Monday, 30 September 2019

Empowering India through the concept of "Happy Person", as proposed by Acharya Mahapragya


Devendra Kothari Ph.D
Population and Development Analyst
Forum for Population Action



“Happy Person” builds” a “healthier society” and develops a “Cheering Economy” (inclusive economy).”    ("खुश व्यक्ति" एक "स्वस्थ समाज" का निर्माण करता है, और यह एक "चियरिंग इकोनॉमी" (समावेशी अर्थव्यवस्था) विकसित करता है।)

Based on Acharya Mahapragya thoughts
The Family and the Nation

While speaking at the release of BJP election manifesto on April 8, 2019, Prime Minister Narendra Modi said:    India should aspire to be a developed and inclusive country by 2047, the 100th anniversary of its Independence”, and added that his government “will lay the foundation for this in the next five years” (2019-2024). Earlier, while addressing a joint meeting of the US Congress on June 8, 2016, PM Modi shared his dream for India, a dream that included “empowering every Indian…..through many social and economic transformations.” 

How to empower India? An increasing GDP (Gross Domestic Product) is often seen as a measure of welfare and economic success. Does economic growth or higher GDP make people happier? This can be best explained or answered through the Easterlin Paradox.  The paradox states that “at a point in time happiness varies directly with income both among and within nations, but over time happiness does not trend upward as income continues to grow.” [1]

It means getting richer in terms of GDP does not make a country happier in the real sense unless it is backed by a sound investment in the people especially those belonging to the deprived segments of the society. It is because deprivation is a feature of life only where people’s opportunities to overcome it are brutally limited.

There is no secret that in the era of high economic growth, India’s growth is much skewed and its benefits go disproportionately to few people as gets manifested by Oxfam’s Wealth Report (2018) which points out that the nine richest Indians own as much wealth as the bottom fifty per cent of the population. Commenting on this, the Oxfam International Executive Director Winnie Byanyima said: "If this obscene inequality between the top 1 percent and the rest of India continues then it will lead to a complete collapse of the social and democratic structure of this country."  

Further, according to the French Economist, Piketty (2017), over fifty per cent of India’s population still has little or no access to basic facilities, such as quality education, health or sanitation even after the adoption of market-friendly strategies during the 1990s and record-high GDP growth in recent years. [2]  Around 700 million out of the total population of 1350 million in 2018 could be classified as deprived based on the 2017 Global Multidimensional Poverty Index (MPI), jointly developed by the United Nations Development Programme (UNDP) and the Oxford Poverty and Human Development Initiative (OPHI). Without empowering this population of 140 million families, mainly comprising Dalits, tribes, other lower castes including OBCs and Muslims, India cannot resolve the issue of poverty and unhappiness.

It is shocking to note that India's ranking in the world happiness index has been dropping very fast. In 2018, India was placed on 133 position, but in 2019 its ranking went down to 140 amongst 156 nations surveyed by the UN Sustainable Development Solutions Network. The immediate neighbours of India including China, Pakistan, Bhutan, Nepal, Bangladesh and Sri Lanka are way ahead in the happiness rankings. [3]

So what India should be doing to resolve these challenges? In this article an alternate concept of empowerment that is “Happy Person” is being analyzed, which was proposed by Acharya Mahapragya.

Acharya Mahapragya (1920-2010), one of the most celebrated Jain thinkers of the world, was the tenth Acharya of the Jain Shwetambar Terapanth sect. He was a prolific writer and has been called a 'modern Vivekananda' by the Rashtrakavi Ram Dhari Singh Dinkar. He played a key role in the establishment of Jain Vishva Bharati (JVB) University. The JVB drew its spiritual and ideological  strength and direction from him. In sum, Acharya Mahapragya was an erudite spiritualist with scientific approach.

