| PYQ Relevance[UPSC 2017] What are the salient features of ‘inclusive growth’? Has India been experiencing such a growth process? Analyze and suggest measures for inclusive growth.Linkage: The article directly examines whether India’s post-reform growth has remained inclusive, especially amid widening urban-rural and class-based consumption inequality. It links strongly with GS-III themes of inclusive growth, welfare distribution, labour reforms, poverty, inequality measurement, and human development disparities. |
Mentor’s Comment
India’s growth story is increasingly being questioned for its uneven distribution of gains. The assumption that inequality in India is moderate when compared globally is being challenged now. The Household Consumer Expenditure Survey (HCES) 2023-24 data states that inequality, especially in urban India and in non-food consumption, is far deeper than commonly estimated. While India has emerged as one of the fastest-growing economies, consumption patterns reveal widening disparities between rural and urban India, between rich and poor, and within social classes themselves. The top 10% in urban India account for 27% of total non-food expenditure, while the richest urban households spend nearly nine times more than the poorest rural households.
Why does measuring inequality in India remain methodologically complex?
- Multiple Dimensions: Inequality exists across income, wealth, consumption expenditure, and access to opportunities.
- Data Limitations: India lacks reliable and frequent income and wealth datasets. Consumption expenditure therefore becomes the primary proxy for measuring inequality.
- Methodological Changes: HCES 2023-24 introduced methodological modifications, making comparison with previous NSSO rounds difficult.
- Measurement Variations: World Bank estimates place India’s Gini coefficient at 0.25, while HCES-based estimates suggest a higher overall consumption inequality of 0.29.
- Sectoral Disaggregation: Urban inequality appears significantly higher once rural-urban and food-non-food distinctions are separately examined.
- Consumption Bias: Food expenditure shows lower inequality because food remains a basic necessity across classes.
How does food and non-food expenditure reveal hidden inequality?
- Food Equality Effect: Food expenditure inequality remains relatively lower due to survival-driven consumption patterns.
- Non-Food Polarisation: Non-food expenditure shows significantly higher inequality in both urban and rural India.
- Urban Concentration: Urban non-food expenditure inequality is the highest among all categories.
- HCES Findings:
- Food expenditure Gini coefficient: approximately 0.25
- Non-food expenditure Gini coefficient: approximately 0.35-0.36
- Overall expenditure inequality: approximately 0.29
- Consumption Diversification: Richer households spend disproportionately on healthcare, education, digital services, transport, luxury goods, and recreation.
- Structural Indicator: Rising non-food inequality reflects unequal access to quality human development indicators.
Why is urban India emerging as the epicentre of inequality?
- Growth Concentration: Most high-growth sectors are urban-centric, including finance, IT, services, logistics, and professional sectors.
- Urban Advantage: Mean urban expenditure exceeds the all-India average, while rural expenditure remains below it.
- Consumption Gap: Urban non-food Monthly Per Capita Expenditure (MPCE) stands at nearly 1.51 times the all-India average.
- Rural Lag: Rural non-food MPCE remains significantly lower at nearly 0.78 of the all-India average.
- Top-Decile Dominance: The richest 10% in urban India contribute nearly 27% of total non-food expenditure.
- Bottom-Decile Marginalisation: The same metric remains only around 4.5 times lower in rural India, indicating sharper urban inequality.
- Extreme Contrast: Mean MPCE of the richest urban decile is nearly nine times that of the poorest rural decile.
- Spatial Disparity: Urban prosperity increasingly coexists with informal labour vulnerability and rising living costs.
How does class-based inequality deepen India’s growth paradox?
- Consumption-Based Class Divide: Inequality increasingly reflects divergence between spending classes rather than only interpersonal differences.
- Urban Professional Gains: Since the 1980s, urban owners, managers, and professionals have disproportionately benefited from economic growth.
- Stagnation of Informal Labour: Informal workers, agricultural labourers, and small farmers experienced comparatively limited gains.
- Class Inequality Persistence: Welfare expansion has not substantially reversed within-class inequality in urban India.
- Growth-Inequality Nexus: Economic liberalisation accelerated aggregate growth but also intensified concentration of gains.
- Non-Food Expenditure Concentration: Around 67% of non-food expenditure inequality arises from within-decile disparities.
- Food Expenditure Contribution: Nearly 33% of food expenditure inequality arises from within-decile disparities.
- Structural Dualism: India simultaneously experiences high-growth enclaves and low-income consumption traps.
Why can lower inequality estimates produce misleading policy outcomes?
- Underestimation Risk: Consumption-based estimates may underestimate actual inequality because the richest households are often underrepresented in surveys.
- Policy Misalignment: Lower inequality estimates may weaken welfare urgency and social protection interventions.
- Welfare Retrenchment Concerns: Reduction in employment guarantees and labour protections could disproportionately affect informal workers.
- Poverty-Inequality Overlap:
- Around one-fourth of the richest 10% benefited from PMGKAY.
- Around 13% of them reportedly accessed BPL cards.
- Targeting Errors: Welfare leakages reveal institutional weaknesses in beneficiary identification.
- Social Stability Risks: Persistent inequality may intensify social fragmentation, urban distress, and political dissatisfaction.
How does rural-urban disparity shape India’s development trajectory?
- Rural Consumption Constraint: Rural expenditure remains heavily food-oriented with limited discretionary spending.
- Urban Service Expansion: Urban economies benefit from greater access to finance, technology, education, and infrastructure.
- Human Capital Divide: Access to quality healthcare and education remains highly unequal across regions.
- Migration Pressures: Rural distress fuels migration toward cities without proportional employment generation.
- Regional Imbalance: Growth remains concentrated in select urban clusters and metropolitan regions.
- Development Asymmetry: Economic expansion has not ensured balanced regional transformation.
Conclusion
India’s growth story reflects a structural paradox where rapid economic expansion coexists with widening consumption inequality, especially in urban India and non-food expenditure. The findings from HCES 2023-24 indicate that economic gains remain concentrated among higher-income groups, while informal workers, rural households, and vulnerable classes continue to face limited upward mobility.





