The
differences in socio-economic development between Hindus and Muslims did
not narrow during the 1990s, in at least one important respect the Muslim
Indian on the average was worse off at the end of the decade than he was
at the beginning.
The National Sample Survey Organisation made estimates of a few indicators
in 1987-88 and many more for 1993-94 and 1999-2000. The results of a
comparison across these three time points:
-
Literacy rates for both Hindus and Muslims improved, albeit slowly,
between 1993-94 and 1999-2000. But the gap between the two religious
groups remained where it was in the rural areas, while it narrowed
marginally in the towns and cities. The illiteracy rate for Hindus in
the rural areas was 50 per cent in 1993-94 (Muslims: 54 per cent) and it
had come down by the end of the decade to 44 per cent (Muslims: 48 per
cent): a difference of 6 percentage points at both time points. But in
urban India, the Muslim illiteracy rate that was as much as 14
percentage points higher in 1993-94 had narrowed a bit to 11 percentage
points by the end of the decade.
-
In
rural India, Muslims seemed to be further marginalised in access to land
during the course of the 1990s. In 1987-88, 40 per cent of rural Muslim
households cultivated little or no land, compared to 34 per cent among
Hindus. By 1999-2000 the proportion of households in both religious
groups in this situation had risen, but the increase was much faster
among the minority community: 51 per cent among Muslims and 40 per cent
among the Hindus.
-
The
relative position of the members of the two main religious groups in
employment status followed an unusual trend. In 1987-88, in the towns
and cities, Muslims in the work force experienced lower unemployment
rates than the Hindus (4 per cent versus 5.5 per cent), a situation that
continued in 1993-94, but by 1999-2000, there was a reversal. Muslims on
the average had by the end of the decade a slightly higher level of
unemployment (5 per cent versus 4.7 per cent). This change was largely
but not entirely on account of a deterioration in the position of
working Muslim women. In the villages, however, Muslims who in 1987-88
suffered from a higher unemployment rate continued to do so in
1999-2000. The disadvantages that Muslims suffered in work, literacy and
access to land was reflected in the relative levels of monthly per
capita expenditure on items of consumption.
Percentage of
Population in Bottom 20% according to Monthly Consumption Expenditure
( as % of population of each religious group) |
|
Hindus |
Muslim |
All Religions |
Rural |
|
|
|
1993-94 |
19 |
20 |
19 |
1999-2000 |
26 |
29 |
26 |
Urban |
|
|
|
1993-94 |
17 |
30 |
19 |
1999-2000 |
22 |
40 |
25 |
Source: National Sample Survey
Organisation Reports No.438 and 468. |
Compared to 1993-94, the
proportion of both Hindus and Muslims who fell in the bottom 20 per cent
of the population was greater in 1999-2000 in both rural and urban India.
But as the accompanying Table shows, a substantially larger proportion of
Muslims fell in this class by the end of the decade. The deterioration in
status was especially marked in urban India. The NSSO has made estimates
for a number of other indicators (for example, worker participation and
kind of employment) and has also presented information for individual
States and according to gender.
But whichever group of indicators one looks at and whatever level of
detail the comparison, the story is the same. The Muslims are on the
average on lower rungs of the socio-economic ladder than the Hindus and
the differences either remained the same or widened during the 1990s
|