Tuesday, May 5, 2015

The problem of poverty in India: the need for new thinking


The problem of poverty in India: the need for new thinking "Poverty is the result of many economic situations, so to solve the problem of poverty will go beyond the concept of poverty itself ...... It's not enough to know how many people are poor, but it's important to know how many poor people poor.
Continued poverty in India is a major challenge concerned only income poverty or adding calories to not be perfect, but we should see that the ones that protect against diseases where there has been, for them, bread, clothing, housing, education , health, and employment will expand facilities. Only affordable education to the poor, cheap cereals and affordable medicines, giving cheaper housing will not only remove their poverty. The way we have to reflect on poverty and poverty line, similarly to determine the richness and richness of the line will have to think on. The survival rationell of the poor standard rationell of living worthy level would elevate. They only have to cross the lifeline exactly would such a person is submerged in deep water over the edge by bringing slam. After this situation the survival and good life requires. The poor out of their poverty and the services provided to them navigate life's necessities, in order to increase their average age, their education and health levels high as possible and to get rid of them in the mindset of poverty grew. The government and the planners will have to develop a new orientation rationell to the poor poorer, the new criteria will have to be determined. Must bridge the gap between rich and poor, rampant poverty that comes from unbridled prosperity is born poor ......... who? What is poverty? Poor, poverty and poor income and expenditure, Kailuri only, malnutrition, hunger and starvation deaths on issues such as semi-government, rationell planners and the public debate in the country over several rationell decades. The recent debate on the poverty line in urban areas and Rs 26 in rural planners Ddwara & #

No comments:

Post a Comment