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Think of Hunger in India 2010 Food Security concept Early Childcare, Nutrition & ICDS PDS & BPL Census Amartya & Kolkata Group National advisory Council & NFS initiative

Hunger in india 2010

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Think

of

Hunger in India 2010

Food Security concept

Early Childcare, Nutrition & ICDS

PDS & BPL Census

Amartya & Kolkata Group

National advisory Council & NFS initiative

Food insecurity

[for children of poor]

“Food insecurity exists when all people, at all times, do not have physical and economic access to sufficient, safe and nutritious food to meet their dietary needs and food preferences for an active and healthy life”

Food & Agricultural Organization (1996)

Food security has three dimensions _ Food Availability, Food Access and Food absorption.

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Food_Availability, Access and Absorption

Food availability is assured when enough of it is produced or imported and at an affordable price it is available locally.

Food access is assured when we can buy, prepare and consume food to avail a nutritious diet.

Food absorption is assured when we have normal physical and mental health and are able to maintain it with our diet.

Early childcare is very important

People below poverty line neglect the young. India continues to lose 6 % of our newborns before their first birthday; 50 % of our toddlers to malnutrition and a whole generation to poor health, low skills and poverty.

Can we afford to ignore (the role that crèches play in) the survival, development and well-being of young children?

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Nutrition Indicators and

recent related data in India

Nutrition indicators:

Under- weight, stunting,wasting in children

Anemia in pregnant women

Poor breastfeeding & complementary feeding rates of infants

Low birth weight

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Recent data: Among pre-school children, under-nutrition has reduced from 77 % in 1975-76 to 47 % in 1998-99.

Stunting_45.5 %

Wasting_ 15.5 %

National Family Health Survey (NFHS) 1998-99.

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Food insecurity prevails in India-2010

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Population below poverty line[BPL]

in India is 260 million in year 2000

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Initiatives to improve the nutritional status of the population during the last five decades include:

Increasing food production and building buffer stocks.

Improving food distribution and building up the public distribution system [PDS]

Improving household food security through:

improving purchasing power,

food for work programmes and

direct or indirect food subsidy.

FOOD AND NUTRITION SECURITY-1

FOOD AND NUTRITION SECURITY-2

Food supplementation to address special needs of

the vulnerable groups,

Integrated Child Development services

[ICDS] and

mid-day meals at secondary schools

Nutrition education, especially through

Food and Nutrition Board [FNB] and

ICDS.

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What is a crèche?

• A crèche is not just an enabling mechanism so that mothers can work, but central to the battle against malnutrition, low birth weight and infant mortality.

• It essentially facilitates an aware adult to take on the small tasks involved in childcare for children under three years of age such as patient feeding of small katories of soft food three or four times a day. Continued…

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PUBLIC DISTRIBUTION SYSTEM

Targeted PDS, Identification of Below poverty line people, plan

for organizing food and nutrition security for the needy

groups

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Initiatives to improve the nutritional status of the population during the last five decades include:

Increasing food production and building buffer stocks.

Improving food distribution and building up the public distribution system [PDS]

Improving household food security through:

improving purchasing power,

food for work programmes and

direct or indirect food subsidy.

FOOD AND NUTRITION SECURITY-1

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At least four alternative figures are

available: (i) 28 per cent from the

Planning Commission, (ii) 5O per cent from

the N.C. Saxena Committee report; (iii) 42

per cent from the Tendulkar Committee

report, and (iv) 80 per cent! or so from the

- National Commission for Enterprises in

the Unorganized Sector (NCEUS)

Four alternative BPL census is

available now

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The proportion of rural

population that is BPL-2

The main exception is the Saxena

Committee report, where, the 50 per cent

figure is based on an independent

argument about the required coverage of

the BPL Census.

Other reports produce alternative figures

by simply shifting the poverty line.

BPL Census methodology

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BPL Census methodology and Targeting

of PDS

Universal vs targeted _ PDS

When targeted PDS is implemented,

possible exclusion errors may occur.

As an aspect of „right to life‟ under Article

21 of constitution, is a „right to food‟, a

fundamental right of all citizens of India?

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The prize recognized Sen’s contributions in the fields of social choice theory, welfare

economics, and economic measurement. He is credited with making inroads into the

assessment of poverty and the evaluation of inequality—making possible better social

welfare comparisons

Tribute to AmartyaAmartya Sen received the Nobel Prize in 1998, for restoring “an ethical dimension” to the discussion

of vital economic problems by combiningtools from economics and philosophy.

AMARTYA SEN

Amartya Kumar Sen(1933-) is an Indian economist, philosopher and won a Nobel prize in 1998 for his work on causes of poverty and famine.

He advocates for a just and sustainable economic world through scholarly research.

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Throughout his life, he has

avoided counseling

governments, preferring to

place his views in the public

domain for discussion. “I like

arguing rather than

dispensing privileged advice,

but I also think social

change comes best from

public argument,” Sen is

celebrated in India yet his

advice goes unheeded.

Amartya Sen advocates: Economic growth as a

means FOR human development, building

capabilities and entitlements.

