1 in 5 Mumbaikars below
poverty line
Linah Baliga | TNN
Twenty
percent of people in the country’s most populous city are
below the poverty line (BPL). For Mumbai’s population of
about 1.25 crore, that means 25 lakh BPL people. This makes
the number of those living in abject poverty in the city 4
lakh more than the population of say Nashik.
The BPL figure comes from a survey carried out by the
BMC in 2005-06. The criterion was an income of Rs 20 or less
per day per person. The findings were not made public till
late this year, after slum activists Jammela Begum and
Simpreet Singh of the Ghar Banao Ghar Bachao Andolan filed a
case in the Bombay high court.
The city’s high BPL percentage is despite Maharashtra
receiving Rs 80 crore in poverty alleviation funds—more than
any other state.
The BMC last carried out a BPL survey in 1998-99, and
found 13,600 families matching the criterion. The number of
families as per the 2005-06 survey is 494,000 (the BPL
population of 25 lakh is a rounding off of 494,000
multiplied by a factor of 5, considering an average of five
members per family). This means that in just seven years,
the number of BPL families has grown by more than 36 times.
“The
2005-06 figure points towards misplaced policies for the
urban poor. For Mumbai, it shows an unequal distribution of
economic wealth. The poverty statistics of other cities are
not as bad as they are of Mumbai,” said Singh, adding that there
is a need to redefine poverty, as on the face of it, the
number of BPL people in the city appears to be much more
than 20% of the population, given that about 60% of the
city’s people live in slums.
Is migration into Mumbai the reason for the high
percentage of poor in the city? “No,” Singh said. “This
reason would have held true only till the1970s. But going by
every census after 1970, we can see that migration has
stabilized. So, the growth of poverty in recent years cannot
be attributed to it.”
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