12 Dec Zero Hunger by 2030 Poverty & Hunger By LevelUp_Admin1 0 Comments 1435 Views Zero Hunger by 2030 December 12, 2023 < General Studies Home Page Content Hunger Situation in India Key initiatives to fight Hunger Situation in India Causes for high Hunger Levels in India Hunger: Hunger is
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.
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)
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.