Indias ‘National Shame’- Hunger, Food Insecurity and Malnutrition

Supported by

Image Source : thedailyeye.info

It is a shocking irony that despite India’s ground-breaking leaps in economic growth, the country still leads in the world hunger list. As the country gears up for unprecedented reforms and projects, why does it continue to disappoint when it comes to combating malnutrition. Hunger has been a chronic issue afflicting the marginalised sections of society who are deprived of access to the bumper crops and surplus of grains. The surplus crops rot in the storage facilities while the malnourished population suffers from the careless organizational and distributional vision of the policy makers. The ‘Hunger of India’ is an unforgivable issue affecting the country which in the long run will fatally dent its long strides towards economic growth. The endemic issue of deprivation, food insecurity and malnutrition expose the grim truth that despite agriculture being a backbone of this country, it has been appallingly ignored. It is more shocking that government has either intentionally or by some gross error failed to provide appropriate subsidies to the agricultural sector. As India reeks under the crisis of Hunger in India-food stock rotting, farmers suicide, undistributed food supplies, government busy in politicising agriculture, it is about time the Right to Food is given immediate attention. The Shocking Facts of the Hunger NeglectThe Global Hunger Index measures the growth of a country on three fundamental criteria: the proportion of calorie-deficient people, child malnutrition and child mortality. India ranks 55th on its scale which begs the question is India in fact a growing economic power when its people languish in hunger. The disadvantaged sections of the society- the Dalits, SC/STs and other BPL(below poverty line) households whose occupation is agriculture are chiefly hit hard by the inaccessibility of food, malnutrition and starvation. The expecting mothers and children who require proper nutrition have found to be severely undernourished, starved and underweight. This leads to higher risks of foetal mortality, anaemia and others serious diseases whose adverse effects are detrimental to the health and livelihood of the farmers and so on. When more than half of the Indian population is incapacitated due to hunger, it immediately demands a prompt redress of the issue. Otherwise the economic growth of India will only remain an elite or superficial affair without touching the grassroots. Hunger should be considered relevant as economic growth if the first step towards hunger eradication is to take place.

India at a loss to combat Hunger: Why?The parliament of India in order to provide subsidies food grains to the marginalised sections of society has enacted the National Food Security Act on September 12, 2013. This progressive step along with the food security programmes as Integrated Child Development Services scheme, Public Distribution System and Midday Meal Scheme highlight the attempts made by the government to generate a policy for combating hunger. However it is a long gap between policy making and put it into action. The very inadequacy to put words in to action suggests why India despite its rank as the next economic power is losing its people to malnutrition.The bill can only procure a positive impact if its implementation is safeguarded from the corrupt practices of stealing what is meant for the poor, mismanaged distribution and storage of food, and lack of access to subsided food. Yet another major contention with the implementation of Food Bill has been the disunited effort of the centre-state relation. They do not put away their political rivalries to enforce the bill with a concerted action. The political parties have rather adversely politicised the issue for gaining votes while seriously hampering the immediate focus and objective of the Food Bill. Due to this lack of coordination between the state and centre, the urgent requirements of storage places have been halted and that has led to rotting of food, wastage and hence hunger. There have also been cases where the meals served in the Mid-day meals scheme have found to be contaminated, adulterated and lacking in the nutritional requirements of the body. This needs to be rectified as it is not only important to ensure food supply, but the assurance of nutrition is also indispensable. How Hunger Impacts EconomyHunger costs economy which in the long run, has a debilitating effect on the growth of a nation as a whole. It leads to illness which burdens the economy to pay for it. Marginalised sections of society due to their incapacity to work, study or pursue life goals are left out and cannot work to rake in the benefits of the modern India. Maternal and Child mortality rise. Farmer suicides are a common occurrence (as they are more burdened to work for themselves and for the country). The Urban-Rural Hunger Gap It is strange when we come to think of starvation. The concept is all too implausible to us, is…

#PoweredByYou We bring you news and stories that are worth your attention! Stories that are relevant, reliable, contextual and unbiased. If you read us, watch us, and like what we do, then show us some love! Good journalism is expensive to produce and we have come this far only with your support. Keep encouraging independent media organisations and independent journalists. We always want to remain answerable to you and not to anyone else.

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Featured

Amplified by

Ministry of Road Transport and Highways

From Risky to Safe: Sadak Suraksha Abhiyan Makes India’s Roads Secure Nationwide

Amplified by

P&G Shiksha

P&G Shiksha Turns 20 And These Stories Say It All

Recent Stories

Ahmedabad Cyber Fraud Case: Aadhaar Manipulation, AI-Assisted Methods Used In ₹25,000 Loan Scam; 4 Arrested

Tamil Nadu-Born Rini Sampath Makes History As First South Asian In Washington, D.C. Mayoral Race

Kerala: Judicial Academy Adapts Hostel For First Visually Challenged Trainee Judge In Judiciary Batch

Contributors

Writer : 
Editor : 
Creatives :