NITI
Aayog has developed a Handbook of State Statistics that consolidates key
statistics across sectors for every Indian State/UT. While the State data on
crucial indicators is currently fragmented across different sources, this
handbook provides a one-stop database of important State statistics.
Starting
with Gross State Domestic Product (GSDP), the handbook provides sectorial
compositions of State economies from 1980-81 to the latest possible year. Five
different GSDP series are available between 1980-81 and now, and this database
covers all of them. It covers statistics on State government finances from 1981
to 2017across indicators such as gross fiscal deficits, revenue deficits,
social sector expenditure, capital expenditure etc. Labour statistics from the
national sample surveys (NSS), statistics on labour force participation rates
(LFPR), worker-population ratio (WPR) by industry and unemployment rates are also
presented.
Data
on education covers primary, secondary and tertiary levels including enrolment
ratios, schools, enrolment, teachers and performance indicators, among others.
Some of the health indicators covered by the handbook include infant mortality
rate (IMR), birth rates, life expectancy, sex ratio at birth, immunisation and institutional
deliveries among others. For certain indicators such as IMR, TFR, birth rates,
data from 1971 onwards to 2015 is available. For other indicators the data
series starts in 2005.
The
infrastructure section provides basic information regarding infrastructure
development in States. Data on road length, installed capacity, electricity
generation & household electrification amongst other indicators is
presented. For most cases, our data series spans the years 2005 to 2015. The
final section of the publication provides state-wise estimates of poverty
numbers. Data has been presented according to the Lakdawala Methodology (data
from 1973-74 to 2004-05) and the Tendulkar Methodology (data from 1993-94 to
2011-12). Please note that this data is not of annual frequency. Rather, it is
quinquennial, as estimates for poverty are derived from NSS Household
Consumption Surveys.
The Handbook of
State Statistics can be accessed here:
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AKT/SH/VK