Skeptic
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It seems to me that the only answer acceptable to you is that India has a huge middle class and Pakistan has none.
No Sir, I am currently of the view that Both India and Pakistan has a middle class, though size of the middle class in India sheerly by virtue of its population base is huge. Percentage wise as well Indian has a slight edge though not by much.
But to me you seem of firm belief - that India does not have a middle class at all - and Pakistan has a huge one. Which is not only contrary to the popular perception, but firmly unsubstantiated.
The only problem is I have cited lots of data to show that India has a very tiny middle class, if any.
You keep talking about NCAER, which is part of the "India Shining" hype that has been joined by the PR folks in India who ran campaigns like "India Everywhere" at WEF in Davos, Switzerland.
The fact is that India has a very small pool of less than 25% (vs 40% in Pakistan) of the population that lives on $2 a day or more from which the middle class can emerge.
Most of the factors which influence the size of middle / upper middle class are firmly overlooked by you.
Pakistan never had land reforms, that has led to all the rural income firmly held in the hands of a few Landlords (.1% anyone) and middle class is entirely an Urban phenomenon in Pakistan - unlike in India.
Higher education: While India has achieved over 14.48 % Gross Enrolment Ratio in higher education by 2010, for Pakistan it was abysmal 4.7% in 2009.
Let me quote Ram Bijapurkar again for your benefit:
While consultants and companies advise investing in India based on the current and projected size of the “middle class”, the bogey of the definition and sizing of the middle class hasn't gone away yet and adds to the unease. The World Bank defines middle class as having between $10 and $20 purchasing power parity (PPP) per capita per day, which is a lot narrower than the NCAER definition of households income between Rs. 2-10 lakh ($4,000 to $21,000 at 2001-02 prices) annually; which is what McKinsey Global Institute uses in its Bird of Gold book. Chris Butel of IIMS-Dataworks suggests sensibly that the middle class are those that have their own personal transport (car or 2-wheeler), own entertainment as in a TV set, sound system and their own communication (phone). Some of us suggest that the middle class are those who are literally in the middle i.e., have approximately between the 33rd and 66th percentile of income. Expectedly the numbers swing wildly from 50 million to 200 / 230 / 300 million. What's more, the nagging worry persists that the middle class being defined by most of these income bands is actually India's upper class.
Ramabijapurkar
The middle Class itself is yet to have a universally accepted defenition. The entire is surrounding the defenition of per capita income of $10 PPP, whereas middle class income is a household phenomenon. I gave you a simple example - If the defenition leaves a person earning 38K in Pakistan, and his family, out of the middle class, how do you expect me to believe that according to the same definition, Pakistan would have a huge middle calss, where it has been proven that only 2.8 million Pakistanis have income in excess of 2 Lakh per annum (Income tax payees).
You have certainly avoided the factual data present and went along the longer way of determining incomes. Gini coefficient has it fallacies and was estimated 68 for Pakistan in 2006.
I read it earlier - there is no need to get repeatative. I will provide something more for your benefit:et me quote Ram Bijapurkar again for your benefit:
While consultants and companies advise investing in India based on the current and projected size of the “middle class”, the bogey of the definition and sizing of the middle class hasn't gone away yet and adds to the unease. The World Bank defines middle class as having between $10 and $20 purchasing power parity (PPP) per capita per day, which is a lot narrower than the NCAER definition of households income between Rs. 2-10 lakh ($4,000 to $21,000 at 2001-02 prices) annually; which is what McKinsey Global Institute uses in its Bird of Gold book. Chris Butel of IIMS-Dataworks suggests sensibly that the middle class are those that have their own personal transport (car or 2-wheeler), own entertainment as in a TV set, sound system and their own communication (phone). Some of us suggest that the middle class are those who are literally in the middle i.e., have approximately between the 33rd and 66th percentile of income. Expectedly the numbers swing wildly from 50 million to 200 / 230 / 300 million. What's more, the nagging worry persists that the middle class being defined by most of these income bands is actually India's upper class.
Ramabijapurkar
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The problem is whether a household is middle class or a individual. As per definition - My father would certainly be in upper middle / upper class while my mom would be below poverty line. Alternatively a person with reasonably good income will be thrust out of the middle class just because he has to many kids. - this is ridiculous.But who, as a patrician British prime minister, Harold Macmillan, once loftily asked, are these middle classes? Their members are neither rich nor poor but somewhere in-between. In countries long divided between lord and peasant, that has large consequences. “Middle-class” describes an income category but also a set of attitudes. In the words of Shashi Tharoor, an Indian commentator, it is a category “more sociological than logical”.
An essential characteristic is the possession of a reasonable amount of discretionary income. Middle-class people do not live from hand to mouth, job to job, season to season, as the poor do. Diana Farrell, who is now a member of America’s National Economic Council but until recently worked for McKinsey, a consultancy that has spent a lot of time studying the middle classes, reckons they begin at roughly the point where people have a third of their income left for discretionary spending after providing for basic food and shelter. This allows them not just to buy things like fridges or cars but to improve their health care or plan for their children’s education.
Usually, an income of that size requires regular, formal employment, with a salary and some benefits, that is, a steady job—another key middle-class characteristic. The income needed to have a third of it left over after meeting basic needs also varies from place to place. In China, for example, $3,000 a year may be enough in Chongqing or Chengdu, big cities in the west, but not in Beijing or Shanghai. So defining the middle class in absolute terms is hard.
In practice, emerging markets may be said to have two middle classes. One consists of those who are middle class by any standard—ie, with an income between the average Brazilian and Italian. This group has the makings of a global class whose members have as much in common with each other as with the poor in their own countries. It is growing fast, but still makes up only a tenth of the developing world. You could call it the global middle class.
The other, more numerous, group consists of those who are middle-class by the standards of the developing world but not the rich one. Some time in the past year or two, for the first time in history, they became a majority of the developing world’s population: their share of the total rose from one-third in 1990 to 49% in 2005. Call it the developing middle class.
I think most appropriate for the subcontinent is the figure provided by Shashi Tharoor - "“more sociological than logical”.
As for $10 per capita - I am still awaiting data on how Pakistan has more than 5% people outside that group.
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