Magazine 2012
- Journal 2012
- Journal 2012 – Index
- Banksb Growth With Advertisement And Publicity (10)
- Factors influencing success of Business Process Reengineering Implementation in Public Sector Banks (15)
- Consumptions and Savings Pattern In India : An Empirical Study (20)
- A Study of Financial Soundness of Mahanand Dairy, Mumbai (27)
- Study of Investors Perception Towards Investment In The Post Recession -era (34)
- Micro-Finance in India and Maharashtra (43)
- Regionalism versus Multilateralism in International Trade : An Overview of the on Going Debate (52)
- Different Aspect and Methods of Environmental Valuation (59)
- Aging Problem in India And Social Support For The Aged (64)
- The Indian Media and Entertainment Industry- ST Prospectives and Challenges in 21 Century (70)
- Perceptions Of Who Is A Good Language Teacher & A Case Study (77)
- Shock Stories : Writing as Resistance A Study of Selected Writings of Daniil Kharms and Mahashweta Devi (80)
- Of Poets, Poetry and Pedagogics : Teaching Gender And Cultural Studies In A Metropolitan Classroom Setting (84)
- Struggle for b Spaceb of Women in Orhan Pamukbs b Snowb (88)
- Journey Into The Self : Binodini Dasibs My Story and My Life as an Actress (92)
- Understanding Tidal Rhythms: Ecological Symbiosis in Amitav Ghoshbs The Hungry Tide and Dhruv Bhattbs Samudrantike (94)
- Ecocriticism : Initiating Eco -Consciousness (98)
- Inclusiveness and Individualized Instruction to Realize Potential in Large Classes (102)
- Gabriel Garcia Marquezbs One Hundred Years of Solitude: A Postcolonial Perspective (108)
- Gender Concerns In The Mission Of The Catholic Church (111)
- The Wind Done Gone: Postcolonial and Postmodern Revisionist History (115)
- A Study on Storage and Acceptability Of Weaning Food (119)
- The Rise of Medical Tourism- a Promising Sector (124)
- Hunger- A Curse on Mankind (128)
- Human Rights Education: The Collective Educational Struggle for Producing Change (134)
- Emerging Work Culture in Corporate World (137)
- Adalaj b Vavb b A Heritage Water Reservoir (176)
- Colonial Sanitarium in Mahableshwar Hill Station: Governorbs Summer Residence (180)
- A Mental Health Initiative (184)
- Emerging Concept of Live-In-Relation International and National Scenario (190)
- Sustainable Human Settlement Development in Urban Centres (196)
- Healthy Youth Our Best Resource (200)
- Social Enterpreneurship – The Way Forward (204)
- Gandhian Ideology : An Attempt to Reconstruct Industry and Society (207)
Hunger- A Curse on Mankind
Dr. Ritu Bhatia, Smt P. N Doshi Womenb s College Mumbai.
Mr. Hitesh Bhatia, Navrachna University, Baroda.
Ten million people die every year of hunger and hunger related diseases. More than 854 million people all over
the world know what it means to go to bed hungry. About 24,000 people die from the effects of hunger each
day. One person dies every 3.6 seconds due to hunger related causes. India ranks 66 out of 88 countries on
Global Hunger Index (GHI) 2010. 200 million food insecure people are living in India. India is among 29 countries
with the highest levels of hunger, stunted children and poverty fed women, according to the International Food
Policy Research Instituteb s Global Hunger Index 2010.The present article focuses on Indiab s Hunger status,
causes and policies and ways to protect future generation from this devastating crisis.
Hunger is when a person does not get enough food to provide body the nutrients (carbohydrates, fats, proteins,
vitamins, minerals and water) for active and healthy live. Hunger is the uneasy or painful sensation caused by
want of food; craving appetite. Chronic hunger reduces the bodyb s ability to function and leads to a weakened
state, leaving a person more susceptible to disease. When hunger progresses into starvation, the body consumes
all its reserves of protein and energy. Hunger is avertable illness that often leads to death. According to World
food program (WFP) one in nearly seven people do not get enough food to be healthy and lead an active life
,
making hunger and malnutrition the major risk to health worldwide- greater than AIDS, malaria and TB combined.
