Narendra
Modi’s candidacy for Indian prime minister largely rests on claims of
turning around his state of Gujarat. As national elections begin today, a
Gallup poll finds that more than one-third of Indians feel their economy is getting worse.
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If elected, can Modi turn that perception around too?
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Quartz
has examined Gujarat entirely through the lens of available public
data, much of which is graphed below. While governance is a chief
platform of the Modi campaign, and the state he oversaw is held up as a
shining example of how India can and should grow, Gujarat’s overall
numbers actually show a mixed picture.
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Since
Modi took over in October of 2001, Gujarat’s economy has vastly
improved by some measures and continued to do as well as it did before
he took office by others. But in non-fiscal indicators such as health
and overall quality of life, Gujarat has sometimes slipped under Modi.
In a few measures, Gujarat has done worse than before Modi took control.
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(A
note: Unless otherwise indicated, years below refer to the Indian
fiscal year that starts on April 1. So 2000, for
example, actually refers to the 2000-2001 Indian fiscal year.)
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The Economy
To get a sense of how Gujarat’s economy was growing compared to other states, let’s look first at gross state product.
Absolute GSP varies from state to state dramatically, because of
overall size, population and and historical levels of industry. Gujarat
has long been mid-pack. Here, as in many instances below, we’ve charted
Gujarat’s statistics since before Modi took office and compared it the
progress of the best state or union territory and the worst over time.
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Overall, Gujarat’s gross state domestic product has grown at an average of 16.6% a year from 2001 to 2010, up from an annual average of 5.1% from 1980 to 1990 and 8.2% from 1991 to 1998, according to the Planning Commission
(pdf, p.2). In the 1991 to 1998 period (before Modi took office)
Gujarat was the fastest-growing of India’s 14 major states based on
gross state product. From 2001 to 2010, Gujarat’s annual average state
domestic product growth is bested by Uttarakhand (18%), a state created
in 2000, and Sikkim (19.2%) which was not counted as a “major state” in
the 1991 to 1998 figures.
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Gujarat’s All-India ranking, based on overall GSP: 2011/12: 5th; 1999/2000: 6th
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GSP per capita:
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By
another measure, gross state product per capita, all of India has again
grown significantly in recent years. Here, Gujarat’s domestic product
has grown faster than the overall average, but again remains far from
the lead, behind Goa, Maharashtra, Tamil Nadu and others. We’ve graphed
Gujarat’s per capita domestic product versus India’s highest and lowest
states or union territory below and the All-India average, based on
current prices, in rupees:
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Gujarat’s All-India ranking, based on per capita state domestic product: 2011-12: 8th, up from 12th in the 2000-2001 fiscal year.
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Unemployment rates:
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Gujarat’s unemployment rate is low, a position the state has held since the 1990s, according to the latest unemployment survey for the 2012-2013 fiscal year (pdf, g 84), but behind several other fast-growth states:
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Gujarat’s All-India ranking for unemployment, where 1 is the lowest: 2012, 4th based on data from the Labor Bureau, which only dates back to 2009. Based on “National Sample Survey data,” Gujarat’s rural unemployment ranking in 2011 was 2nd, tied with Madhya Pradesh, verus 5th in 1999. Ranked on urban unemployment, Gujarat was 1st in 2011 and 1st in 1999.
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Foreign Direct Investment:
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In
his tenure as chief minister of Gujarat, this has been one of Modi’s
top priorities, a push that’s been accompanied by high-profile
investment summits and the construction of new factories by Bombardier and other foreign manufacturers. Gujarat, Modi likes to say, has become the “global Gateway to India.”
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On
FDI inflows, though, Gujarat remains dwarfed by other states that have
been the traditional “gateway” to the country, according to a Reserve Bank of India report
that dates from the year before he took office. The RBI ranked its own
offices in the cities that made the reports, not the states they are in,
so “Mumbai” here can be considered a proxy for Maharashtra, Chennai for
Tamil Nadu and Ahmedabad for Gujarat.
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In
recent years, drawing foreign direct investment to Gujarat has had
mixed results, according to the most recent data available. (Years below
refer to the Indian fiscal year):
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Gujarat’s All-India ranking, based on FDI: 5th, from April 2000 to Dec. 2013.
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Income equality, rural & urban
Inequality
in India’s rural areas is on the rise in the past decade, after
dropping through most of the 1990s, when judged by the Gini coefficient,
a measure of inequality in which a score of “zero” means perfect
equality and “one” means one person owns everything. Gujarat saw a
sharper rise than the rest of India from 1999 through 2004, and then
improvement, and remains mid-pack here. Uttar Pradesh has by far the
worst income inequality in rural India, while Rajasthan’s rural
inequality levels fell sharply after 1991 and remain below that level.
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On a urban basis, Gujarat’s income inequality is growing as well, but less sharply than some other fast-growth states.
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On an All-India basis, Gujarat ranked 15th
based on urban inequality, where 1 represents the highest inequality in
the 2009-2010 fiscal year, the latest available. On the basis of rural
inequality, Gujarat was 20th. Complete GINI coefficient data for all Indian states is not available for the 1999-2000 period so comparing Gujarat’s inequality versus other states during that time period to the present is not meaningful.
