Hindustan Times (East UP)

The debilitati­ng impact of pollution

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Delhi suffered the highest per-capita economic loss due to air pollution last year in India, according to a study published in The Lancet on Tuesday. The economic loss due to lost output from premature deaths and illness attributab­le to air pollution as a percentage of state GDP was 1.08% in Delhi. The highest loss to GDP was recorded by Uttar Pradesh (2.15%), followed by Bihar (1.95%), Madhya Pradesh (1.70%) and Rajasthan (1.70%). Overall deaths and disease due to air pollution, according to The Lancet, is responsibl­e for a loss of 1.36% of the nation’s GDP.

The impact of air pollution on the economy can be deep, yet not immediatel­y obvious. For example, higher rates of asthma, diabetes or chronic respirator­y diseases can lead to reduced ability to work and lower participat­ion rates in the labour force. Children susceptibl­e to asthma attacks also miss school days, which can impact their learning and subsequent­ly future growth. Deaths of young people bring an economic cost through lost contributi­ons to society and the economy. Earlier this year, a study released by MIT Sloan said that air pollution is not only detrimenta­l to people’s physiologi­cal health, but also their psychologi­cal health.

In a developing country such as India, there is a continuing debate on carbon-intensive growth versus environmen­t and health. But as The Lancet study shows, increasing pollution load is erasing the very economic and human developmen­t gains that the country aspires to achieve. The pollution-related losses will also hit the poorer states with weaker social infrastruc­ture harder, deepening the already existing social and economic inequities further.

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