Yet there is plenty of food for everyone on earth. Abundance and not paucity best illustrates the worldb s food
supply. The problem is that many people are too poor to buy food, miserably trapped in the clutches of
poverty and Hunger. This increasingly makes them weaker, poorer and hungrier. The FAO defines hunger as the
consumption of fewer than 1,800 kilocalories a day b the minimum required to live a healthy and productive
life b which 200 million Indians lack. Hunger in India remains largely invisible because it is driven not by near
death starvation but by sweeping malnourishment and calorie deficiency.
UNDERLYING CAUSES OF HUNGER
The 4 things contribute to most of the worldb s Hunger b
b "
b "
b "
Poverty- Poor people do not have the resources i.e. land, tools, money needed to grow or buy food on
regular basis.
War- War disturbs agricultural production and food storage, armed forces and terrorist often destroy
farms and food leads to food shortage.
Environmental overkill- Over consumption of food by wealthy nations, rapid population growth in poor
nations makes it difficult for poor people to have food for them. Deforestation, over cropping, and
overgrazing are exhausting the earthb s fertility to produce food.
b "
Inequality- Lack of education and employment, ignorance, racial and religious conflicts, gender biases
lead to discrimination resulting poverty and hunger.
India has its own specific causes:
b "
b "
Falling per capita food production
Increasing inequality, from their scanty income the poor people are strained to spend money on medicines,
transport, fuel, etc which reduces their share of their expenditure purchase of essential food products.
b "
b "
Poor access of the lower income population to expensive food products like milk, oils, fruits, pulses,
meat which provides essential nutrients like protein, fat and micronutrients.
Low status of women in Indian society, early marriage, early pregnancy due to that, multiple pregnancies,
low weight during reproductive age, deficiency diseases mainly iron deficient disease Anemia, illiteracy,
lack of access to finance and power at home, leads to low birth weight babies, and prone women to
maternal mortality.
b "
Poor child rearing practices due to orthodoxy values and illiteracy of mothers such as, incorrect breast
feeding practices, faulty weaning methods, insufficient supplementary diet to babies, lack of cleanliness
like poor hygienic conditions at home and in cooking.
(128)
b "
b "
Poor primary health care facilities, such as immunization, lack of access to health care in remote areas,
lack of government will to enhance standard of health care facilities for average Indian.
India cannot afford to let its food grains go to waste, but it is ironical that lack of enough storage space
ensue tones of food grains to be stored in open space for putrefaction with no protection against the
rats, damp air and disease droplets. These surplus food grains could have been used to feed millions of
hungry people in various parts of county one square meal.
b "
b "
The impact of Green Revolution was limited only to wheat and rice. Other crops like oilseeds, pulses
have largely remained out its benefit. Even the staple food of poor like jowar and bajra remained no
beneficial on account of green revolution.
The 1991 Government policy of Trade liberalization which focus on export of luxury cash crops to rich
countries instead of producing traditional food for its own people obliterate the countryb s food security
base. Government encouraging farmers to switch to cash crops in place of customary food crops has
resulted in an extraordinary increase in farm input costs, while market forces determined the price of the
cash crop resulting in many numbers of farmersb suicides across the country.
POVERTY AND FOOD SECURITY
India in past decade has witnessed accelerated economic growth, emerged as a global player with the worldb s
fourth largest economy in purchasing power parity terms, and made progress towards achieving most of the
Millennium Development Goals. However, poverty remains a major challenge though it is declining steadily but
slowly. Based on the new official poverty lines, 42% of people in rural areas and 26% of people in urban areas
lived below the poverty line in 2004-05. The World Bank (2011) however calculates all India poverty rates at
3
2% for 2009-10.
The Government of India took more than three decades of Economic Planning and Six Five Year Plans to
identify Urban Poverty as a critical issue. In the Seventh Plan (1985-90) there was a serious attempt to address
the problem of Urban Poverty. In the Ninth Plan (1997-2002), a special reference was made on Urban Poverty
Alleviation. Table-7 presents rural, urban and total poverty figures in absolute and percentage terms for selected
states. In terms of total number of poor persons, urban poverty has increased during the period 1993-94 and
2004-05 in Maharashtra, Rajasthan, Orissa and Delhi.
