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Understanding Indian Poverty through Poverty Indicators:Is India Shining?

 

Is India Shining?

Poverty still remains a challenge for the policy makers in Indiadespite high GDP growth of last decade, progress on the implementation of Millennium Development Goals (MDGs) and steady decline in the rate of population growth. Despite the commitment of all political parties to remove poverty and scores of government programs, Indiahas not been able to tackle as effectively as, for example, Chinadid. Therefore, it appears that the policy makers don’t have clear understanding of the multidimensional nature of poverty and have remained oblivion to the real depth and extent of poverty. An attempt will be made here to see poverty in light of various poverty indicators so as to get a realistic picture of poverty in India.

Snapshot of Reality

Of the 1.21 billion people of India, only 38 per cent are illiterate, about 420 million poor live in only eight states, almost 250 million people do not have access to basic medical care, around 350 million do not have access to safe drinking water.

That is not all: A whopping 53 per cent of our children are undernourished and 52 per cent of our primary schools have only one teacher for every two classes.

These numbers are very recent (from July 18, 2011 Times of India): India’s Low HDI Ranking

The Official Poverty Line

Poverty and PoliticiansIndia’s official poverty measure, until recently, has been based solely upon the ability to purchase a minimum recommended daily diet of 2,400 kilocalories (kcal) in rural areas where about 70 percent of people live, and 2,100 kcal in urban areas – it did not consider nutrition but only the satiation of hunger. Rural areas usually have higher kcal requirements due to need of greater physical activity. The poverty definition did not take into account the provisions for shelter (housing), healthcare, education, etc. Essentially, it meant that as long as you consume at least 2100 kilocalories daily you are not poor even if you lived on a footpath or in a shabby slum, can’t see a doctor, and can’t even send children to school!

Not surprising, if many people considered it a “starvation line” rather than poverty line. Recently the government accepted the Kelkar Committee’s definition of poverty line that is somewhat broader – it also considers health and education. Though critics are still not pleased, it does offer some improvement. Using this definition, the 2010 data reveal that 32.7% people live in poverty as compared to 37% (25.7% urban and 41.8% rural) obtained from 2005 data. It replaces the 27% figure obtained from the older calorie based poverty line and adds about 5 crore more people among the poor. It only meant that the number of “officially poor” increased to 405 million in March 2011 compared with 370 million in 2005.

Other Poverty Lines

The World Bank estimated that 42% people were surviving on less than 1.25 dollars a day in 2005; compares it with Asian Development Bank’s estimate of 55% based on the 1.35 dollar benchmark. These are significantly higher than the new official estimate of 37% of the population in poverty for the same year. In fact, rural poverty of 41.8% closely matches with the World Bank’s estimate of 42%. Incidentally, a 2 dollar a day poverty line makes over 75% Indians poor.

However, regardless of which number is used to define the poverty line, one only gets an idea of the number of poor and learns nothing about the nature of their poverty or suffering.

Composite Poverty Indices

Income based approach to poverty can not tell any thing about other forms of deprivations poor go through. Poverty is basically a denial of a range of material needs such as nutritious food, safe drinking water, shelter, healthcare, education, etc. Therefore, multidimensional poverty measures provide better understanding of the nature of poverty – at local, regional, national, and world level.

Global Hunger Index (GHI)

The Global Hunger Index (GHI) is basically a measure of malnutrition and hunger – two biggest enemies of the poor. It is focused on three measures weighted equally:

Proportion of people who are undernourished
Proportion of children under five who are underweight
Child mortality rate

In the recent Global Hunger Index 2010, Indiais among 29 countries with the highest levels of hunger, stunted children, and poorly fed women. It ranked 67th out of 84 developing countries and was way behind China (9th) and Pakistan (52nd). Bangladesh was right after India at 68th position. India’s performance was adversely affected due to high levels of underweight children resulting from the low nutritional and social status of women in the country. In India, 46% children under five are undernourished compared to just 5% in Pakistan. Even the neighboring Nepal (56th)and Sri Lanka (39th) as well as Sudan andNorth Korea did better thanIndia. Such insight is not possible from pure income based poverty lines.

