The Hindu, Sunday Magazine, October 26, 2014
In this season of festivities, when urban
lifestyle-based diseases are getting a boost as we stuff our stomachs
with forbidden foods, and our homes eat up even more of scarce
electricity, one in every third child will go to bed hungry. Her home
will be dark, without even the light from the hearth that cannot be lit
because there is no cooking fuel.
Hunger,
malnutrition, under-nutrition… these are not the talking points at
election rallies or television debates but they remain a hard and
unrelenting reality for million of Indians. I fear that — in the
drummed-up euphoria surrounding cleaning up India, making in India and
other such slogans — this depressing reality will be obscured and
forgotten.
The good news, we are told, is that acute
hunger is decreasing. On the Global Hunger Index 2014, prepared by the
International Food Policy Research Institute (IFPRI), India now ranks
55th of the 76 countries and its situation has moved from ‘alarming’ to
‘serious’. That is good. But is it something to celebrate? That from
45.1 per cent of underweight children under five years of age in
2005-06, there are now 30.7 per cent of underweight children as of last
year? It is progress, but that still leaves virtually one in every three
children under five years of age that is underweight. This means this
child will never be able to catch up as an adult because she has been
deprived of adequate and nutritious food in the first five years of her
life.
We should also be worried that the very
programmes that helped this decline are now in danger of being
neglected, or reformulated in a way that could prove detrimental. For
instance, IFPRI acknowledges that government programmes that have
contributed to this decline in child hunger are the Integrated Child
Development Scheme (ICDS) under which balwadis in villages
provide young children with a nutritious supplement; the committee to
monitor malnutrition set up by the Supreme Court; the National Rural
Health Mission (NRHM) that has increased access to health care for many
in rural areas; the Mahatma Gandhi National Rural Employment Guarantee
Act (MGNREGA), which has guaranteed employment to millions of people;
and the Public Distribution System (PDS), which provides subsidised food
grains to people below the poverty line.
Apart from
hunger caused by inadequate quantity of food, millions also suffer from
hidden hunger, due to the deficiency of micronutrients in the food. If
you are poor, not only do you get little to eat, but what you eat is
also of poor quality. This is what aggravates the already deadly impact
of undernutrition. Whenever these subjects come up for discussion — and
internationally and in India they do so all the time — there are many
technical fixes that are discussed such as bio-fortification, which
involves increasing the micronutrient content of food crops. In other
words, the same grain that you eat will be fortified so that even if you
eat the same quantity, you will get more nutrients into your system.
While
all that is well-meant, if you are poor, you need money to buy food,
even if it is subsidised. And you need work to earn the money to buy
that food. Despite its shortcomings, MGNREGA has been responsible for
putting that money in the hands of millions of rural poor. Yet, this
programme is being deprived of funds and could end up a mere acronym.
The
technical fixes also misfire because the approach is sometimes top-down
without taking in the particular needs of different parts of India. For
instance, one of the solutions for malnutrition among children is to
give them a high-energy protein paste, that includes crushed peanuts,
through the ICDS programme. But the solution, although it makes sense,
does not take into account the fact that children’s tastes and eating
habits differ in various parts of India. Or that severely malnourished
children — like those in isolated tribal hamlets in some parts of
Maharashtra, for instance — cannot digest this rich mixture because they
are so emaciated. Rather than giving them nourishment, the mixture can
cause acute diarrhoea. So, universalised solutions do not work if there
is no flexibility built into such programmes.
Just as
a handful of long-handled brooms will not clean India, there is no
magic wand for ending hunger. The real measure of a country’s progress
should surely be the child hunger index. And here India continues to
fall short. Moving from ‘alarming’ to ‘serious’ is simply not good
enough.
(To read the original, click here.)
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