As a monk, Mahapragya travelled more than 1, 00,000 km on foot across the length and breadth of India, including 10,000 km of ‘Ahimsa Yatra’ that he undertook in the last decade of his life. During these jaunts, he reached out to more than 10,000 villages, towns and cities in creating awareness on the broad perspective of nonviolence, wellbeing of downtrodden, leading a life free from drug addiction, self-transformation, communal harmony, quality of education and living healthy and harmonious social and personal life. During these trips, he noticed poverty very closely like Mahatma Gandhi observed.  In short, he devoted his entire life in promoting happiness and wellbeing of the people. And for this, he proposed the concept of “Happy Person”. According to him, “Happy Person” (satisfied state of being) builds” a healthier society” (functioning well or being sound) and “Healthier Society” develops a “Cheering Economy” (inclusive economy).

I had the privilege of meeting the Acharya Shree along with Late Shri Siddhraj Bhandari, then President of the JVB University. During the interacting session, I asked Acharya Shree what, according to him, was the single biggest challenge before India. He said: “Economic growth of the kind being pursued in India and elsewhere in the world has become an end in itself. It is divorced from ethics, righteousness and spirituality. It stands in conflict with man’s responsibility towards his own community and the community of other creatures on Earth. Which is why, human being everywhere, are unhappy”. [4] So, we must promote the concept of “khush insaan” or “Happy Person“, he emphasized. He shared the similar views while elaborating the mission of JVB; he commented that JVB is an organization dedicated to humanity with focus on   “happy person, healthier society and cheering economy”.[5]

While elaborating his    concept of “Happy Person”, Dr. Abdul Kalam noted:  “We (Acharya Mahapragya and Kalam) thought over the question of how an empowered nation (India) could be formed and came to the conclusion that its seeds need to be shown in the person.”  He added: “Only an individual who has been brought up in a family that instills the right values will be able to realize his and her responsibility towards the nation.  Such a citizen (person) will adopt the principle ‘work with integrity and succeed with integrity’. This premise is the bedrock of the Happy Person”. [6]

Before I took permission to leave, Acharya Shree asked me take a pledge. I was surprised but took the pledge, and its wordings were:  I will be responsible for educating at least five students for three years. I will activate at least one water pond in my neighborhood or nearest village….I will plant five fruit bearing trees…. I will treat male and female children in my family equally in education. I will lead from now onwards a righteous life free from corruption.” 

 

While I was departing, I requested him to solve my curiosity: “Whether this pledge will help in achieving the goal of a ‘Happy Person’ ”?  He replied: “If you're asking a question, propose a solution. ...”. And then, Acharya Shree retired to his room.  His reply bewildered me. I stayed up all night to figure out his query. Before I dwell further, let me focus on some outstanding features of the emerging scenario in the country.

India’s problems/issues are not fixed. They are changing everyday and hence their solutions. Two issues need urgent attention: agrarian distress [7] and job crisis. Any durable solution to agrarian distress requires non-farm jobs. When a sector (that is agriculture) with less than 15 per cent of GDP supports a population three times its size, we have a convergence of rural and urban hopes: jobs. One cannot lift rural incomes without absorbing at least two-thirds of those dependent on the farm in non-farm jobs. Many farmers, however, cannot leave agriculture because of a lack of opportunities in the non-farm sector.  In addition, the current pool of India’s manpower has very low employability mainly due to poor quality of human capital, i.e. abilities and skills of human resources.  The country produces more than five million graduates every year. The National Employability Report    reveals that a significant proportion of these graduates, nearly 47 percent, are unemployable, given their poor linguistic and cognitive/analytical skills. 

With the World Bank ranking India at 115th out of 157 countries on the Human Capital Index in 2018, India cannot avoid the issue of empowering people.  HCI seeks to measure the amount of human capital that a child born today can expect to attain by the age of 18. According to its parameters a child born in India today will only be 44 per cent as productive as she could have been if she had enjoyed quality education and full health as well as quality of living environment including water and sanitation.  In other words, there are grave deficiencies in India’s human development inputs that are preventing children from reaching their full potential. As a result, the productivity, measured as per capita GDP,   is very low. India became the fifth largest economy in the world in terms of GDP in 2018 but still it has a very-very low per capita GDP, as per IMF. It is placed at 122nd position among 187 countries.

