Why are Indians not concerned about #inequality?
I came across this graphic today on twitter.
Predictably for Indians, the top concern is religious and ethnic hatred and not inequality. While I understand that communalism, regionalism, casteism and all the other ‘isms’ are media favourites, political favourites and hot topics in drawing room discussions, I find it strange that ‘poorism’ is not of much concern to the Indian people. I’m not getting into the methodology that Pew might have used for this and whether their sample was sufficiently representative of the varying income levels in India, but what the survey is saying corroborates well with what I observe around me.
Those of us who research and practice in the area of poverty and human development are usually preaching to the choir when we express our concerns. Most Indians, sometimes including the poor, are not really concerned about the issue of income inequality in India. Is it that we have normalised inequality? Or is it that we believe in the passiveness of the Indian poor who will never rebel? Or do we really believe that India is decimating poverty rapidly enough for it to not be a concern?
I don’t have the answers, but I sure find it interesting. Also, perhaps if we focused more on bringing down inequality, the other ‘isms’ might matter less? What do you think?
Posted on October 21, 2014, in Personal and tagged concern, conflict, development, ethnic, fear, income inequality, India, poverty, religious. Bookmark the permalink. 2 Comments.
It’s sad for a country who fought for its independence. Perhaps, we don’t realize that but we will pay a heavy price in the long run. The biggest tragedy is the inequality that dividing humans.
My take is that this too, like patriarchy, is a part of the ingrained hierarchical casteist mindset that we have inherited. And if we are absolutely honest, all of us have some prejudices, derived from this. It may take a few generations for us lose this – I dont see it happening too soon.