Analysis of socio-economic status of people in aspirational districts of Odisha for inclusive growth

Socioeconomic status of aspirational districts of Odisha

Authors

  • ANIL KUMAR ICAR-Central Institute for Women in Agriculture
  • J C JEEVA ICAR-Central Institute for Women in Agriculture
  • D N SARANGI ICAR-Central Institute for Women in Agriculture, Bhubaneswar
  • A K PANDA ICAR-Central Institute for Women in Agriculture
  • S K SRIVASTAVA ICAR-Central Institute for Women in Agriculture

Keywords:

Aspirational districts, Gender gap, Literacy, Sex ratio

Abstract

Aspirational district programme was launched by the government of India to uplift the 117 backward districts in the country through rapid development. Ten districts of Odisha were included in this programme which included Dhenkanal, Gajapati, Kandhamal, Balangir, Kalahandi, Rayagada, Koraput, Malkangiri, Nuapada and Nabarangpur. Socio-economic variables formed important dimension for identifying the backwardness of districts.  Hence, the socio-economic status of people in the 101 blocks in the ten backward districts were analyzed to address the weak points. The socio-economic indicators analyzed were: population density, sex ratio, SC and ST population, total literacy percent, male and female literacy percent, and gender gap in literacy percent and they were compared with the state average. Most of the aspirational districts are located in the southern part of Odisha except Dhenkanal. In the aspirational districts 89.3 percent of the population live in rural areas compared to 83.3 percent for state average. These aspirational districts have high tribal population (39.4 percent) with lower human density (153 per sq km), higher sex ratio (1010), low total literacy (58.1 percent), low female literacy (47.1 percent) and high gender gap in literacy (22.2 percent). The 101 blocks in the aspirational districts of Odisha were also ranked based on these indictors. The study revealed that the socio-economic indicators in the aspirational districts were weak which need focused attention for their improvement.

 

Author Biographies

ANIL KUMAR, ICAR-Central Institute for Women in Agriculture

Dr. Anil Kumar

Principal Scientist

ICAR-Central Institute for Women in Agriculture, Bhubaneswar

J C JEEVA, ICAR-Central Institute for Women in Agriculture

Dr. J.C. Jeeva

Principal Scientist 

ICAR- Central Institute for Women in Agriculture

D N SARANGI, ICAR-Central Institute for Women in Agriculture, Bhubaneswar

Dr. Debendra Nath Sarangi

Technical Officer,

ICAR-Central Institute for Women in Agriculture, Bhubaneswar.

A K PANDA, ICAR-Central Institute for Women in Agriculture

Dr. A.K. Panda 

Principal Scientist 

ICAR-Central Institute for Women in Agriculture

S K SRIVASTAVA, ICAR-Central Institute for Women in Agriculture

Dr. S.K. Srivastava

Principal Scientist

ICAR- Central Institute for Women in Agriculture

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Published

2020-09-01