How to forge ahead?: The concept of “happy Person” can be seen as a process of empowering people or unlocking human potential by expanding the real freedoms that people enjoy. It can be achieved by investing in health and education, and in innovation that is human development. And, that could be the way out to achieve the mission of “Happy Person”, as conceived by Acharya Mahapragya.

The policy monograph - Nurturing Human Development: A Strategy for New India  - proposes such a strategy to unlock the human potential and it is christened as “HDPlus” (Human Development Plus). [8] It is a dynamic agenda based on a ‘whole child’ concept, that is school-going child and his/her family (that is HDPlus family) should be the fulcrum of quality education leading to human development efforts. The concept is being described by policies, practices, and relationships which ensure that each child is healthy, educated, engaged, supported and encouraged. For this, integrating the child and his or her family more deeply into the day-to-day life of school and home activities represents an untapped instrument for raising the overall achievements including learning skills and health parameters, and hence improving overall productivity. In other words, creating an enabling environment at family and school levels is a way to promoting quality life and happiness, as shown in Box A.  

Box A: HDPlus strategy in action
Govt.   Elementary  School


  •     Ensure total involvement of community/panchayat in the management of school
  •            Select    all students (As per the Annual Economic Survey 2018, around 80% of students in the govt. elementary schools are from the weaker sections of the society).  
HDPlus Family



  •            After selecting students, go to their families and provide all basic requirements for better living: water, toilet, electricity, cooking gas, primary health among others, if they are not having.
Human Competency


  •     All these interventions will ensure that the 8th graders are well prepared to read, write and be efficient in mathematics & basic digital technology before moving to further education.
                                                                                
                                          

In conclusion, the HDPlus strategy focuses on enhancing the richness of human life, especially those of underprivileged, rather than simply the richness of the economy through unlocking the human potential. It enables people to decide who they want to be, what to do, and how to live, as visualized by Acharya Mahapragya.    Investments in education, health, living environment and its determinants – the social sector – therefore, should be made a priority; though it is a relatively long but a certain process in achieving sustainable and inclusive development to realize not only the  vision of “Happy Person” but  also expedite the process of  achieving the Sustainable Development Goals of United Nations. First and foremost target of SDGs is to “End poverty in all its forms everywhere”, and HDPlus strategy proposes an effective way to tackle actual poverty - the main cause of unhappiness. 


I strongly believe that the concept of “Happy Person”, as conceived by Acharya Mahapragya, could be promoted to achieve the goal of prosperous and empowered India. If yes, then it will be a befitting contribution of all of us to spread knowledge and legacy of Acharya Mahapragya in his birth century year. In words of Acharya Mahashraman, his worthy successor, expressed his wish in a beautiful couplet:

“Jnana Chetana Varsh Kare Prakash/ Jaage Samyam Mein Vishwas.” [9]

(That is, ‘May people develop their faith in self-control. And may the light of Acharya Mahapragya’s birth centenary illuminate this message.)




[1] The Easterlin paradox is a finding in happiness economics formulated in 1974 by Richard Easterlin, then professor of economics at the University of Pennsylvania, and the first economist to study happiness data.  For details, refer: Richard A. EasterlinLaura Angelescu McVeyMalgorzata SwitekOnnicha Sawangfa, and Jacqueline Smith Zweig. 2010. The happiness–income paradox revisited, PNAS
[2] Chancel, Lucas and Thomas Piketty. 2017.  “Indian income inequality, 1922-2014: From British Raj to Billionaire Raj?”  WID, World Working Paper Series No. 2017/11, World Inequality Lab, Paris School of Economics. 

[3] Refer report at:https://www.businesstoday.in/current/world/indias-happiness-ranking-drops-to-140-way-behind-pakistan-china-bangladesh/story/330018.html

[4]  Similar views of Acharya Shree  were also reported by Sudheendra Kulkarni, former aide to Prime Minister Atal Bihari Vajpayee in the PMO, for details, refer his article:   “Acharya Mahapragya’s message of self-control”, Speaking Tree, Times of India, July10, 2019.

