Zero Hunger by 2030
< General Studies Home Page
Contents
- Hunger Situation in India
- Key initiatives to fight Hunger Situation in India
- Causes for high Hunger Levels in India
Hunger:
- Hunger is a situation when a person is not able to consume sufficient food to meet basic nutritional needs for a sustained period. The required number of calories may vary according to age, sex, physical activities etc.
- The UN mandated SDG-2 of ” ‘Zero Hunger’: ending hunger and ensuring access to nutritious and sufficient food for all” is supposed to be achieved by 2030.
- This goal works in tandem with many others: Poverty Elimination (SDG1); Good Health and Well Being (SDG3); and the Need for Clean Drinking Water (SDG6).
- Similarly other SDG goals (SDG4 – Education; SDG5 – Gender Equality; SDG8 – Decent Work and Economic Growth; SDG10 – Reduction of Inequality; SDG11 – Sustainable Cities and
Communities; SDG16 – Peace, Justice and Strong Institutions; and SDG17 – partnership for goals also influence consumption patterns and healthy diet choice.
Hunger Situation in India:
- Malnourishment is a major challenge faced by India, especially amongst children below the age of five.
- As per NFHS-5, 32% of children were underweight; 35% are stunted and 19% are wasted.
- Global Hunger Index, 2022 has also ranked India 107/121 countries (worse than all our neighbours except Afghanistan (109)).
- Though India has criticized GHI on several grounds, but still, it throws some light on the hunger levels in India.
- GHI is using erroneous measure of hunger (i.e., it is measuring hunger in terms of other variables beyond the lack of food).
- 3/4 variables are related to children and can’t be representative of whole
population. - The data for undernourished population is based on a poll conducted on a very small size of 3,000.
- GHI seems to have ignored initiatives like PMGKAY, Anganwadi Scheme, PMMVY
etc.
- As per a report by UNICEF: Child Food Poverty, 13 countries across the world (including India), more than 40% of children live in severe food poverty.
- Though India has criticized GHI on several grounds, but still, it throws some light on the hunger levels in India.
Key initiatives to fight Hunger Situation in India:
- NFSA 2013 and the Public Distribution System
- PMGKAY
- Poshan Abhiyan: Launched by MoW&CD in 2018 is focused on reducing stunting, undernutrition, and anemia (among young children, women and adolescent girls).
- Integrated Child Development Services (ICDS) Scheme: Launched in 1975, the ICDS scheme offers a package of six services – Supplementary Nutrition; Pre-School non-formal education; Nutrition and Health Education; Immunization; Health Checkups; and Referral Services.
- Eat Right Movement: It’s an initiative by Food Standards and Safety Authority of India (FSSAI) for citizens to nudge them towards eating right.
- Various initiatives for Poverty Reduction; Health (like Mission Indradhanush); Employment; Environment Protection etc. also contribute to fighting hunger situation.
Other Measures over the years which have contributed to fight against Hunger:
- Green Revolution: It has turned India from a “Ship to mouth” economy to the largest exporter of rice in the world. It has allowed the successful implementation of PDS, PMGKAY etc.
- White Revolution: India has emerged as the largest producer of milk in the world.
Causes for high Hunger Levels in India:
- Hunger is a complex multidimensional problem.
- In a 2008 paper, Hunger in the Contemporary World, Amartya Sen enumerated the interdependence of food deprivation and hunger on multiple factors.
- Low Income (Poverty) – Poverty leads to poor living conditions, less income, insufficient food which eventually leads to malnourishment and hunger.
- Social Factors:
- Gender Inequality:
- Inter-Family food distribution rules: Patriarchy leads to girl child getting food at the last or lesser food.
- Low female literacy and education: Lack of adequate knowledge amongst mothers regarding nutrition, breast-feeding, and parenting.
- Economic Factors
- Poor Employment
- High Government spending in non-social sector
- Huge Military expenditure (as India lives in a very vulnerable neighborhood)
- Gender Inequality:
- Other Factors include:
- Poor Administration and Governance: Corruption; Faulty PDS system; Unidentified hunger (inclusion and exclusion errors due to wrong allocation of BPL cards);
- Hidden Hunger: Several types of nutritional deficiencies are occurring due to poor diet, diseases, and failure to meet the needs of women during pregnancy and lactation period.
- Economic and Health challenges associated with COVID-19.
- COVID-19 pandemic has exacerbate child undernutrition in general and child wasting in particular.
- Climate Change and weather extreme also pose big challenge to India’s food system and poverty alleviation targets.
Way Forward:
- Intensive Hunger Specific Initiatives:
- Improve the implementation of NFSA by removing all kinds of exclusion errors.
- In Post-Covid scenario, bring back and strengthen functional Anganwadis providing food and other services.
- Mid-day meal scheme should restart with full vigour in schools.
- Improving Implementation:
- Social Audit
- IT for better monitoring
- Focus on other associated issues like Water, Health, Sanitation, maternal and child health etc.
- Focus on dietary diversity -> Encouraging consumption of more diverse range of foods, particularly fruits, vegetables, and protein rich diets.
- Social Changes:
- Addressing gender inequality
- Accelerated and Inclusive Economic Growth:
- Women’s participation rate in labour force is around 30% currently, which needs to increase. Here focus on literacy, skill development would be important.
- Look into the issues of Livelihood: Expand rural employment guarantee scheme.
- Sustainable Agriculture: Investment, Research, and Innovation for Sustainable Agriculture.
- Reducing food wastage and losses
- Adaptation and Mitigation to climate change.