Full text: Resource and environmental monitoring (A)

   
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Wasteland 96 
Figure 3.0 Wastelands & Incidence of Poverty linkages at 
District level - Andhra Pradesh 
At district level, the relationship between incidence of poverty 
and wastelands has increased significantly for almost all the 
States. In case of Andhra Pradesh, for example, it is depicted in 
Figure 3.0 and Table 2. It is important to note that regression 
coefficient (R square) between incidence of poverty and 
wastelands increased from 0.0167 at State levels to as good as 
around 0.5 for quite a few States at the district level. It is 
expected that regression coefficient may increase further if it is 
derived at village level. It brings out clearly that a meaningful 
relationship between incidence of poverty and wastelands exists 
at much higher level, may be at village level. The direct links 
between poverty and resource degradation requires further 
ground-level research and thus calling for dis-aggregated 
wasteland mapping to establish closer linkages with incidence 
of poverty. 
4.0 ROLE OF PUBLIC POLICY AND INSTITUTIONAL 
INTERVENTIONS 
The linkages between poverty and environmental degradation 
are, however, not just governed by the physical limits of 
ecosystems, but rather, by the income strategies of the poor. 
Driven by public policies and institutional interventions, 
economic and spatial integration of markets occur and several 
new marginal income-earning opportunities become available 
in the informal sector of the economy. Consequently, the 
dependence of the poor on the natural resource base for 
livelihoods may actually get reduced. It is in this context that 
linkage between poverty and renewable natural resource 
degradation got altered. In view of this, it is required to 
evaluate the role of economic and institutional policies in 
altering labor and capital flows between and within regions 
(Figure 4). 
   
„Natural 
Resources 
*Labour & Capital Flow/ 
Mobility 
Spatial Integration of 
\ Economic activities | 
   
  
  
  
   
       
   
   
Institutional/ 
Social Factor 
  
   
Interventions- 
Program, Techno 
dogy-, 
*New Lively hood opportunities 
          
     
      
: : Incidence of : 
Poverty 
Figure 4. Poverty, Natural Resources, Institutional 
Interventions and Societal Dynamics - Linkages 
Yet another aspect is, production and exchange through 
impersonal markets is strongly preferred to subsistence 
activities by poor producers and consumers alike. Although 
family decisions and mutual responsibilities may continue 
defining some aspects of household economic behavior, market 
exchange irreversibly supplants reciprocity and redistribution as 
the means of acquiring income and wealth (Dalton 1981). 
Under these circumstances, except for a small group of the ultra 
poor, most individuals and groups could be expected to strive 
for income security rather than just food security; cash being 
necessary to purchase non-traditional food and consumption 
items that reflect changing utility functions. A desire for 
income security has lead to creative income earning efforts 
through a myriad of highly divisible, labor intensive, low skill 
vocations involving wage labor and self-employment in rural 
India (Jagannathan 1987, Pean 1989). All these altered the 
relationship between poverty and natural resources degradation. 
The availability of these (often unrecorded) income-earning 
opportunities reduces the necessity of the poor to mine land and 
water resources close to their homes for survival. Equally 
important is whether the poor have the power to gain access or 
to use available natural resources. Poverty is very often visible 
as unequal access to land and capital because asset ownership is 
inequitable (Table 1). Moreover, monetization also appreciates 
land and water values to society, and what were common 
property rights begin to get privatized or retain de facto access 
to productive and water resources because of social and 
institutional factors, such as changing tenurial relations, laws 
and regulations, social and political relations both within and 
outside villages. Jodha (1986), for example, has documented 
how common values, leaving the poor de facto access to only 
marginally productive wastelands. : 
Apart from market incentive structures and institutional 
constraints, India has attempted to improve the welfare of the 
rural poor through social and economic policies. Before 
drawing any policy conclusions on poverty-environment 
linkages, one has to look beyond just the immediate physical 
environment, and correlate the largely individualistic survival 
strategies pursued by the poor to generate income and food 
security with: 
Public policies designed to provide basic needs services to poor 
citizens, because of which economic expectations of the poor 
begin improving; 
Natural resource utilization by poor communities, taking into 
account spatial choices that are available for earning livelihood 
between farming, off-farm activities and non-farm activities. 
The issue for research becomes disentangling complex casual 
processes, and explaining whether poverty, public policies, 
   
      
  
    
   
    
   
   
   
    
   
    
    
  
       
  
  
    
  
    
    
    
   
    
   
   
   
   
   
    
    
   
   
   
   
   
   
   
   
   
  
   
   
	        
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