In 2008 when the GHI was applied to 17 individual states ofIndiacovering over 95% of the population, there was a wide variation between states – the best was Punjab and the worst was Madhya Pradesh. 12 states had “alarming” poverty and 1 (Madhya Pradesh) showed “extremely alarming” level of poverty; none of the states was free from “serious” poverty. You may like to explore:

Understanding Indian Poverty through Global Hunger Index

Human Poverty Index (HPI)

The UN’s Human Poverty Index (HPI) is another widely used poverty indicator. It is calculated differently for developing (HPI-1) and developed (HPI-2) countries and the two are not comparable. It focuses on lack of three basic dimensions of poverty:

Longevity
Knowledge
Standard of living

For the developing countries, the first deprivation relates to survival – the likelihood of death before the age of 40. The second relates to education – those who are excluded from reading and communication (the level of illiteracy). And the third dimension incorporates a measure of standard of living – percentages of people without lack of safe drinking water and undernourished children.

Of the 182 countries ranked in 2009,Indiawas located at the 134 position much behind China at position 92. Afghanistan and Niger occupied the bottom two spots. The country with best HPI were Norway followed by Australia and Iceland at 2 and 3 rank; Japan at 10, US at 13 and UK at 21. Pakistan was ranked somewhat below at 141, if that can be taken as solace. Bhutan and Laos did better than India on this index.

From 2010, HPI has been replaced by a better and more comprehensive poverty measure, the multidimensional poverty index (MPI) which is described below.

Multidimensional Poverty Index (MPI)

In July 2010, the United Nations Development Program (UNDP) and the UKbased Oxford Poverty and Human Development Initiative (OPHI) came up with a new measure of poverty, called Multidimensional Poverty Index (MPI), which will replace the HPI. The new measure attempts to go beyond income poverty and gives a broader understanding of different types of deprivation the poor may face.

It is more comprehensive than the HPI and incorporates ten weighted indicators that measure education, health and standard of living. The Indicators used are:

Education: Years of schooling and child enrollment (education) (each with 1/6 weight-age);
Health: Child mortality and nutrition (each with 1/6 weight-age);
Standard of Living: Electricity, flooring, drinking water, sanitation, cooking fuel and assets (each with 1/18 weight-age).

The MPI reflects both the extent of poverty and its intensity and throws up some new light on Indian poverty. A person is poor in this index if he is deprived on at least 30% weighted indicators. By this definition, 55% of India is poor, twice the official figure of 27% (which now stands revised to 32.7% for 2010 data and new poverty line definition), and almost 20% of Indians are deprived on 6 of the 10 indicators.

Comparing MPI ranks of individual Indian states with other countries, MPI suggests that there are more poor people (421 million) in the eight Indian states of Bihar, Chhattisgarh, Jharkhand, Madhya Pradesh, Orissa, Rajasthan, Uttar Pradesh, and West Bengal than in the 26 poorest African countries combined (410 million).

MPI was also calculated for individual states of India and compared with MPIs of the 103 other developing countries. It revealed that the magnitude of regional differences within India almost range from that of a reasonably well off Indonesiato that of a desperately poor Somalia.

State with the best MPI is Kerala that resembles Paraguay and Philippines, next best is Goa, which is close to Indonesia, Punjab’s MPI is similar to that of the central American nation of Guatemala while HP is close to the north African Morocco, and TN is akin to Ghana, a sub-Saharan nation. Amongst the low performers, MPI of MP is similar to DR Congo and Rwanda, while Bihar and Jharkhand have the worst MPI and compare with Somalia.

In also points to the fact that world wide South Asia has the highest levels of poverty: 51% percent of the population of Pakistan is poor, 58% in Bangladesh, and 65% in Nepal; not very different from 55% in India.

This multidimensional index has already been adapted for official use in Mexico; Chile and Colombia are considering it. Hope Indian policy planners will begin to think on similar lines soon.

Conclusion

The composite indices are able to better capture the nature, extent and depth of poverty compared with the income or single dimensional indicators. Hence, their use should be encouraged to utilize their diagnostic capability in the policy and decision making. Looking at all the above, it appears fair to say that about one-third to half of Indian population can be safely labeled “poor” who are severely deprived of even the most basic necessities of life.

References

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India will Implode from within-Abject Poverty of Masses and Casteism

Demonic Casteism still rampant in North India

Dividing Humans into religious groups and then the sub-caste groups was part of the process of the demonisation of humans .

In India Brahmins consider themselves the most superior of all humans.

The Dalits are categorized as a group of lower class humans, who aren’t allowed into temples nor close contact with the upperclass Brahmins.

 

Many western scholars believe the true origins of Zionism was Brahminism.