[5] Refer at: http://www.jvbharati.org/about/aboutjvb/inspiration/
[6] Acharya Mahapragya and A. P. J. Abdul Kalam. 2014.  The Family and the Nation, New Delhi:  HarperCollins.

[7] Agrarian distress, in the present context, is mainly in terms of low agricultural prices and, consequently, poor farm incomes. Low productivity in agriculture and related supply side factors are equally important.

[8] For details, see:  Kothari, Devendra. 2019. Nurturing Human Development: A Strategy for New India, New Delhi: Paragoan International Publishers.
  
[9] As quoted by Sudheendra Kulkarni in his article:   “Acharya Mahapragya’s message of self-control”, Speaking Tree, Times of India, July10, 2019.



Tuesday, 20 August 2019

Are Indians against small family norm? (Post #106)


Only 24 per cent of the married women between 15 and 49 years want a second child. For men, the corresponding proportion is 27 per cent, down from 49% a decade ago.

National Family Health Survey-4 (NFHS-4 (2015-16)

Ministry of Health and Family Welfare, Government of India

 


Dr. Devendra Kothari[1]
Population and Development Analyst
Forum for Population Action

It was a wet morning at Red Fort as the country awaited the flag hosting ceremony and address to the nation by PM Narendra Modi on its 73rd Independence Day. The nation of 1,350   million people was eagerly   to know what PM Modi thinks about “New India”, which he promised during the General Election. 

Among many issues PM Modi raised from the ramparts of Red Fort, the issue of “Population Explosion” was very critical. He emphasised “small family is good for the society, nation... High time the nation debates this and brings a law if needed...Else we will soon run out of resources”.   It is because virtually all major problems that confront India today relate in some critical way to the galloping population. It leads to a massive diversion of national investable resources to consumption which could otherwise be used for increasing investment and productivity and for improving the quality of public services like education, health, sanitation, provision of safe drinking water, etc.  That could be the reason why PM Modi brought up the issue of Population Explosion. In fact, he is the first prime Minister of India who dwelled at length on this issue from a public platform.

India's demography is mind-boggling. India’s population in 1947 was 330 million and in 2018 it was 1350 million. In last seventy years it has quadrupled.  India now contains about 18% of humanity (i.e. every sixth person in the world is an Indian). China is the only country with a larger population ‑ in the order of 70 million more in 2018 as compared to 300 million   in 1990. The Indian population grew at an annual rate of 1.24% during 2010-15. On the other hand, China registered a much lower annual growth rate of population (0.61%) during the corresponding period.  Based on the analysis of recent data, it is estimated that India will overtake China in the next 3-5 years that is before 2025.[2]

The current population growth in India, however, is mainly caused by unwanted fertility.  Around five in ten live births are unintended/unplanned or simply unwanted by the women who experience them and these births    trigger continued high population growth. Around 26 million children were born in India in 2018, and out of this about 13 million births could be classified as unwanted. Further, based on the National Family Health Surveys (1 to 4), it is estimated that in 2018 around 430 million people out of 1350 million in India were a result of unwanted pregnancies.  With a large number of people resulting from unwanted pregnancies, how can one think about using them for nation building?   The consequences of unwanted pregnancy are being reflected in widespread malnutrition, poor health, low quality of education, and increasing scarcity of basic resources like food, water and space.

