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A couple of days ago, a friend of mine suggested that we go out for lunch to Barbeque Nation (not the first time she’d asked me that) – and once again, my answer was the same it’s been for the past four years: NO.
Being a full-time novelist and one who has yet to experience breakout success, I’ve thus far been able to wiggle myself out of anything that requires spending a lot of money (shopping at glitzy malls, eating at top end restaurants, catching Olas and Ubers for meetings are a strict no-no for me). “There’ll be a time for that,” I often remind myself. Many of us, however, are not that lucky – not even that savvy, I guess.
Meet the urban poor.
The Buzzfeed article which went viral last year was snapped up by Bloomsbury after her literary agent, Kanishka Gupta, got in touch with them. Out in stores now, Jayaraman’s first non-fiction book, Who Me, Poor?, takes a closer look at “urban poverty”, asks some really tough questions, makes insightful observations, and reminds us of one of the most hard-hitting debates of our times:
Can you be poor if you own a smartphone?
The answer to that is an unequivocal YES, even though society may not think so.
True that! – and we need just look around us to see how a lot of people who are otherwise so capable of putting up pretences on their social media accounts, may actually be struggling to pay their bills on time.
The book is replete with personal stories of millennials, many of whom have had a rude awakening to a new idea of success – one that has nothing to do with their educational degrees or the sort of work they do in those swanky offices.
“The idea of success in our heads – what it ought to look like and its signifiers – are largely peer-ordained,” Jayaraman observes in the book and corroborating her claim are models, techies, BPO employees, marketing executives, fashion assistants, entrepreneurs, financial consultants, even Bollywood stars, for that matter.
For one who has had a close brush with “urban poverty” and has seen far too many young, suave-looking professionals struggle with massive amounts of debt, Jayaraman’s book is a biting commentary on this particular brand of poverty, the reasons for which are not hard to find.
She tells me in an email:
Is financial literacy an answer to this problem, I wonder? She agrees in part,
In as much as the book shows a mirror to the policymakers, it exhorts its readers to identify what success means for them. “It sounds clichéd,” she says in the book, “but being yourself is seriously the best thing you can do for your personality projection and your bank balance” – and we cannot not agree with that.
(Vani has worked as a business journalist and is the author of ‘The Recession Groom’. She can be reached @Vani_Author)
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