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The Kerala Model: Probably the right way forward

Nakki Nair

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Kerala: A Case Study

Gross national product is often used as a synonym for achievement, but it is also an eloquent shorthand for gallons of gasoline burned, stacks of garbage tossed out, quantities of timber sawn into boards. One recent calculation showed that for every American dollar or its equivalent spent anywhere on earth, half a liter of oil was consumed in producing, packaging, and shipping the goods. One-seventieth the income means one-seventieth the damage to the planet. So, on balance, if Kerala and the United States manage to achieve the same physical quality of life, Kerala is the vastly more successful society. Which is not to say that we could ever live on as little as they do--or, indeed, that they should. The right point is clearly somewhere in between.

Logical as a middle way might be, though, we've not yet even begun to think about it in any real terms. We've clung to the belief that perhaps someday everyone on earth will be as rich as we are--a belief that seems utterly deluded in light of our growing environmental awareness. Kerala does not tell us precisely how to remake the world. But it does shake up our sense of what's obvious, and it offers a pair of messages to the First World. One is that sharing works. Redistribution has made Kerala a decent place to live, even without much economic growth. The second and even more important lesson is that some of our fears about simpler living are unjustified. It is not a choice between suburban America and dying at 35, between agribusiness and starvation, between 150 channels of television and ignorance. It is a subversive reality, that stagnant/stable economy that serves its people well, and in some ways it is a scary one. Kerala implies that there is a point where rich and poor might meet and share a decent life, and surely it offers new data for a critical question of our age: How much is enough?

Actually thinking about it, the way we are moving forward now is completely wrong. It is all about GDP and per capita income now. All about money.:agree::agree::agree::agree::agree:

MODS: Dont know where to post these kind of stuff. Please do move this thread to the appropriate place if it is not supposed to be posted here.:tup:
 
What explains Kerala's success? The history is fascinating: Kerala was exposed to peaceful trade with the outside world long before the British colonial rule. As the British penetrated the economy and Christian missionaries began opening schools, ancient patterns of caste discrimination and autocratic power were eroded. Newly "proletarianized" peasants - whose Western educations, ironically, gave them access to Marxist ideas - began organizing and engaging in mass demonstrations that were highly successful in bringing about reform in land ownership, governance, and the distribution of wealth. Popular protest as a tool for holding public officials accountable is a vital part of malayalee's life. Kerala model proves that literacy, low infant mortality, and the like can be achieved even before industrial world income levels. Some aspects of development do not have to wait for economic growth.

Those cheering the demise of Communism in Russia or Central Europe may be surprised to learn that Kerala's Communist Party has been freely elected into (and out of) power on several occasions, and early Communist cadres deserve much credit for the improved condition of the poorest.:tup:
 
For all those states which lack industry & have higher population density kerela is role model. kerela with lack of industry & higher population density is a prosperous state.
 
I think most of the welfare is attributed to grassroots level politics. This of course leads to a lot of small strikes, but it helps keep the struggle of the working class alive. Also, Kerala has the most conscious voters in the country probably because of the exposure to media. It is not just coincidence that real good leaders like EMS, EK Nayanar and Achuthanandan have been voted in.

The point is, there is no need to run behind GDP numbers to bring up the standards of the poor. GDP and GNP are all pointless. The only thing that matters is HDI. People think you need to be rich in order to have a high HDI. No! The Kerala model proves it wrong. We need dedicated initiatives to spread AWARENESS to the poor people.
 
^^^ One cannot ignore the remittance from ME. Kerala is populous state, and without Industry.

Granted kerala has more equality due to literacy(equal rights) but you need weath creation as well.
 
417033_247777151980578_100002448853618_550530_478611962_n.jpg
 
Forgot to mention kerala has a very high debt burden. Not a good model, if you call it one.
 

you're using the old scale of India comparing with new scale countries. The regional numbers haven't been updated yet. China's numbers dropped from 0.76 in 2009 to 0.689 in 2010 due to change of methodology that reduced the importance of literacy.
 
he he hehehe.. look at UP and it comparison

whatever makes this think that Saudi is so high..no way... and how is el salvador better than South africa.. nonsense

and if India is .575, then why is rajsthan .537 compared to india
 
you're using the old scale of India comparing with new scale countries. The regional numbers haven't been updated yet. China's numbers dropped from 0.76 in 2009 to 0.689 in 2010 due to change of methodology that reduced the importance of literacy.

Thanks it is good to know ...can you please provide me link to new model or share some information about it..
 
Kerala has good education,healthcare,and low poverty levels because of the human development factors economic wise Kerala is not as industrialized compared to Punjab or Gujarat however HDI figures in both of those states are lower than Kerala's

we should combine the economic and social policies of these 3 states and implement it nationally as a way to improve standard of living
 
i hope kerala never grows economically, otherwise there will be even more poor from the crappy states and the olympic medalist pole vaulters will drag the entire HDI down
 
While Pakistan's HDI of 0.504 (2011) ranks it among UNDP's low human development countries, its largest city Karachi's HDI of 0.7885 (2005) is closer to the group of nations given high human development rankings.

Karachi%2BHDI.jpg


Majority of the nations ranked as high human development are less populated than Karachi with its 15 million+ inhabitants, and none is experiencing the massive waves of poor rural migrants from some of the least developed areas of Pakistan which Karachi continues to absorb after each disaster in other parts of the country, natural or otherwise.

Haq's Musings: Karachi's High Human Development Index
 

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