While India’s population continues to grow by 16 - 17 million   annually, and while 14 million women, especially in the lower economic strata including Muslims, seek to postpone childbearing, space births, or stop having children; they are not using a modern methods of contraception. This is also known as the ‘unmet need’ for contraception. Often, women with unmet need for family planning services  travel far from their homes to reach a health facility, only to return home ‘empty handed’ due to shortages, stock outs, lack of desired contraception and/or non-availability of doctors and paramedical staff or poor quality of services. When women are thus turned away, they are unable to protect themselves from unwanted/unplanned pregnancies and sexually transmitted infections. And this type of incomplete control over the reproductive process reduces the prospects for an early decline in the rate of population growth.  [3]

Incidents of unwanted pregnancies can be dramatically reduced, if not eliminated, within a next five years  by simply providing reproductive services as per the needs of clients,   as had been done in Andhra Pradesh during the nineties.  If Andhra, with little outside help, could manage its population growth under relatively low literacy and high poverty (Literacy Rate of AP in 2011 was 67.7% compared to 67.1% in Rajasthan, as per 2011 Census), there is no reason why other states especially Four Large North Indian (FLNI) States of Bihar, MP, Rajasthan and UP, with lesser problems and with increasingly generous support from the Centre, should fail so spectacularly in managing unwanted fertility. 

 

The people of the FLNI states are not against small family norms. While general knowledge about family planning is almost universal, access to modern methods of contraception services and products is a big problem in these states.

India must ensure that every child is a wanted one. So government    must provide client-centred reproductive health services with special reference to poor performing states.  It will help in meeting women’s needs for family planning and that would help in avoiding numerous reproductive health-related issues. Women who are able to delay or stop childbearing when they wish to are more likely to meet their children’s educational goals, earn a living and support their families, and manage changes in their environment and natural resources. Reducing incidence of unwanted pregnancies will help in achieving the national goal of population stabilization at the earliest.[4] 

The need of the hour, thus, is to create confidence among policy makers and programme managers especially in the poor performing states that a breakthrough is possible. There is no need to implement coercive measures like one-child norm or to provide incentives and disincentives. The real need is to provide services in un-served and underserved areas by realigning the capacity of health system to deliver quality care to suit the needs of clients.

A failure to stabilize India’s population will have significant implications for the future of India’s economy, that was the concern, one can see on the face of PM Modi while he was talking about this issue from the rampant of Lal Qila.




[2] Calculated by the author using data obtained from the Registrar General and Census Commissioner of India and National Family Health Surveys.   

[3] Kothari, Devendra. 2014. “Managing Unwanted Fertility in India: Way Forward”, --   in Suresh Sharma and William Joe.   (eds.):   National Rural Health Mission: An Unfinished Agenda, Bookwell, New Delhi.

[4] For details, see:  Kothari, Devendra. 2019. Nurturing Human Development: A Strategy for New India, New Delhi: Paragoan International Publishers. A copy of the publication could be obtained by contacting author at dkothari42@gmail.com.



Monday, 1 July 2019

Nurturing Human Development and Rotary


Devendra Kothari Ph.D. [1]
District Chairman,
Human Resources Development,
RID 3054 (2019-20)

“On factors holding India back, my biggest disappointment is the low level of human development”.
Bill Gates
Co-Chair, Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation


The post explores role of the Rotary in the post PolioPlus era.

There is no secret that India's growth is much skewed and its benefits go disproportionately to few people as gets manifested by Oxfam’s Wealth Report (2018) which points out that the nine richest Indians own as much wealth as the bottom 50 percent of the population. Further, the income inequality is rising much faster than expected.  The top one percent richest individuals in India appropriated six percent of total income in the early 1980s, and now, this figure has gone up to twenty two percent, as per the French Economist Thomas Piketty.[2] This suggests that wealth is not trickling down to the poor and India is turning into a ‘republic of inequality’.

Inequality is a roadblock to progress when it deprives people of opportunity, and subjects many to conditions of extreme poverty. As a result, it is sharply diminishing living conditions of millions of people in India, a country that is already home to some of the world’s poorest and hungriest people. More than half of India’s population (around 700 million in 2019) is still living under ‘multi-dimensional poverty’ compared to 5.2 per cent in China.

The article is an attempt to understand what should be done in the next 5 to 10 years to reduce the level of inequality?  Most importantly, how can the Rotary contribute in this effort?

