health coverage — eliminating catastrophic health expenditure
      • Strengthen Primary Health Centres — functional, staffed, equipped — free primary care
      • Address nutrition — POSHAN Mission — stunting, wasting — intergenerational poverty cycle
      • Develop community health workers — ASHA, ANM — health outreach to poorest
      • Implement free essential medicines — at public health facilities — reducing OOP expenditure
      • Promote WASH (Water, Sanitation, Hygiene) — preventive health — reducing poverty-related disease
  • Governance and Targeting Reforms 
    • Improving Welfare Delivery 
      • Update poverty identification — new socio-economic survey — accurate targeting
      • Implement technology-enabled delivery — DBT, Aadhaar — reducing leakage
      • Develop single integrated welfare portal — citizen accessing all entitlements — one platform
      • Strengthen social audit — community verification — MGNREGS model — all major programs
      • Develop grievance redressal — poor accessing entitled benefits — complaint mechanism
  • Social Reforms
    • Targeted Support for Vulnerable Groups 
      • SCs, STs, minorities, persons with disabilities, elderly persons, migrant workers and urban poor need special attention. Welfare schemes must be designed according to their specific vulnerabilities. 
  • Addressing Discrimination — Caste and Gender 
    • Strengthen anti-discrimination enforcement — labour market, credit market — effective legal remedy
    • Promote Dalit entrepreneurship — specific credit, market access, mentorship programs
    • Implement women’s economic empowerment — land rights, credit access, skill training
    • Develop affirmative action in private sector — beyond public employment — private sector inclusion
    • Address social norms — campaigns against caste discrimination, gender violence — enabling environment

Poverty in India is not simply insufficient income — it is the accumulated consequence of historical exploitation, structural exclusion, institutional failure, economic marginalisation, and environmental vulnerability operating simultaneously across generations. Its causes are deeply intertwined — caste exclusion reinforcing income poverty, income poverty reinforcing educational deprivation, educational deprivation perpetuating occupational entrapment — a web of mutually reinforcing disadvantages from which individual effort alone cannot escape.

India has made remarkable progress — lifting hundreds of millions from extreme poverty — through economic growth, targeted welfare, and expanding public services. Yet the remaining poverty is the hardest — concentrated among the most structurally excluded, the most geographically remote, the most socially discriminated. Reaching them requires going beyond economic growth alone — into the difficult territory of land reform, caste and gender equality, governance transformation, and regional convergence.

The ultimate measure of India’s development ambition is not its GDP growth rate or its unicorn count — it is whether the Dalit agricultural labourer in Bihar, the tribal widow in Jharkhand, the migrant construction worker in Mumbai, and the girl child in Rajasthan’s desert are given the genuine capability to live lives of dignity, opportunity, and freedom from want.

“Poverty is not a natural condition — it is a political choice. Every society has the resources to eliminate destitution; what varies is the will to distribute them justly, the institutions to deliver them honestly, and the commitment to address the structural exclusions that reproduce poverty across generations. India’s poverty challenge is ultimately a test of its democratic character.”

Sample UPSC Mains Questions

10 Marks (150 Words)

1. Poverty in India is increasingly becoming multidimensional rather than merely income-based. Discuss.

2. Examine the structural causes responsible for the persistence of poverty in India.

3. Poverty reduction requires more than welfare transfers. Discuss.

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