The Bold Voice of J&K

Poverty discussion

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Discussing poverty reduction and accelerating economic growth on sustained basis India and Pakistan lawmakers and experts meeting in Dubai, notwithstanding the chill in bilateral ties, is something on the lines what Prime Minister Narendra Modi must have visualised as part of better governance. Modi had told Pakistan to concentrate on the major issue of poverty reduction to speedup economic growth rather than exporting terror. His comments came after attack on an army base in Kashmir’s Uri town in September last year. The fifth round of ‘Pakistan-India Legislators and Public Officials Dialogue’ facilitated by Pakistan Institute of Legislative Development and Transparency (PILDAT) is a welcome step even though being held in a third country. The participants from India highlighted a number of social safety net programmes that have helped alleviate poverty in India adding that success also needs to be based on equitable and sustained growth and the inclusion of stakeholders other than government. While the dialogue saw overall consensus on both global and South Asian success with some reduction in poverty numbers despite complexity of measuring poverty and disagreements on successful strategies, participants believed that continuing arms expenditure by both countries will be to the detriment of the welfare of the people. While Pakistani participants showcased economic growth and role of remittances, they also cited some success emanating from targeted-subsidy programmes in reducing poverty. Dialogue also recognised with concern the growing gap in rich and poor segments of society both in Pakistan and India. Comprehensive poverty alleviation strategies must also focus on reducing inequality within society in both countries. Participants highlighted exclusion of the poor in planning as well as in prioritising development schemes. There needs to be an increased focus on expenditures by governments in housing, public health, public education and in other social sectors. The two sides agreed that microfinance and availability of easy and cheap credit can go a long way in providing capital to poor and deprived sections of society for small business enterprises. Highlighting food security as a critical looming challenge for Pakistan and India, dialogue participants emphasised that both countries must focus on revamping agricultural growth policies that are farmer-friendly and incentivise them as key stakeholders. Tensions have been running high between India and Pakistan at the LoC and got escalated after the cross border terror attack on an army base in Kashmir’s Uri town in September.

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