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Quality of Life
The Human Development Index
The
HDI is calculated based on life expectancy, income, and education and
is used by the United Nations to judge quality of life (and was
co-created by Nobel Prize-winning economist Amartya Sen in 1990).
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Gujarat’s
human development index figure has grown faster than the All India
figure in recent years, but far slower than several of the fastest
growth states, like Kerala. Based on HDI, Gujarat has dropped sharply in
the All-India rankings since Modi took office.
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Gujarat’s All-India ranking, based on HDI—2007-2008 (latest available): 11th, down from 6th in 2001 and 6th in 1991.
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Water
Gujarati’s
access to safe drinking water has increased dramatically since 1981, as
it has for most of India. The increase has slowed since Modi took
office, from 25% between 1991 and 2001, to 7% in the subsequent decade, a
slowdown echoed by the rest of the country—probably because the
hardest-to-reach places will be the last anywhere to get water.
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Gujarat
is mid-pack compared to the rest of India on the basis of safe drinking
water accessibility, lagging behind 14 states and territories,
including Delhi, Haryana, Punjab and Uttar Pradesh.
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Gujarat’s overall ranking, on the basis of safe drinking water accessibility has dropped from 14th in the 2001 census to 15th in 2011. On the availability of tap water, Gujarat’s rural households rank 15thand urban 9th, according to the 2011 Census.
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Gujarat’s
more pressing water woes come from a scarcity of water, with 10
districts out of 33 and some 4,000 villages affected by drought last
year, according to state officials, despite a decade of normal monsoons.(The central government said 17 districts were affected.)
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Long-planned
projects such as the Sardar Sarovar Dam on the Narmada River and the
Kalpasar dam project are running years behind schedule. The Kalpasar
project, which was first floated in 1998, is likely to commence its
construction work this year, according to the state government.
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Women and children
The
overall ratio of women to men in Gujarat—a measure of both how
widespread female infanticide is, and attention paid to girls’ and
women’s health—has been in constant decline for decades. In 1981, there
were 942 females born per thousand males, but the 2011 census shows that
number has slipped to 918.
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Over
the same time, the overall India ratio has improved, and some states
and territories, including Mizoram, have improved remarkably. Even
Chandigarh, the territory, which had the most unbalanced sex ratio in
1981, has seen improvement in that time.
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Gujarat’s All-India ranking, based on sex ratio: 2011: 24th, down from 17th in 1991.
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Child Sex Ratio
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Gujarat’s
child sex ratio, a comparison of female to male children age six and
under, is currently far below India’s average, and has improved slightly
since Modi took office. The ratio dropped from 928 to 883 between 1991
and 2001, but improved after the Gujarat government launched a ‘Save the Girl Child’
campaign in 2005 with the help of Unicef. Authorities confiscated
ultrasound machines, sent thousands of counselors across Gujarat and a
large community of landholders vowed to fight against female foeticide.
Still it remains well below the All India ratio.
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Gujarat’s All-India ranking, based on child sex ratio: 2011: 27th, versus 28th in 1991
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Female literacy rates
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Gujarat
scores better here, outperforming the India average . The state’s
female literacy rate has been better than the India average since well
before Modi took office, and its rate of improvement has remained
virtually the same for the past two decades.
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Gujarat’s All-India ranking, based on female literacy rates: 20th in 2011 vs. 21st in 2001, based on Planning Commission data.
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Child malnutrition
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The percentage of Gujarat’s children under the age of three
who were officially classified as “underweight” skyrocketed early in
Modi’s term, to over 70%—by far the highest of any state in the nation.
Years after taking office, he was “shocked” when informed the state was
not performing as well as the rest of India, The Times of India reported in 2007, and started a program to distribute vitamin-enriched chocolates to undernourished kids.
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In a 2012 interview
with the the Wall Street Journal, when asked what he was doing to
combat malnutrition, Modi blamed the problem on “beauty conscious”
middle class girls who refused to drink milk because they thought it
would make them fat. Malnutrition in young children has fallen sharply
since 2007, to just below the Indian average, the most-improved state
between 2007 and 2011.
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Gujarat’s All-India child malnutrition ranking, where the highest rank has the least number of malnourished children: 2011 21st, versus 20th in 1998.
Infant mortality
Gujarat’s
infant mortality rates have been dropping since the 1990s, as they have
in the rest of India, but the state remains near the very bottom of
India’s rankings. Infant mortality in Gujarat has fallen to 38 per 1,000
in 2012 from 57 in 2003- a drop of 33.3%—more than the 30% decline
nationally.
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In 2005-06, the Gujarat government launched a public-private partnership called the Chiranjeevi Yojana
scheme to reduce the maternal and infant mortality rate in rural areas
by encouraging mothers to deliver in private hospitals. It provides free
childbirth care at designated private hospitals for women below the
poverty line.
Still, according to 2012 figures, Gujarat ranks 23rd
among the 28 Indian states, when ranked by the least number of infant
deaths per thousand live births. (The top-ranked have the least deaths).