Provisional Data of Socio Economic and
Caste Census (SECC) 2011 for Rural India Released
Press Information Bureau Government
of India Ministry of Finance
03-July-2015
03-July-2015
Hon’ble Finance Minister
Shri Arun Jaitley and Hon’ble Minister Rural Development, Panchayati Raj and
Drinking Water Supply and Sanitation, Shri Chaudhary Birendra Singh, today
jointly released on-line the provisional data from the Socio Economic and Caste
Census (SECC) 2011 for Rural India. The Report of the SECC 2011 is available on http://secc.gov.in. The management of the Central data base is with the
NIC.
SECC 2011 is a unique
paperless Census. The enumeration of the data was done using over 6.4 lakh
electronic handheld device. Household data was taken from the National
Population Register along with the Temporary Identification Number (TIN). At
each stage there was an opportunity for transparency and grievance redressal. A
total of 1.24 crore claims and objections were received of which 99.7% have already
been resolved. Gram Panchayats and Gram Sabhas were involved in this process,
besides School Teachers and Data Entry Operators as enumerators. The districts
and State Governments have carried out the SECC with the Ministry of Rural
Development as the nodal Ministry. Ministry of Housing and Urban Poverty
Alleviation carried out the survey in urban areas and the Registrar General,
Census of India carried out the caste census.
The provisional
socio-economic data for Rural India has been released today. The survey has
been completed in all the 640 districts. It is provisional as the final lists
are being uploaded in some districts after addressing all the objections
received. It is being released as its use in evidence based planning for rural
development and poverty reduction needs to be undertaken immediately. It
provides very useful data on households regarding various aspects of their
socio-economic status – housing, land-holding/landlessness, educational status,
status of women, the differently able, occupation, possession of assets, SC/ST
households, incomes, etc. SECC provided for automatic exclusion on the basis of
14 parameters, automatic inclusion on the basis of 5 parameters and grading of
deprivation on the basis of seven criteria. The data addresses the multi
dimensionality of poverty and provides a unique opportunity for a convergent,
evidence based planning with a Gram Panchayat as a unit. The data is an
opportunity to make evidence based selection, prioritization and targeting of
beneficiaries in different programmes.
I - Key Findings from Rural India
|
|
|
1.
|
Total Households in the
Country (Rural
plus Urban)
|
24.39 Crore
|
2.
|
Total Rural Households
|
17.91 Crore
|
3.
|
Total Excluded Households (based on fulfilling any of the 14 parameters
of exclusion – i. motorized 2/3/4 wheeler/fishing boat; ii. Mechanized 3 – 4
wheeler agricultural equipment; iii. Kisan credit card with credit limit of
over Rs. 50,000/-; iv. Household member government employee; v. households
with non-agricultural enterprises registered with government; vi. Any member
of household earning more than Rs. 10,000 per month; vii. Paying income tax;
viii. Paying professional tax; ix. 3 or more rooms with pucca walls and roof;
x. owns a refrigerator; xi. Owns landline phone; xii. Owns more than 2.5
acres of irrigated land with 1 irrigation equipment; xiii. 5 acres or more of
irrigated land for two or more crop season; xiv. Owning at least 7.5 acres of
land or more with at least one irrigation equipment. )
|
7.05 Crore(39.39%)
|
4.
|
Automatically included (based on fulfilling any of the 5 parameters of
inclusion – 1. Households without shelter; ii. Destitute, living on alms;
iii. Manual scavenger families; iv. Primitive tribal groups; v. legally
released bonded labour)
|
16.50 lakh
0.92%
|
5.
|
Households considered for deprivation
|
10.69 Crore
|
6.
|
Households not reporting deprivation
|
2.00 crore
|
7.
|
Households with any one of the 7 deprivation
|
8.69 Crore
|
II - Deprivation Data
|
|
|
D1.
|
Households with only one room, kuccha walls and kuccha roof
|
2.37 Crore
13.25%
|
D2.
|
No adult member in household between age 18 and 59
|
65.15 lakh
3.64%
|
D3.
|
Female headed household with no adult male member between 16 and 59
|
68.96 Lakh
3.85%
|
D4.
|
Households with differently able member with no other able bodied
adult member
|
7.16 lakh
0.40%
|
D5.
|
SC/ST Households
|
3.86 Crore
21.53%
|
D6.
|
Households with no literate adult above age 25 years
|
4.21 Crore
23.52%
|
D7
|
Landless households deriving a major part of their income from manual
labour
|
5.37 Crore
29.97%
|
III - Sources of Household income
|
|
|
1.
|
Total Rural Households
|
17.91Crore
|
2.
|
Cultivation
|
5.39 Crore
30.10%
|
3.
|
Manual Casual labour
|
9.16 Crore
51.14%
|
4.
|
Part time or full time domestic service
|
44.84 lakh
2.50%
|
5.
|
Rag picking, etc.
|
4.08 lakh
0.23%
|
6.
|
Non Agricultural own account enterprise
|
28.87 lakh
1.61%
|
7.
|
Begging/charity/alms
|
6.68 lakh
0.37%
|
8.
|
Others ( including government service, private service, PSU
employment, etc.
|
2.50 Crore
14.01%
|
The Ministry of Rural
Development has taken a decision to use the SECC data in all its programmes.
SECC data would have meaningful use in Housing for all, Education and Skills
thrust, MGNREGA, National Food Security Act, interventions for differently
able, interventions for women led households, and targeting of
households/individual entitlements on evidence of deprivation, etc. The
household data is also available for planners of programmes at State, district,
Block, Gram Panchayat and village level. SECC provides an opportunity to
simultaneously address the multi-dimensionality of poverty by addressing the
deprivation of households in education, skills, housing, employment, health,
nutrition, water, sanitation, social and gender mobilization and entitlement.
The use of the NPR TIN Number across programmes affords an opportunity to track
the progress of households over the years. SECC truly makes evidence based
targeted household interventions for poverty reduction possible. It paves the
way for a Mission Antyodaya to work simultaneously in addressing the poverty of
households through a Gram Panchayat Poverty Reduction Plan. The Ministry of
Rural Development, in consultation with States, is trying to implement a
convergent, integrated poverty reduction plan with Gram Panchayats and deprived
households as priority.
*****
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