Montek to clarify stance on poverty

Discusses fallout of Rs 32 yardstick with PM

Amid a raging controversy over the Rs 32 per capita per day poverty line

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definition, planning commission deputy chairman Montek Singh Ahluwalia met prime minister Manmohan Singh on Sunday and will clarify the panel’s stand on the issue on Monday.

The planning commission deputy chief, who returned from a 10-day foreign visit on Saturday, met the prime minister for the first time since the controversy erupted after an affidavit filed by the plan panel in the Supreme Court.

Ahluwalia is believed to have discussed the fallout of the controversy relating to the affidavit, which said that persons consuming items worth more than Rs 32 per day in urban areas (Rs 26 in rural areas) are not poor, with the prime minister.

As per the affidavit, a family of five spending less than Rs 4,824 (at June, 2011, prices) in urban areas will fall in the BPL (Below Poverty Line) category. The expenditure limit for a family in rural areas has been fixed at Rs 3,905.

The number of poor entitled to BPL benefits, as per the affidavit, has been estimated at 40.74 crore, as against 37.2 crore estimated at the time of accepting Tendulkar Committee report.

Officials in the planning commission have said that providing benefits to more persons would defeat the purpose of the anti-poverty programme.

Congress general secretary Rahul Gandhi is believed to have intervened in the matter and has reportedly asked the plan panel to do a rethink on its definition of poverty.

Ahluwalia is also scheduled to meet rural development minister Jairam Ramesh on Monday to discuss the issue.

Concerned over the public outcry, information and broadcasting minister Ambika Soni had said on Saturday, “The planning commission had given an affidavit. When we asked for information from the panel regarding it, we were told that it is an initial document and not the final document.”

She had further said, “These figures could undergo a change, who knows some other statistics may come up, which is acceptable to the planning commission. There is concern among people and disquiet in the civil society. They believe the statistics are somewhat removed from reality.”

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