This may be the wrong time to discuss the latest findings of a new poverty survey, when the whole country is consumed by uncertainty as parliament tries for the third time to elect a new prime minister. Or this may be just the right time because it proves that it is political mismanagement that has turned Nepal into the poorest country in Asia.
To be sure, we have taken giant strides in the last 20 years in child and maternal survival, the distribution of safe drinking water, and promoting literacy. But imagine how much more progress we would have made if it hadn't been for that ruinous war, if there was a government that could ensure efficient delivery, if the development budget was actually spent, and if there was political stability.
Nepal ranks 82 among 104 countries in the latest Multi-dimensional Poverty Index (MPI) put together by the Oxford Poverty and Human Development Initiative and UNDP's Human Development Report Office. The new index uses 10 indicators grouped under health, education, and living standards and tracks the level of deprivation from these services. It shows that 84.7 per cent of Nepalis are deprived, and more than 18 million people are 'poor'. It should be little comfort to us that India ranks 74 in the MPI: even war-torn Sri Lanka is way ahead at 32.
In fact, what little progress we've made since 1990 has been achieved despite government, mostly through individual and community-based initiatives. What is perhaps surprising, to put a positive spin on this shameful national ranking, is that with all the mismanagement and political disarray, Nepal did not fare worse. If we want to feel still better, we can cite the National Planning Commission's figures which show 'only' 31 per cent of the people living below the poverty line, or the World Bank's estimate that 55 per cent live on less than $1.25 a day.
The reason is that 15 per cent of Nepal's population is working abroad at any given time, and they send home $2 billion a year. This is improving family cash income, but it doesn't always correlate with access to services like years of schooling, safe drinking water, electricity, or chronic hunger in children. Many of these basic services are the prerogative of the state, and an unresponsive state keeps its people poor.
Politicians horsetrading for Monday's election should look at the MPI figures and hang their heads in shame. They can't pass the buck because many of them have been at the helm of the state since 1990. They should also be deeply worried by the statistics of mass deprivation because of what it means for the future of the political process in this country.
Go on, tear yourselves apart politically if you must to get into government. But work on a minimum national consensus on development. Set out an ambitious, visionary strategy to improve service delivery and increase purchasing power by job creation. Get real-time monitoring in place so progress can be evaluated and course corrections made.
Nepal's politics has made us a laughing stock. Our poverty is a national disgrace.
READ ALSO:
It's getting stale, mate, PRASHANT JHA
Women MPs seek to unlock deadlock, RUBEENA MAHATO
An open letter to the Big Guys, SUNIL B PANT