THE GIST of Editorial for UPSC Exams : 28 October 2019 (National dishonour (Indian Express))

National dishonour (Indian Express)

Mains Paper 2: Social Justice
Prelims level: GHI
Mains level: Steps towards curbing hunger and malnutrition problems

Context

  • Despite unprecedented quantities of wealth and the vulgar ostentation which has become customary in the gaudy glitter of city life, India is unable to overcome hunger and malnourishment.
  • This is even more unconscionable when government warehouses are overflowing with stocks of rotting rice and wheat.

About Hunger

  • Hunger is the failure to access the calories that are necessary to sustain an active and healthy life.
  • It results in intense human suffering and indignity, as their brains and bodies are unable to grow to full potential and they fall ill too often and are snatched away too early.

Reasons behind calling it dishonour

  • With appropriate public policies — sensitively designed, adequately resourced and effectively implemented — the country has both the wealth and the food stocks many times over to end hunger entirely.
  • Nepal emerging from 15 years of civil war and Pakistan still torn by internal conflict — is a sobering reminder of what India has not accomplished. This failure does not spur public outrage and the introspection that it should.

GHI report ranks

  • The GHI report ranks India at a lowly 102 out of 117 countries listed.
  • The GHI scores are based on four indicators.
  • Undernourishment (the share of population with insufficient calorie intake);
  • Child wasting (children with low weight for height, indicating acute undernutrition);
  • Child stunting (children with low height for age, reflecting chronic undernutrition); and
  • Child mortality (death rate of children under five).

Report highlights and the success story of Nepal and Bangladesh

  • India has the highest rate of child wasting (which rose from the 2008-2012 level of 16.5 per cent to 20.8 per cent). Its child stunting rate (at 37.9 per cent) also remains shockingly high.
  • The report is instructive as it explains why Bangladesh and Nepal have surged ahead of a much wealthier India.
  • The Bangladesh success story is attributed to pro-poor economic growth raising household incomes as well as significant improvements in “nutrition-sensitive” sectors like education, sanitation and health.
  • Nepal, likewise, shows increased household wealth, maternal education, sanitation, health and nutrition programmes.

Boosting farm sector

  • The largest population of food-insecure people being food producers — farm workers, tenants, marginal and small farmers, fish workers and forest gatherers.
  • To end hunger, food producers must be supported to receive adequate remuneration.
  • Need to be taken sound measures to protect farmer incomes, including income transfers to farmers, minimum support-price guarantees and crop insurance, and a massive expansion of farm credit.
  • For farm workers, a refocus on land reforms is called for, and, a greatly expanded and effectively managed rural employment guarantee programme with attention to land and watershed development, small irrigation and afforestation.
  • There must also be an urgent and comprehensive shift to sustainable agricultural technologies less dependent on irrigation, chemical fertilisers and pesticides, to reverse our agri-ecological crisis.

Introducing an urban employment guarantee programme

  • The other large food-vulnerable population comprises informal workers.
  • Hunger can’t be combated without addressing the burgeoning job crisis.
  • It also entails labour reforms which protect job security, fair work conditions and social security of all workers.
  • The time has come for an urban employment guarantee programme, to help build basic public services and infrastructure for the urban poor — especially slum and pavement residents, and the homeless.
  • This should also include employment in the care economy, with services for child-care, children and adults with disability and older persons.

Revitalising the Public distribution system

  • The Public Distribution System must be universalised (excluding income tax payees), and should distribute not just cereals but also pulses and edible oils.
  • We need to reimagine it as a decentralised system where a variety of crops are procured and distributed locally. Both pre-school feeding and school meals need adequate budgets, and the meals should be supplemented with nutrient-rich foods such as dairy products, eggs and fruits.
  • Social protection also entails universal pension for persons not covered by formal schemes, universal maternity entitlements to enable all women in informal work to rest and breast-feed their children, a vastly expanded creche scheme, and residential schools for homeless children and child workers.
  • Malnourishment results not just from inadequate food intakes, but also because food is not absorbed due to frequent infections caused by bad drinking water, poor sanitation and lack of healthcare.
  • India’s nutrition failures are also because of persisting gaps in securing potable water to all citizens, and continued open defecation despite optimistic official reporting.
  • There is an urgent requirement for a legally enforceable right to healthcare, with universal and free out-patient and hospital-based care, free diagnostics and free medicines.

Way ahead

  • India continues to fail children born in impoverished households, to homeless people and single mothers, and to oppressed castes and social groups.
  • Our economic policy continues to be trapped in an elite capture, dominated by measures that support big businesses to the exclusion of farmers and workers. Social rights are broken and betrayed.

Conclusion

Prelims Questions:

Q.1) With respect to “Nine Dots Prize”, consider the following statements:
1. It is a prize for creative thinking that tackles contemporary societal issues.
2. It is sponsored by the Kadas Prize Foundation with support from CRASSH at the University of Cambridge and Cambridge University Press.

Which of the statements given above are correct?

(a) 1 only
(b) 2 only
(c) Both 1 and 2
(d) None of the above

Ans: C
Mains Questions:
Q.1) What must India do better to at least keep pace with its South Asian neighbours in tackling hunger?