HomeNewsBusinessEconomyIMF paper says India's free foodgrain scheme helped cap rise in extreme poverty to 0.86% in 2020

IMF paper says India's free foodgrain scheme helped cap rise in extreme poverty to 0.86% in 2020

Using "in-kind transfers" such as those of food to arrive at poverty estimates, the authors of the paper refuted previous studies that estimated that 3.2-23 crore Indians fell into extreme poverty in 2020

April 06, 2022 / 18:21 IST
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(Image: Shutterstock)
(Image: Shutterstock)

Extreme poverty in India edged up by only a marginal 10 basis points in 2020 to 0.86 percent, thanks to the government's free foodgrain programme, an International Monetary Fund (IMF) working paper has said.

Extreme poverty—defined by the World Bank as those living on under $1.9 a day in 2011 Purchasing Power Parity terms—was 0.76 percent in India in 2019. This rose only to 0.86 percent in 2020 amid the coronavirus pandemic because of the free foodgrain scheme, the paper Pandemic, Poverty, and Inequality: Evidence from India says.

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Authored by economists Surjit Bhalla, Karan Bhasin and Arvind Virmani, the paper does not necessarily represent the views of the IMF, its executive board, or management.

The cabinet in March extended the Pradhan Mantri Garib Kalyan Anna Yojana by another six months. Launched in March 2020 as the country went into a lockdown to curb the spread of coronavirus, the government would have spent Rs 3.40 lakh crore on the free foodgrain scheme by September to ensure no poor household is left hungry as the economy recovers from the pandemic.