A shift needs to happen towards

enforceable rights,

towards implementation through authentic

participatory development,

from target group handouts

towards empowerment and self-help of the poor,

socially excluded and the deprived;

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Amartya Sen advocates: Economic growth as a

means FOR human development, building

capabilities and entitlements.

towards empowerment and self-help of the poor, socially excluded and the deprived;

their capacity building, participation and

change in their understanding of interlinking dimension and

the need to self mobilize for peaceful public action and

more genuine democracy.

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The Kolkata Group, an independent initiative

inspired and chaired by Amartya Sen, has argued for

Right to Food Act be made non-discriminatory and universal to cover legal food entitlements for all Indians.

The Eighth Kolkata Group Workshop (February 2010), has argued for creating durable legal entitlements that guarantee the right to food for all in the country.

Sen stressed the need for the firm recognition of the right to food, and comprehensive legislation to guarantee.

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“A Right to Food Act covering enforceable food entitlements should be non-discriminatory and universal. Entitlements guaranteed by the Act should include food grains from the Public Distribution System (PDS), school meals, nutrition services for children below the age of six years, social security provision, and allied programmes”

The Kolkata Group, an independent initiative inspired and chaired by Amartya Sen, has argued

for

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For India, with nearly fifty per cent children underweight,

to make freedom from hunger a legal right is a golden

dream that needs hard work to be true.

It involves besides an universal PDS, many interventions & entitlements like

Child nutrition,

Social security,

Health care and even

Proper rights. Framing National Food Security Act requires creative work, public debate and political commitment.

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An universal PDS is suggested

It may be with increased food subsidy.

It could be combined with cost saving

measures such as

decentralized procurement,

Self-management of Fair price shops by

Gram Panchayats and

a range of transparency safe-guards.

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Evidence is now mounting in many parts of our country that there continues to exist

what Amartya Sen calls persistent mass hunger,

especially acute malnutrition among many

children. Recent reports in the media about poor

children eating mud and silica to deal with their

hunger in village „Ganne' in district Allahabad

appeared in The Hindustan Times on April 4 and

on BBC on May15. These reports raise, once

again, serious issues of abject neglect of children

and point towards a most uncaring administration.

Collapse of security-1

An enquiry was ordered by the Supreme Court in response to

the media reports on the situation by Ms. Arundhati Dhuru and

Prof. Jean Dreze, now member National Advisory Council. The

main findings of the enquiry are that there is a total

collapse of food security related schemes and 80 per

cent of the people are deprived of their

entitlements. People are living with starvation and

hunger due to acute poverty. 90 per cent of the

children examined suffer from severe malnutrition

of Grade IV. 45

Collapse of security-2

Elected representatives and administration have failed to secure people's access to the right to food and failed to protect the life and livelihood of families in the affected villages, communities and beyond.

Many of the people in Ganne village are working as bonded labourers.

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The Right to Food Campaign, civil society and economists like Jean Dreze, point out several facts.

The poverty estimates of about 40 per cent given by the Tendulkar Committee to determine the number of poor who will receive subsidised food under the forthcoming National Food Security Act is inadequate to our current situation of hunger, starvation and malnutrition.Others that have submitted their reports are the

National Committee for Enterprises in the Unorganised Sector (NCEUS) set up by the Government of India, that estimates that 77 % of our population have an income of less than Rs.20 per day in 2004-05; the Saxena Committee set up by the Ministry of Rural Development that says that 50 % of our population should be considered below the poverty line.

Have the right priorities, and a

moral courage

The paucity of resources can no longer be an excuse for keeping our people hungry. It is more a case of having the right priorities, and a moral deficit. The NCEUS report appointed by the government points out that the safety net can be provided within the available resources and capacity of the government. If a universal subsidy can work in Tamil Nadu state and PDS can work in Kerela state why can't it be made to work elsewhere?

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A Right to Food Act is needed

on compassionate grounds.

India wants to reach the moon but the question is whether it can reach its own starving children.

Who cares if the Commonwealth of the “Games” is so uncommonly unequal.

According to Harsh Mander, a Food Commissioner appointed by the Supreme Court, about ten homeless die every day in Delhi. Says Mander “That so many people die each day at our doorstep, close to the centers of power, is a reminder how scarce is compassion in our public life.”

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At present, the government supplies 27.4 million tonne of rice and wheat for PDS, which costs it Rs 56,000 crore (in 2010-11). It estimates to have 50 million tonne of grain in its godowns at the worst point of the year.

Back of the envelope calculations show the first year of NFSA, when one-fourth of the blocks or districts get almost universal coverage and special nutrition schemes are launched, would require around 50 million tonne of grain. The subsidy bill will go up by around Rs 20,000 crore.

But even so, the increase of fiscal subsidy might require only a political decision; supply of grain, on the other hand, is a governance issue that the NAC will have to fight and push hard.

….a governance issue

The government has announced a 'second green revolution' through the non-irrigated lands,

but the agricultural ministry's past record does not inspire confidence.

To assure itself that the NFSA does not come undone in future years, the NAC will need to set the course for this second 'revolution' and push the government to procure more.

The latter is beset with macroeconomic concerns of how increased government purchase will hit prices and inflation.

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Enhancing production alongside will become

mandatory.

This would be the toughest bit to ensure

because these issues will lie beyond the

mandate of the NFSA. They would have to be

embedded in an overall economic policy shift

that will require increased budgetary allocations

to agriculture, combined with the same

intellectual vigour that India witnessed during

the first green revolution.

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