The Paradox In Plain Sight
Odisha presents the contradiction most starkly. The state sits atop vast mineral wealth — bauxite, iron ore, coal — and its GDP has grown accordingly. Yet the Scheduled Tribe communities of Koraput, Kalahandi, and Malkangiri, whose land holds these resources, remain among the most nutritionally deprived in India. GDP counted the extraction; it did not count what was lost — the forest cover, the water tables, the displacement. Nagaland tells the opposite story: community-owned forests managed through traditional institutions maintain biodiversity that formal conservation struggles to match, yet the state's contribution to measured output is modest. Under GDP, Nagaland underperforms. Under a well-being framework that counts natural capital and social cohesion, it may be outperforming states with far higher headline figures.