Early afternoon sun
When the exhausted world is fast asleep
Then at the new-dusk of the New Year
We too shall celebrate
Our New Year
– Anant Bhatnagar in
"Hum bhi manayenge naya saal"
The battle of statistics is depressing in the Indian intellectual arena. Last year, the N C Saxena panel of the Ministry of Rural Development reported that half of the country's population was below the poverty line. A member of the Indian Planning Commission then reasoned that 80 percent of the rural and 64 percent of the urban population could qualify as poor. Meanwhile, the Arjun Sengupta Committee found that about 836 million people (77 percent of the country's population) subsisted on INR 20 a day or less. It corroborated the findings of the National Sample Survey Organisation, which calculated that the average Indian spent just INR 440 or less on food each month. According to the estimates of the World Bank, 41.6 percent of Indians – the decimal point is perhaps for technocratic authenticity – live on less than USD 1.25 a day, the international poverty line. These are tough numbers to take in alongside an aperitif.