There are nine states in 2004-05, where urban poverty in terms of percentage is more than rural poverty.
Typically in Gujarat urban poverty has rapidly declined although, the rural poverty remains almost static in the
two periods. In Maharashtra, rural poverty has declined sharply but the urban poverty still remains at a very
high level. Tamilnadu and U P have witnessed rapid decline in both rural and urban poverty. The Table shows
that the percentage decline in urban poverty has been considerably low from 32.4% in 1993-94 to 25.7% in
2
8
004-05. Actually, there has been a rise in absolute number of urban poor from 76 million in 1993-94 to nearly
1 million in 2004-05.
Table b 1
Urban Poverty
STATES
1993-94
Urban
2004-05
Urban
Rural
No.
79.49 15.92 74.47 38.33 153.97 22.19 64.70 11.2 61.0
450.86 58.21 42.49 34.50 493.35 54.96 336.72 42.1 32.42 34.6 369.15 41.4
62.16 22.18 43.02 27.89 105.19 24.21 63.49 19.1 27.19 13.0 90.69 16.8
Total
Rural
Total
No.
22.0 126.10 15.8
%
No.
%
No.
%
No.
%
No.
%
%
AP
Bihar
Gujarat
Karnataka 95.99 29.88 60.46 40.14 156.46 33.16 75.05 20.8 63.83 32.6 130.89 25.0
MP 216.19 40.64 82.33 48.38 298.52 42.52 175.65 36.9 74.03 42.1 249.68 38.3
Maharashtra 193.33 37.93 111.90 35.15 305.22 36.86 171.13 29.6 146.25 32.2 317.38 30.7
Orissa
140.90 49.72 19.70 41.64 160.60 48.56 151.75 46.8 26.74 44.3 178.49 46.4
94.68 26.46 33.82 30.49 128.50 27.41 87.88 18.7 47.51 32.9 134.89 22.1
Rajasthan
Tamilnadu 121.70 32.48 80.40 39.77 202.10 35.03 76.50 22.8 69.13 22.2 145.60 22.15
UP
496.17 42.28 108.28 35.39 604.46 40.85 473.00 33.4 117.03 30.6 590.03 32.8
0.19 1.90 15.32 16.03 15.51 14.69 0.63 6.9 22.30 16.2 22.93 14.7
Delhi
(129)
Indian Planning Experience b a statistical profile, Planning Commission.
(Nob s in Lakhs)
The Table reveals not only widening rural-urban divide for most of the states but also points out regional
disparities within urban India. According to National Strategy for Urban Poor (NSUP) the share of UP, Maharashtra,
WB, MP and Andhra Pradesh in Urban Poverty rose from 56% in 1993-94 to 60% in 1999-00. This suggests
alarming concentration of urban poor in fewer states.
Economic reforms threaten to bring more structural changes in rural-urban poverty. Infect the whole urban
setting is likely to change dramatically. More than a decade and half to economic reforms the debate still
continues; if India is a better place to live in. The reforms process has changed the urban setting drastically.
Employment opportunities (or lack of it), inflation, consumption and income patterns, growth of manufacturing
and service industries coupled with stagnant or deteriorating agriculture are crucial variables which would
affect the migration trends and fate of urban and rural poor in the country. Rising investments in technob
intensive production and informalized service sector may further lead to insecure livelihoods in the urban areas.
It is also a fact that the formal sector in urban India does not welcome the poor migrants due to their illiteracy
and inferior skills. Informal sector gives low wages and part employment. Such casualization of workforce has
limited the earning opportunities of poor. Privatization of public services like water, electricity and health has
increased the cost of living in urban areas.
A fairly good percentage of population nearly 70% residing in urban area are above the poverty line, determined
on the basis of income calories-intake approach. Does this means that they have access to pure drinking
water, shelter other then slums, proper education, and minimum health facilities? According to the Report of
National Commission for Enterprises in the Unorganized Sector, 2007 (NCEUS) majority of urban poor are
those living in b miserable conditionsb belong to lower castes and minorities and more importantly women and
children.
