An Average Ravichandran
http://www.developmentoutlook.org/2013/06/an-average-ravichandran-part1.html
In 1951, the Times of India
commissioned cartoonist R.K. Laxman to illustrate the common man's reactions to
current events in a daily comic strip, "You Said It". The comic strip
had an extremely successful run and more than 60 years in, has given us one of
the nation's most endearing mascots — an always bewildered, balding, dhoti-clad
householder — often seen peeking into meeting rooms from behind half-closed
doors or eavesdropping on conversations, his face buried in a newspaper.
It turns out, unifying the common
characteristics, reactions, aspirations and troubles of a majority of the
nation and presenting them in a single persona was a good idea. It was an
amusing caricature but it was also a powerful image that would be frequently
referenced for many decades to come. Another example of this is the idea of an
Indian "aam aadmi" — a
phrase that, when coined, resonated so widely that it won a national election.
Just as popular are the terms "an average Joe", "plain
Jane" and many others worldwide.
However, most profiles of the common man or aam
aadmi are often created based on popular perception, rendering them
possibly biased and inaccurate.
Who
is Chennai's "average Joe"?
Being a true-blue CMF-er, I find it
difficult to settle for an ill-informed or biased sketch of the aam aadmi. Further, I am spoilt by my
love for large, unbiased samples and very long surveys, so I've decided to use one
such large dataset from a Yale-CMF study to create a profile of Chennai's own
"average Joe". What is his name, how old is he, how big is his
family, what's in his home and what's on his mind?
In a series of thematic posts, I hope
to integrate relevant findings from various sections of a Yale-CMF survey and
present an accurate picture of the life of the average family in Chennai — where
they live, how they earn their bread (their idlis?), manage their money and
engage with the community.
The
Tamilnadu Socioeconomic Mobility Survey
As mentioned earlier, this analysis
will use data from the Yale-CMF Tamilnadu Socioeconomic Mobility Survey.
The survey collected data from 5000 urban households (in addition to 5000 rural
households), of whom 1075 households reside in the city of Chennai. The large
sample was randomly selected from a thorough listing of all enumeration blocks
(which were also randomly selected). As we like to say at CMF — the more
randomness the better — so rest assured, we anticipate that our estimates from
this sample will be representative of Chennai city.
The panel survey was extremely
detailed and collected information on a wide range of topics including housing
conditions, livelihood, expenditure, finance, education, health and migration.
I hope to leverage the breadth of the dataset and keep the analysis itself
simple — restricted to the estimation of medians in most cases. Stringing
together information on how the median household measures on a variety of
metrics, I hope to paint a picture of how the average household in Chennai gets
by. Needless to say, this is policy relevant because, as they say, the mark of
a great city is how it treats its ordinary people and not the special ones.
Meet
the Ravichandrans
We found that the median household
size in Chennai is 4, usually consisting of a middle-aged head of the
household, his spouse and their 2 children. Let's give them names and flesh out
more details.
The median age of the head of the
household in our Chennai sample is 46 and from the data that we collected, the
most common name for boys born in that decade was Ravi, Ravikumar or
Ravichandran. Likewise, the median age of his spouse is 39 and the most common
name for women her age is Lakshmi (named after the Goddess of wealth). So there
you have it: Chennai’s “average Joe” is Ravichandran, 46 and the “average Jane”
is Lakshmi, 39.
Ravichandran and Lakshmi married in
1990, at which time Ravichandran was 26 and Lakshmi barely 20 years old. Our
data shows that the median Chennai family waits for a little more than a year
to plan their first child and accordingly, Lakshmi was 22 when their first
child was born. Now, they have two children — a boy and a girl. Similar to how
we renamed “average Joe” and “average Jane” based on the most popular names for
their generation in our sample, we found that the average children are Vignesh,
16 years of age and Ramya, 14.
When we realized they were living as a
nuclear family, naturally we were curious about their extended family and where
they lived. In our survey we inquired about all non-coresident parents and
siblings of both the household head and his spouse. We found that, on an average,
both parents of the household head (in our case, Ravichandran’s) were deceased
while Lakshmi was likely to have one living parent, usually her mother.
Further, the data revealed that Lakshmi’s mother likely resides in Chennai too,
perhaps with Lakshmi’s brother’s family, as is the social custom.
In our survey we asked a lot of
questions about Ravichandran and Lakshmi's relationship with their extended
family and if they've helped each other out in times of need. As we expected,
there are a lot of complex financial and non-financial exchanges that take
place between relatives and I'll save the details for another post.
In the next post we'll peek into
Lakshmi and Ravichandran's home and take a look at how many rooms they have,
what consumer appliances they own and whether they received the free TV and
mixer/grinder that the government promised. I hope they don't mind us snooping
around!

Wonderful story. Thanks a lot for sharing it with us!
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