Why high level of inequality? The main reason behind the high level of inequality is the low productivity of labor. India became the fifth largest economy in the world in terms of GDP in 2018 but still it has a very-very low per capita GDP, as per IMF. It is placed at 122nd position among 187 countries. Hence, there needs to be a concurrent increase in productivity.

With the World Bank ranking India at 115th out of 157 countries on the Human Capital Index in 2018, India cannot avoid the issue of empowering people.  HCI seeks to measure the amount of human capital that a child born today can expect to attain by the age of 18. According to its parameters, a child born in India today will only be 44 percent as productive as she could have been if she had enjoyed quality education and full health as well as quality of living environment including water and sanitation.  In other words, there are grave deficiencies in India’s human development inputs that are preventing children from reaching their full potential.

Let us consider some facts. India has done well over the past decade or so to get most of its children into school. It has done less well at getting them to learn substantially or meaningfully. Analysts are, therefore, already worrying that India’s demographic dividend — its vast pool of young people — will become (has already become) a curse: Without jobs, all those young people could drag down the country instead of pushing it towards upper-middle income status. The problem is that they are desperately short of preparation for both the old economy and the new. India has taken education in isolation. We cannot improve the quality of education without harmonizing it with other items like WASH (Water, Sanitation and Hygiene) and primary health, not only in schools but also in homes of students.

In addition, the population growth is a worrying factor.  The current population growth in India is mainly caused by unwanted fertility.  Around five in ten live births are unintended/unplanned or simply unwanted by the women who experience them which    trigger continued high population growth. Around 26 million children were born in India in 2018, and out of this, about 13 million births could be classified as unwanted. Further, based on the National Family Health Surveys, it is estimated that in 2018 around 445 million people out of 1,350 million in India were a result of unwanted pregnancies.  With a large number of people resulting from unwanted pregnancies, how can one think about using them for nation building? 

Rotary initiative to unlock human potential: There is growing consensus that economic growth is not sufficient to reduce inequality unless it is backed by high level of labor productivity. Everyone, therefore, recognizes that harnessing the human potential is the key to reduce inequality.   With this in mind, the top leadership of the Rotary International District 3054 [3] assembled at the Rotary Club, Jaipur on October 28, 2017 and came out with a strategy to empower people. [4] The strategy is being christened as ‘HDPlus’ (Human Development Plus).  It is a dynamic agenda based on a ‘whole child’ concept, that is primary-school-going child and his/her family (that is ‘HDPlus family’). The concept is being described by policies, practices, and relationships that ensure that each child is healthy, educated, engaged, supported and encouraged. For this, integrating the child and his or her family more deeply into the day-to-day life of school and home activities represents an untapped instrument for raising the overall achievements including learning skills and health parameters, and hence improving overall productivity.

To start with, the HDPlus strategy focuses on five interventions in a more closely integrated form in focusing on the HDPlus families to unlock the human potential. These are: 

1.   Ensuring quality elementary  education by improving assessment and accountability systems, which largely translates into improving teacher recruitment and training as well as community participation in the management of  government schools; [5]

2.   Improving physical living conditions    by strengthening access to WASH (Water, Sanitation and Hygiene) facilities, electricity and LPG among others;

3.   Enhancing healthy life by focusing on primary health and nutrition;

4.   Promoting gender equality by changing the mindset of young as well as old   through sensitization at the  family level;[6] and 

5.   Stabilizing population by reducing incidence of unwanted fertility and infant mortality by providing services looking to the needs of people as well as advocating that every child should be a wanted one.[7]

How to implement the strategy? To reduce inequality, policies should be universal in principle, paying attention to the needs of disadvantaged and marginalized populations.  The framework focuses on children from the government elementary schools (primary and upper primary) and their families.  Now question arises why government schools are being selected to start with? The government lays emphasis on elementary education involving children aged 6 to 14 years old. 80 percent schools at the elementary level are government-run or supported, making it the largest provider of education in the country. Further, even if some people have lost hope in government schools, the fact remains that they are catering mainly students coming from the poor families and they are present each and every corner of the country; and as such, they are very important link in our efforts to focus on the deprived population.