 

Follwing is a report published in yesterday’s Times of India, report an encounter between the upper class Brahmins and the lower class Dalits:

Dalit attacked, prevented from entering temple

TIMES NEWS NETWORK

Kanpur: While the Brahmin-dalit alliance swept Bahujan Samaj Party to power in Uttar Pradesh last May, the political bonhomie between the two sections has not extended to the social sphere. The tenuous nature of the alliance was underscored when a dalit man was beaten up and abused by a priest of Mahadev temple here on Tuesday when he, along with his three friends, tried to enter the temple.

Shailendra Tiwari, the priest, allegedly attacked and abused the dalit, Sudhir Kumar of Gangapur village under Bidhnoo police station limits, as he along with two men named Bablu, both from Gangapur, and Dharmendra of Rajivnagar, tried to enter the temple.

Tiwari did not act alone; he had his friends Rajan Dixit and Shiv Singh Yadav join him in physically attacking and preventing Sudhir and his friends from entering the temple.

“They not only assaulted us but also threatened us with dire consequences and demanded money to purify the temple,’’ said Sudhir. “The priests used filthy language against us,’’ he further alleged. The news of assault created tension in the village with dalits holding a meeting in which they decided to inform senior district administration about the incident and make renewed attempt to enter the temple.

“We requested the police to act against the priest and others involved in beating up Sudhir,’’ a dalit said.

The incident took place in an area where the dalit-Brahmin collaboration had worked well for the BSP, enabling it to sweep the constituencies in rural Kanpur. BSP’s Brahmin candidate, Anil Shukla Warsi won the by-election for the Bilhaur Lok Sabha seat.

Dalit sets self on fire, MP looks on

Bhopal: A dalit man set himself on fire inside the collectorate in Sagar, about 200 km from Bhopal, on Monday afternoon, while local MP Virendra Kumar Khatik and his supporters allegedly looked on.

The incident occurred at 1 pm when Khatik, BJP MP from Sagar, was holding a meeting. Shiv Prasad Chaudhary set himself on fire while demanding land for a school in his village. Chaudhry had been demanding land since November, threatening suicide if his demand wasn’t met. On Monday, Chaudhary entered the premises with kerosene and a burning torch and asked Khatik for the land. Snubbed by Khatik, Chaudhary set himself on fire and suffered 50% burns.

Cabinet minister in charge of Sagar, Kailash Vijayvargiya, said the BJP supporters tried to stop Chaudhary but he was drunk and violent.

WHERE IS THE LOVE?

Girl’s relatives gouge out her lover’s eyes

Syed Rizwanullah | TNN 

Aurangabad: A love affair in a Marathwada village took a gruesome turn when outraged relatives of an upper-caste girl gouged out one of the eyes of a dalit boy who had eloped with her. The relatives then tried to inflict the same punishment on the boy’s friend but he managed to escape with injuries.

The incident took place at Sategaon village in Nanded district on January 6 but came to light only two days later after the police, who got word of the crime, contacted the two boys. Five of the girl’s relatives have been arrested and remanded to police custody until Jan. 14.

Nanded DSP Vasant Jadhav told TOI that Premala, the 18-year-old Maratha daughter of a daily wage earner, fell in love with 20-year-old Chandrakant Gaikwad, a XII Standard dalit student.

When both families refused to entertain their desire to be married, the couple fled to Kamareddy in neighbouring Andhra Pradesh on January 4. They were given shelter by Chandrakant’s friend Milind Jondhale. Premala’s relatives however tracked them down on the night of January 6, beat them brutally, and forcibly brought all three to Sategaon. When they reached the village, a few of the girl’s family members used knives to gouge out one of Chandrakant’s eyes. Doctors at a Nanded hospital are struggling to save his other eye though they said the chances are slim. The SP added, “They somehow spared Milind who got scratch wounds around his eyes.’’ The boys’ lives were spared only after they promised they would not file a police complaint, Jadhav said. Therefore, it was only with great reluctance that they finally narrated the sequence of events to the police. Five people have been arrested while six are absconding. Those arrested are Subhash Jadhav, Parasram Jadhav, Gangadhar Jadhav, Yadav Jadhav and Atmaram Jadhav.

Despite the economic growth and outsourcing of foreign jobs by western companies to India, majority of the Indian population still wallow in extreme poverty and disease. Behind India’s new-found economic strength are three hundred million poor people that live on less than $1 per day. Government figures may indicate a reduction in poverty. But the truth is, with increasing global food prices, poverty is spreading everywhere like a swarm of locust. Conditions are worst in the rural areas where close to 70% of India’s population resides. Statistics show, that 2.1 million children under 5 years old die of malnutrition yearly.

