Disparities within India's Poorest Regions : Why Do the Same Institutions Work Differently in Different Places?

Orissa has gradually become India's poorest state, in terms of proportion of people living below the poverty line, and with much slower improvements in human development indicators. These disparities do not exist because of a lack of effort to address them; both the regional and group disparities have featured significantly on the policy agenda, with a large number of programs in existence, and significant sums of money allocated for the purpose. Often, these programs are the same across India, and a key question is why they work better in some places than in others. This paper suggests that the lack of performance is related to a lack of accountability within the administrative system, and that the very disparities that the policies try to address permeate the system of delivery responsible for them. Regional inequality is unlikely to be addressed successfully unless a range of economic, political and socio-cultural conditions are met, including: a challenge of the political and socio-cultural dominance of the elite; mobilization and creation of effective voice among marginalized groups; and progressive reform of the institutions that determine access to livelihood resources.

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Main Author: de Haan, Arjan
Language:English
Published: Washington, DC: World Bank 2004
Subjects:World Development Report 2006,
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10986/9084
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spelling dig-okr-1098690842023-11-17T16:11:12Z Disparities within India's Poorest Regions : Why Do the Same Institutions Work Differently in Different Places? de Haan, Arjan World Development Report 2006 Orissa has gradually become India's poorest state, in terms of proportion of people living below the poverty line, and with much slower improvements in human development indicators. These disparities do not exist because of a lack of effort to address them; both the regional and group disparities have featured significantly on the policy agenda, with a large number of programs in existence, and significant sums of money allocated for the purpose. Often, these programs are the same across India, and a key question is why they work better in some places than in others. This paper suggests that the lack of performance is related to a lack of accountability within the administrative system, and that the very disparities that the policies try to address permeate the system of delivery responsible for them. Regional inequality is unlikely to be addressed successfully unless a range of economic, political and socio-cultural conditions are met, including: a challenge of the political and socio-cultural dominance of the elite; mobilization and creation of effective voice among marginalized groups; and progressive reform of the institutions that determine access to livelihood resources. 2012-06-26T15:37:54Z 2012-06-26T15:37:54Z 2004 http://hdl.handle.net/10986/9084 English CC BY 3.0 IGO World Bank http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/igo/ application/pdf Washington, DC: World Bank
institution Banco Mundial
collection DSpace
country Estados Unidos
countrycode US
component Bibliográfico
access En linea
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tag biblioteca
region America del Norte
libraryname Biblioteca del Banco Mundial
language English
topic World Development Report 2006
World Development Report 2006
spellingShingle World Development Report 2006
World Development Report 2006
de Haan, Arjan
Disparities within India's Poorest Regions : Why Do the Same Institutions Work Differently in Different Places?
description Orissa has gradually become India's poorest state, in terms of proportion of people living below the poverty line, and with much slower improvements in human development indicators. These disparities do not exist because of a lack of effort to address them; both the regional and group disparities have featured significantly on the policy agenda, with a large number of programs in existence, and significant sums of money allocated for the purpose. Often, these programs are the same across India, and a key question is why they work better in some places than in others. This paper suggests that the lack of performance is related to a lack of accountability within the administrative system, and that the very disparities that the policies try to address permeate the system of delivery responsible for them. Regional inequality is unlikely to be addressed successfully unless a range of economic, political and socio-cultural conditions are met, including: a challenge of the political and socio-cultural dominance of the elite; mobilization and creation of effective voice among marginalized groups; and progressive reform of the institutions that determine access to livelihood resources.
topic_facet World Development Report 2006
author de Haan, Arjan
author_facet de Haan, Arjan
author_sort de Haan, Arjan
title Disparities within India's Poorest Regions : Why Do the Same Institutions Work Differently in Different Places?
title_short Disparities within India's Poorest Regions : Why Do the Same Institutions Work Differently in Different Places?
title_full Disparities within India's Poorest Regions : Why Do the Same Institutions Work Differently in Different Places?
title_fullStr Disparities within India's Poorest Regions : Why Do the Same Institutions Work Differently in Different Places?
title_full_unstemmed Disparities within India's Poorest Regions : Why Do the Same Institutions Work Differently in Different Places?
title_sort disparities within india's poorest regions : why do the same institutions work differently in different places?
publisher Washington, DC: World Bank
publishDate 2004
url http://hdl.handle.net/10986/9084
work_keys_str_mv AT dehaanarjan disparitieswithinindiaspoorestregionswhydothesameinstitutionsworkdifferentlyindifferentplaces
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