In short, the HDPlus strategy is aimed to lay foundation for the human competency that is quality of being adequately or well qualified physically and intellectually. The strategy   ensures that 14 year olds (8th graders) are well prepared to read, write and be efficient in mathematics as well as in the basic digital technology before moving to further education, thus initiating the process of human capital formation.

What can Rotary do? The Rotary is a group of local leaders making progress on a particular issue. The world has already witnessed   how the Rotarians used their intelligence and financial resources and their energy to fight polio. Now the Rotarians must help the deprived and marginalized people by unlocking their potential, thus eradicating poverty. It will also help to achieve the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) of United Nations which is one of the focus areas of the Rotary Foundation.

Here, the PolioPlus could be our guiding strategy in unlocking the human potential.[8] First of all, media should be used extensively to propagate the HDPlus strategy. A number of press conferences could be arranged before contacting the state and central governments as well as    corporate sectors for their involvement and funding. To start with, the framework could be implemented in few RI districts on pilot basis before covering up the entire country like the PolioPlus.  Further, the Rotary clubs should be encouraged to take field projects, based on the HDPlus strategy by joining hands with corporate sector/NGO/government.

In sum, the mission of Rotary is to provide “service” to poor and needy ones, and here the HDPlus strategy provides an opportunity to the Rotarians to help deprived people by unlocking their potential.  I will like to conclude in the words of   Rabindranath Tagore:

“I slept and dreamt that life was joy. I awoke and saw that life was service. I acted and behold, service was joy.”



[1] After obtaining formal degrees from Harvard and Australian National universities, Dr. Kothari has been working on issues pertaining population and development. He has been nominated as the District Chairman, Human Resources Development Committee of RID 3054 (2019-20). He can be contacted at:  dkothari42@gmail.c9om or 09829119868.   Last year, his comments on “Population and Climate Change” appeared in the New York Times (Sept. 11, 2018).

[2] Chancel, Lucas and Thomas Piketty. 2017.  “Indian income inequality, 1922-2014: From British Raj to Billionaire Raj?”  WID, World Working Paper Series No. 2017/11, World Inequality Lab, Paris School of Economics. 

[3] The discussion was chaired by then DG Maulin Patel of RID 3054 (2017-18). In addition, then DGE Neeraj Sogani and DGN Bina Desai as well PDG Ratnesh Kashyap, PDG Ashish Desai among others attended the discussion.  Rtn. Devendra Kothari, District Chairman, Human Resources Development Committee, RID 3054 (2017-18) initiated the discussion.

[4] For details, see:  Kothari, Devendra. 2019. Nurturing Human Development: A Strategy for New India, New Delhi: Paragoan International Publishers.

[5] Kothari, Devendra. 2017. “Managing school education in India”, in Administrative Change, Vol. XLIV (2): 78-89.

[6] Kothari, Devendra. 2014. “Empowering women in India: Need for a Feminist Agenda”, Journal of Health Management, 16 (2): 233-43.

[7] Kothari, Devendra. 2014. “Managing Unwanted Fertility in India: Way Forward”, --   in Suresh Sharma and William Joe.   (eds.):   National Rural Health Mission: An Unfinished Agenda, Bookwell, New Delhi.

[8] Rotary's involvement in polio eradication began in 1979 with a five-year commitment to provide and help deliver polio vaccine to six million children of Philippines. Following similar commitments in other countries, in the early 80's Rotary started planning for the most ambitious program in its history — to immunize all of world's children, less than five years of age, against polio, and in 1985 PolioPlus program was born. Since then, Rotary’s dedication to the global eradication of polio has remained constant. 2018 marked the 33rd anniversary of and challenges the program has faced.  But through the efforts of Rotary, 99 percent of the world’s population lives in regions certified polio-free. The goal of eradication is closer than ever. Same can be done to alleviate poverty by promoting HDPlus strategy.