India is not be rated as the most corrupt country in the world as far as the figures go but corrupt practices exist here in India like any other place in Africa. Public school teachers rarely go for classes but still get paid at the end of the month. The ministry of education in India is struggling to identify thousands of so-called ghost-worker names of teachers that only exist on payroll – yet victory is far-fetched. 

Mumbai is beautiful and businesses are flourishing but that is for the privileged few. The poor, who are majority, live in slums. They can only see and fantasize about the beautiful things in the city of Mumbai, but can’t benefit. The streets of major cities in India, like the rural areas, are populated by persons who can’t even get the minimum amount of calories that is required for survival due to the low quality of food they eat. To many Indians, basic amenities such as proper sanitation, portable water, and health care are luxuries they can only get in their dreams.

Many young girls have resorted to prostitution as a way to escape from poverty and provide for their families. Increasing number of girls are dropping out of schools to look for jobs. In some extreme cases, parents force their girls out of school themselves. This ugly trend spells doom for India’s economy in the future.

As families cut back at the number, quality and quantity of food they consume per day; meat, a source of protein, is no more an option in the menu of many families. People now opt for less nutritional meals – just to put something in the stomach— which has a bad effect on child’s growth. Meanwhile, it’s estimated that 40% of children in India are suffering from stunted growth.

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US PROTEGE INDIA ARROGANTLY THREATENS CHINA WITH AGNI-V

   

Chinese Citizens Comment shown below about China-India Trade

[“China should limit the Indian businesses, such as InfoSys in China, given India’s belligerent attitude”]



Zaheerul Hassan, a defence analyst for Pakistan Think Tank writes: In short, “Indian quest for ‘Arms purchasing’ and development of weapons of Mass destruction is directly threatening regional peace and security of the countries like China, Pakistan, Sri Lanka and Nepal. The Indian mindset believes in Maha Bharat concept. Thus she prepared her military doctrine basing on her strategy of becoming initially regional and ultimately a global power. Nuclear era added another dimension to this already bitter saga which pitched Indian against China. United States ticked India as an ally against China. United States role in South Asia always remained questionable because of its ever changing national interests. She did not even feel like condemning India on Agni-V Missile Test since US knows that Maha Bharat concept though covers area of some of western countries but ofcourse does not touch American boundaries. Indian aggressive posture is a real danger to the global peace since all her preparations are apparently connecting to another nuclear war. “

A Chinese View Point : 

China Forum

Yes, India has tested missile, great but why keep mentioning in headline that it can hit Beijing or shanghai.

That’s very belligerent attitude, no good at all.
We should target India’s big IT firms expansion in China such as InfoSys.

http://bbs.chinadaily.com.cn/forum.php?mod=viewthread&tid=744162&page=1&extra=#pid2671459



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Indian Strategic Move – Agni Missile –V Test

Indian Strategic Move – Agni Missile –V Test

On 19 April 2012 India entered Into Inter-Continental Ballistic Missile (ICBM) Club after successful testing Agni-V. The three-stage, 17-metre tall Agni-V, weighing 50 tones, is capable of carrying a nuclear warhead of 1.1 tonne. It is the most formidable missile in Indian arsenals which cover a range of more than 5000 Km. Agni-V, painted in white and black with an orange ribbon across, lifted off majestically from a rail mobile launcher at 8.04 a.m. from the Wheeler Island, off the Odisha coast. After a 20-minute flight, the missile’s nose-cone carrying a dummy payload impacted near the pre-designated target area with an accuracy of few meters between Australia and Madagascar in the Indian Ocean .After the lift-off, it cut a ballistic path across the sky reaching a height of 600 km, before rapidly descending. The mission was so smooth that the missile’s three stages ignited on time and decoupled with clockwork precision before the re-entry vehicle was injected into the atmosphere at an altitude of 100 km with a velocity of 6,000 meters per second. The re-entry vehicle withstood scorching temperatures of about 3,000 degree Celsius as it sliced into the atmosphere at a remarkably accurate angle. The Defence Research and Development Organisation (DRDO) has designed and developed Agni-V.

