Survey suggests Indians losing hope in quality of life improvement under Modi
More than half of respondents say rate of inflation had "adversely" affected their quality of life
NEW DELHI: A pre-budget survey, conducted by polling agency C-Voter, showed that more Indians are becoming less hopeful about their quality of life under Prime Minister Narenda Modi as stagnant wages and higher living costs cloud future prospects.
More than 37% of respondents in the survey said they expect the overall quality of life for ordinary people to deteriorate over the next year, the highest such percentage since 2013, a disappointing news for Modi ahead of this week's annual budget. Modi has been prime minister since 2014.
C-Voter said it polled 5,269 adults across Indian states for this survey.
Persistent eye-watering food inflation has squeezed Indian household budgets and crimped spending power, and the world's fifth-largest economy is expected to post its slowest pace of growth in four years.
Nearly two thirds of survey respondents said inflation had remained unchecked and that prices had gone up since Modi became prime minister, while more than half said the rate of inflation had "adversely" affected their quality of life.
Modi, in the nation's annual budget this week, is expected to announce measures to shore up faltering economic growth, lift disposable incomes and placate a stretched middle class.
Nearly half of respondents said their personal income had remained the same over the last year while expenses rose, while nearly two thirds said rising expenses had become difficult to manage, the survey showed.
Despite world-beating economic growth, India's job market offers insufficient opportunities for its large youthful population to earn regular wages.
In the last budget, India earmarked nearly $24 billion to be spent over five years on various schemes to create jobs but those programmes have not yet been implemented as discussions on the details drag on.
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