Poverty, hunger, unemployment, population and migration are connected. A senior answer should show causal chains: poverty affects nutrition and education; unemployment drives migration; migration affects remittance, family structure and labour market.

Core Definitions

Poverty

Standard definition: A condition of deprivation in income, capability, access, security and dignity.

Exam meaning: आय, क्षमता, access, सुरक्षा र dignity मा हुने deprivation।

Food Security

Standard definition: A condition where all people have physical, social and economic access to sufficient, safe and nutritious food at all times.

Exam meaning: सबै मानिसलाई सधैं पर्याप्त, सुरक्षित र पौष्टिक खानामा भौतिक, सामाजिक र आर्थिक access हुने अवस्था।

Migration

Standard definition: Movement of people from one place to another for work, livelihood, security, education or social reasons.

Exam meaning: काम, livelihood, सुरक्षा, शिक्षा वा अन्य कारणले मानिस एक ठाउँबाट अर्को ठाउँ जाने प्रक्रिया।

Conceptual Depth

These issues should be analyzed as vulnerability systems. Poverty is not only low income; it includes weak assets, poor services, social exclusion, shocks and limited voice. Migration is both opportunity and symptom: it brings remittance but may signal weak domestic employment.

Causal Linkages

Use linkage thinking instead of separate paragraphs only.

Issue Linked Cause Linked Effect
Poverty Low assets, exclusion, low productivity Low education/health and vulnerability
Hunger Food access, price, nutrition, agriculture risk Poor human capital
Unemployment Skill mismatch and weak industry Migration and frustration
Population change Age structure, urbanization, dependency Service demand and labour supply
Migration Wage gap and aspiration Remittance, family change, brain drain

Policy Responses

Integrated response is stronger than isolated programs.

  • Productive employment through agriculture modernization, SMEs, tourism, hydropower and digital services.
  • Skills aligned with domestic and foreign labour markets.
  • Nutrition-sensitive agriculture and social protection.
  • Targeted cash/food support for vulnerable groups.
  • Migration governance: safe migration, reintegration and remittance investment.
  • Population-responsive planning for urbanization, ageing and youth employment.

Remittance and Migration

Migration answer should be balanced.

  • Positive: remittance, poverty reduction, foreign exchange, skill exposure.
  • Negative: family separation, labour exploitation, brain drain, dependency and domestic labour shortage.
  • Policy focus: safe migration, bilateral labour agreements, financial literacy, productive use of remittance and returnee entrepreneurship.

Analytical Framework

  • Define the problem and its multidimensional nature.
  • Analyze causes at household, market, institutional and structural levels.
  • Identify vulnerable groups and geographic concentration.
  • Discuss policy tools: employment, social protection, nutrition, education, skill and migration governance.
  • Evaluate implementation and targeting challenges.
  • Recommend integrated and data-based approach.

Nepal-Specific Application

  • Nepal’s poverty reduction has been supported by remittance, social sectors and infrastructure, but vulnerability remains.
  • Youth migration reflects both opportunity abroad and limited domestic employment quality.
  • Food and nutrition security are affected by productivity, market access, climate and income.
  • Urbanization and demographic change require planned services, housing, jobs and social protection.
  • Local governments can identify vulnerable households and coordinate targeted interventions if data systems improve.
Policy Area Short-Term Tool Long-Term Tool
Poverty Targeted cash/social assistance Productive jobs and capability
Hunger Food/nutrition support Agriculture productivity and market access
Unemployment Public works and training Industrialization and enterprise growth
Migration Safe migration support Domestic employment and reintegration
Population Basic service planning Human capital and urban planning

Exam Point

  • Treat poverty as multidimensional.
  • Connect unemployment with skill mismatch and productive economy.
  • Migration is both opportunity and challenge.
  • Use integrated response, not fragmented schemes.

25-Mark Answer Structure

  • Define key issues.
  • Explain interlinkages.
  • Analyze Nepal’s causes and consequences.
  • Discuss policy responses and implementation gaps.
  • Conclude with integrated livelihood and capability approach.

Model Argument

Nepal’s response to poverty, unemployment and migration should combine immediate protection with long-term productive transformation: jobs, skills, nutrition, safe migration, reintegration and local economic development.

Diagrams and Tables To Practice

  • Poverty-vulnerability cycle.
  • Migration push-pull matrix.
  • Employment policy chain.
  • Short-term vs long-term response table.

Common Mistakes

  • Writing poverty as income only.
  • Calling migration only bad or only good.
  • No link between unemployment and education/skills.
  • No targeted implementation discussion.

Revision Questions

  • What is multidimensional poverty?
  • How are unemployment and migration linked?
  • What is food security?
  • How can remittance support development?

Summary

  • Poverty, hunger, unemployment, population and migration are linked systems.
  • Policy must combine protection and productivity.
  • Migration needs safe governance and domestic opportunity creation.
  • Local data and targeting are essential.