[Reader-list] Reg: Set - 7

Rakesh Iyer rakesh.rnbdj at gmail.com
Sat Jul 3 11:35:14 IST 2010


Article Theme: Health and Education

Source: The Hindu

Date:  Friday, Sep 17, 2004

Link:  http://www.hindu.com/2004/09/17/stories/2004091701431000.htm

Article content:

*Bangladesh shows the way *

By Jean Drèze

* In India, social progress is slower and less broad-based than in
Bangladesh, despite much faster economic growth. *

 IN THE context of the recent panic over the growth rate of the Muslim
population in India, recent international data on "human development" in
India and Bangladesh make interesting reading. Surely, India must be far
ahead of Bangladesh in this respect? Indeed, Bangladesh is not only poorer
(much poorer) than India, but also saddled with a large Muslim population.
India, for its part, is now a "superpower". One would, therefore, expect its
citizens to be much healthier, better fed and better educated than their
Bengali neighbours.

Let us examine the evidence. A good starting point is the infant mortality
rate: 51 per 1,000 live births in Bangladesh compared with 67 per 1,000 in
India, according to the latest Human Development Report. In other words,
infant mortality is much lower in Bangladesh.

This is all the more interesting as the positions were reversed not so long
ago: in 1990, the infant mortality rate was estimated at 91 per 1,000 in
Bangladesh, and 80 per 1,000 in India. India has been neatly leap-frogged,
that too during a period when economic growth was much faster in India than
in Bangladesh.

Other indicators relating to child health point in the same direction.
According to the same Report, 95 per cent of infants in Bangladesh are
vaccinated against tuberculosis, and 77 per cent are vaccinated against
measles. The corresponding figures in India are only 81 per cent and 67 per
cent, respectively.

Similarly, 97 per cent of the population in Bangladesh have access to an
"improved water source," compared with 84 per cent in India; and 48 per cent
of Bangladeshis have access to "improved sanitation," compared with 28 per
cent of Indians.

For good measure, the maternal mortality rate is much higher in India than
in Bangladesh: 540 and 380 per 100,000 live births, respectively.
Contraceptive prevalence, for its part, is higher in Bangladesh than in
India — the "wrong" ranking again!

Perhaps all this has something to do with the fact that public expenditure
on health as a proportion of GDP is almost twice as high in Bangladesh (1.6
per cent) as in India (0.9 per cent). The reverse applies to military
expenditure, also known as "defence": 2.3 per cent of GDP in India compared
with 1.1 per cent in Bangladesh. So much for health. But in education at
least, India must be way ahead? Can Bangladesh boast a fraction of India's
Nobel prizes, famous writers, nuclear scientists, eminent scholars?

Perhaps not, but Bangladesh appears to be closer to universal primary
education than India: it has achieved a "net primary enrolment ratio" of 87
per cent, higher than India's 83 per cent. What is more, Bangladesh has
eliminated the gender bias in primary education, in sharp contrast with
India where school participation rates continue to be much higher for boys
than for girls. Other gender-related indicators also put Bangladesh in a
relatively favourable light, compared with India: Bangladesh, for instance,
has a higher female-male ratio and much higher rates of female labour force
participation.

However, there is a consolation of sorts: the nutrition situation is no
better in Bangladesh than in India. In both countries, about half of all
children are undernourished. No country in the world fares worse in this
respect, but at least India is not alone in the back seat.

Some of these estimates may not be very accurate. Perhaps the ranking would
be reversed, in some cases, if exact figures were available. But the general
pattern, whereby Bangladesh is now doing better than India in terms of many
aspects of social development, is unlikely to reflect measurement errors.
This pattern is all the more striking as India used to fare better than
Bangladesh in all these respects not so long ago — say in the early 1970s ,
when Bangladesh became independent.

Bangladesh is no paradise of human development. Like India, it is still one
of the most deprived countries in the world. However, social indicators in
Bangladesh are improving quite rapidly.

Whether one looks at infant mortality, or vaccination rates, or school
participation, or child nutrition, or fertility rates, the message is
similar: living conditions are rapidly improving, not just for a privileged
elite but also for the population at large. In India, social progress is
slower and less broad-based, despite much faster economic growth. This is
one indication, among many others, that India's development strategy is
fundamentally distorted and lop-sided.


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