 

Although DRDO officials claim that Agni-V “is not any country-specific,” the fact remains that the missile is capable of reaching Beijing after flying over the most parts of China and covers complete area of Pakistan.   Therefore, India joins the U.S, Russia, France and China, which have ICBM capability. In fact India has created a new dimension in the nuclear arms race in South Asia as it is China specific. At this occasion Prime Minister Manmohan Singh said in a statement that successful Agni-V test launch represents another milestone in our quest to add to the credibility of our security and preparedness. Defense Minister A.K. Anthony called it an “immaculate success.” Dr. V.K. Saraswat Scientific Adviser to the Defence Minister has said, “We have made history and became one of major missile”.  India was among the select group of countries to have the capability to design, develop, build and manufacture a long-range missile of this class and technological complexity. “The versatile capability of this missile will enable India to leapfrog into areas of Multiple Independent Re-entry Vehicles (MIRVs), anti-satellite weapons and the capability to launch satellites on demand. Avinash Chander, Chief Controller (Missiles and Strategic Systems), DRDO, and Programme Director, Agni-V, called it a “fantastic mission.

 

According to Washington Post of April 19, 2012 many defence experts have said the Agni-V missile marks a significant improvement in India’s nuclear-deterrent capability and was clearly aimed at bolstering its defense against neighbouring China.

 

India faced horrible defeat in a border war with China in 1962 and since then relations have remained mutually wary since then.  She has also fought three major wars with its Pakistan, which also possesses nuclear weapons. During these wars US always remain supporter of India against China and Pakistan.  Disintegration of “Great Soviet Union”  introduced new world order. The world changed from Bi-polar to uni-polar system. It brought Washington and New Delhi closer to each other and they concluded Civil Nuclear Deal 123 in 2008. The Indo-US ties relationship mainly revolves around; containment of China, putting India as watchdog in Asia and US desire of capturing Indian market. Indian ambitious desire of achieving hegemony in Asia has made her the world’s largest arms buyer.

 

Nevertheless, in 2009, India increased its defense budget by a whopping 28.2 percent or Rs 130,000.00 million. Some experts estimate that military spending will increase further, totaling as much as 200 billion dollars over the period to 2022. Similarly, once again India has raised her defense expenditure for year 2012 & 2013. According to Stockholm International Peace Research Institute (SIPRI) India appeared as world number one arms importer and China is at number two whereas America is number one dealer of arms supplier. India now accounts for 9 percent of global arms purchases, followed by China at 6 percent. According to SIPRI’s report India, which seeks to modernize its military in order to keep up with the Chinese, is expected to spend about $80-billion over the next decade. Indian expansion design and her ambitions of becoming continental and regional power and dominance in Indian oceans are unhidden. Indian hasty increase in defence spending has put the global peace at stake. She has also conducted exercise with  Code-named as ‘Pralay’ (devastation) in March 2012 in which ground forces, Mirage-2000, MiG-29 and Jaguar fighter aircraft, IAF has also flown the strategic lift C-130J transport plane along with AN-32 and the AWACS. In recent years, India has bought reconnaissance aircraft from US aerospace, Being of worth 2.1 billion-dollars, medium range missiles for 1.4 billion dollars from Israeli Aerospace Industries, and signed a contract with the Russian Aircraft Corporation to upgrade its MiG 29 squadron for 965 million dollars. Several deals are planned for the near future including one of the largest arms contracts of recent times—a 11-billion-dollar project to acquire 126 multi-role combat aircraft.

 

In February 2010, Indian Defence Minister A.K. Antony disclosed that India’s defence expenditure which is 2.5 percent of its gross domestic product (GDP) is going to increase. Antony explained that our government is committed to rapid modernization of armed forces. Indian Finance Minister Pranab Mukherjee told lawmakers while announcing rise of 12 percent in the 2012-13 budgets in parliament said that  allocation is based on present needs and any further requirement will be met.

 

However, on current Indian test of Agni-V Missile ,  China  has reacted frostily, with the Global Times newspaper warning that India was being swept up by “missile delusion” and recalling that it has not signed the nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty.“The West chooses to overlook India’s disregard of nuclear and missile control treaties,” the Communist Party’s mouthpiece said in an editorial published before the launch. “India should not overestimate its strength,” it wrote. “Even if it has missiles that could reach most parts of China that does not mean it will gain anything from being arrogant during disputes with China. India should be clear that China’s nuclear power is stronger and more reliable.”The test comes just days after a failed long-range rocket launch by North Korea, although India is unlikely to face the kind of international condemnation that was directed at Pyongyang.

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Pakistan spending $2.5bn a year on N-arms: Indian News Report!

Comment: Talking heads in Washington, who have no clue about Pakistan’s Nuclear Program throw morsels at Indian news media. These are generally based on guesstimate and not credible data, but, Indians being Indians, lap it up by face value. In science, there is an axiom about conclusions based on unreliable data, “garbage in, garbage out.” So, is the case about this Press Trust of India news report, which allocates half of Pakistan’s defence budget of $5.7 Bn. to Nuclear Arms. 

