Wednesday, February 15, 2012

Superpower? 230 million Indians go hungry every day-ToI-15.1.12


Often, in the hype over economic growth, we forget the harsh reality of India– extreme poverty, hunger, disease, lack of education, and regressive social practices. We Indians should be ashamed about them. These simmering injustices cannot be allowed to fester because they will heighten social tensions that will ultimately risk our growth story. TOI flags some of the key problems that need speedy intervention


    With 21% of its population undernourished, nearly44%of under-5children underweight and 7% of them dying before
 they reach five years,India isfirmly established among the world’s most hunger ridden countries. The situation is better than only Congo, Chad, Ethiopia or Burundi, but it is worse than Sudan, North Korea, Pakistan or Nepal. 
    This is according to the International Food Policy Research Institute (IFPRI) which combines the above three indicators to give us a GlobalHunger Index(GHI) according to which India is 67th among the worst 80 countries in termsof malnourishment.
 
    That’s not all. Data collected by GHI researchers shows that while there has been some improvement in children’s malnutrition and early deaths since 1990, the proportion of hungry in the population has actually gone up. Today India has 213 million hungry and malnourished people by GHI estimates
 although the UN agency Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO) puts the figure at around230 million.The difference is because FAO uses only the standard calorie intake formula for measuring sufficiency of food while the Hunger Index is based on broader criteria. 
    Whichever way you slice it and dice it, the shameful reality is inescapable – India is home to the largest number of
 hungry people, about a quarter of the estimated 820 million in the whole world. 
    The National Family and Health Survey (NFHS), last carried out in 2004-05, had shown that 23% of married men, 52% of married women and a chilling 72% of infants were anemic – a sure sign that a shockingly large number of families were caught in a downward spiral of slow starvation.
 
    Global research has now firmly established that depriving the fetus of essential nutrients – as will happen in an under-nourished pregnant woman – seals the fate of the baby once it is born. It is likely tosuffer from susceptibilityto diseases and physical retardation, as also to mental faculties getting compromised.
 ‘Expand nutrition schemes’ 
    So,continuing to allow people to go hungry and malnourished, is not just more misery for them: it is the fate of future generations of Indiansin balance.
 
    What can be done to fix this unending tragedy?The government already runs two of the world’s biggest nutrition programmes: the mid-day meal scheme for students up to class 12 and the anganwadi programme under which infants andchildren up to6 yearsof age
 are given “hotcooked” meals. 
    These need to be spread further and more resources pumped into tackle weaknesses.For instance, a recent report by the anganwadi workers’ federation revealed that as many as 73,375 posts of anganwadi workers and 16,251 posts of supervisors arelying vacant.
 
    But the biggest contribution to fighting hunger would be providing universal coverage of the public distribution system with adequate amounts of grain, pulses and edible oils included.

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