INDIA’S neighbours must be alarmed by yet another, sizeable rise in its defence budget — it has gone up to a whopping $38.6bn. Presenting the budget in parliament on Friday, Indian Finance Minister Pranab Mukherjee said the allocation was based “on the present needs” and that the government would meet any “further needs for the security of the nation”. The 17 per cent increase seeks to add to the nuclear and conventional military muscles of a country that already has one of the world’s largest armed forces. The budget allocates $17.5bn for capital expenditure, which is to go towards acquiring the most modern equipment for the three branches of the Indian military. Already having a nuclear triad, India is upgrading 51 Mirage 2000 fighter jets, is negotiating a $20bn deal with France for the purchase of 126 Rafale multi-role combat aircraft, working on a government-to-government agreement with the US for 145 ultra-light howitzers, and has ordered 49 new warships for the navy. Clearly, this phenomenal rise goes far beyond India’s legitimate security needs and adds to the neighbours’ concerns about New Delhi’s hegemonic ambitions.

India’s economic development should not make its policymakers oblivious to the needs of their people. Despite the rapid expansion of its middle class, India suffers from grinding poverty and has the world’s largest concentration of illiterate people. Besides, a very large number of its troops are bogged down in Kashmir because of New Delhi’s refusal to seek a peaceful solution to the problem. The hike in India’s military budget thus gives the wrong message to its neighbours and perpetuates tensions in South Asia. The neighbours’ concerns are not baseless, because India is not on the best of terms with them, and it has a history of military conflicts with Pakistan and China. And, India’s history of intereference in Sri Lanka, Myanmar, Afghanistan, Bhutan/Sikkim, Goa, Manavadar, Siachen, and Kashmir.  Northern India’s hegemony over Tamil Nadu and West Bengal, have given rise to freedom movements led by the brave Naxalite Organization.


Pak spending $2.5bn a year on N-arms: Report18-div

Estimated to have more nuclear weapons than India, Pakistan is rapidly developing and expanding its atomic arsenal, spending about $ 2.5 billion a year to develop such weapons, a report has said.

“Pakistan has been rapidly developing and expanding its nuclear arsenal, increasing its

capacity to produce plutonium, and testing and deploying a diverse array of nuclear-capable ballistic and cruise missiles,” said the report Assuring Destruction Forever: Nuclear Modernisation Around The World.

 

“Pakistan is moving from an arsenal based wholly on HEU to greater reliance on lighter and more compact plutonium-based weapons, which is made possible by a rapid expansion in plutonium production capacity,” said the 150-page report by Reaching Critical Will of the Women’s International League for Peace and Freedom.

“Pakistan is also moving from aircraft-delivered nuclear bombs to nuclear-armed ballistic and cruise missiles and from liquid-fueled to solid-fueled medium-range missile. Pakistan also has a growing nuclear weapons research, development, and production infrastructure,” it said.

According to the report Pakistan is estimated to have 90-110 nuclear weapons. “A long-term concern now driving Pakistan’s nuclear programme is the US policy of countering the rise of China by cultivating a stronger strategic relationship with India. This may tie the future of Pakistan and India’s nuclear weapons to the emerging contest between the United States and China,” said the report.

Pakistan has a number of short-range, medium, and longer-range road-mobile ballistic surface-to-surface missiles in various stages of development.

“It has developed a second generation of ballistic missile systems over the past five years. It is estimated that Pakistan could have a stockpile of 2750 kg of weapon-grade HEU and may be producing about 150 kg of HEU per year,” it said.

Estimates suggest Pakistan has produced a total of about 140 kg of plutonium, the report said.

While not much information is available on the funding of Pakistan’s nuclear weapons project, the report said estimates indicate that Pakistan spends about $ 2.5 billion a year on nuclear weapons.

Despite extensive foreign military assistance, Pakistan’s effort to sustain its conventional and nuclear military programmes has come at increasingly great cost to the effort to meet basic human needs and improve living standards, the report said.

India the report said is estimated to have 80–100 nuclear warheads. “It is also developing a range of delivery vehicles, including land- and sea-based missiles, bombers, and submarines,” it said.

“While nuclear weapons used to be seen as a ‘necessary evil’, there is no more enthusiasm for India to become a bonafide nuclear weapon power that can exercise its military might in the region,” it said.

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