Needless to say that transformation of urban cities in to jungle of concrete and cement has taken out all
possibilities of living a decent life. Metros like Delhi regularly face shortage of electricity during peak hours.
People in Mumbai have to bear with pollution and spend hours fighting traffic jams. The city of Bangalore is
one of most expensive cities in the world, Kolkata and Hyderabad struggles for adequate supplies of food
grains. Rising crime rate, growing law and order problems and rise in the frequency of terrorist attacks have
made the life in big urban cities miserable.
Thus instead of a simple calorie- intake approach b the basic issues in defining the poverty specifically urban
poverty should be availability of housing, access to basic civic amenities, healthy and clean living environment,
safe drinking water, public health and education facilities, food security, gainful employment opportunities,
freedom from violence and social negligenceb (Archana Sinha, Vikalp, 2005).
POVERTY and VULNERABILITY
The state of wellbeing is strongly correlated with the quality of life (Thorbecke, Erik 2005). The income approach
to calculate poverty does not consider the imputed value of social goods like education, and health. It is
impossible for the traditional approach to counter essential attributes of poverty like low life expectancy,
illiteracy, economic and social insecurity, lack of freedom and empowerment etc. This brings out the first major
limitation of income-centric approach. Secondly there stands no guarantee on the part of the person, that he
would spend his income on the consumption of given food items for himself and family. Infect, most of the poor
and those marginally poor are found spending their minimum income on consumption of alcohol, tobacco,
and on gambling, sacrificing standard minimum calorie intake. These people are potentially vulnerable to
poverty in future. b Poverty is concerned with not having enough now; whereas vulnerability is about having a
high probability now of suffering a future shortfallb (Thorbecke, Erik 2005). Many of those who are non-poor
now, are at risk of failure to attain minimum well being in future. Such vulnerability is reflected from the fact that
about 50% of Indiab s population is deprived of proper housing and nearly 24.1% of urban populations are
forced to live in slums (Global report on Human Settlement, 2005). High infant mortality and child mortality
rates are countered by higher birth rate and enhancing further deprivations.
Table - II
Health Indicators
SC
83.0
119.3
53.5
ST
Others*
76.0
103.1
47.3
Rural
75
103.7
49.6
Urban
44
63.1
38.4
Total
70
94.9
47
IMR
U5MR
84.2
126.6
55.9
%
of Childrenb s
undernourished
Tenth Five Year Plan, 2002-2007
*socially discriminated groups
(130)
Childrenb s undernourished in their young age often remain unhealthy with low productivity for rest of their life.
About more than 50% of children were found to be undernourished in all the backward groups. This deprivation
was not specifically due to unavailability of food supplies but denial of adequate health care, clean drinking
water, infections, etc. Health conditions are concerns not only for poor states, but also for rich states for
example, in Karnataka about 10% of populations suffered due to malaria in 2001 compare to 21% in Orissa and
9
% in Madhya Pradesh. Only 20% of Indians are covered by public health care system while rest of India
depends upon private sector (Ramadoss, 2004). According to Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO), food
security refers to condition when all people, at all times, have physical and economic access to sufficient, safe,
and nutritious food to meet their dietary needs and food preferences for an active and healthy life.
Per Capita Availability of Food Grains
Source-Dept of Agriculture and Co-operation, ministry of Agriculture, GOI
Rising population and falling agricultural growth rate in the last decades has already forced country towards a
probable food crisis in future. This has again made a mockery of income-calorie approach to measure poverty;
in the sense that net availability of food grains has increased marginally from 1951 to 1991 and considerably
fallen thereafter (Kumar Jayant and Hitesh Bhatia, 2008). There has been considerable fall in production of
pulses and food grains in the last decade.
HUNGER ACROSS THE WORLD
Facts on Hungry Nations b B7
World Hunger and Poverty:
b "
According to Food and Agriculture Organization
b "
854 million people across the world are hungry-
more than the populations of USA,Canada and
(
FAO) 2006 Statistics,820 million people are
hungry in developing countries where--
Sub-Saharan Africa: 204 million-
Asia /Pacific: 156 million-
India: 221 million-
China: 142 million-
b "
b "
Hunger and poverty claim 24,000 lives every day.
Hunger is the most extreme form of poverty,
where individuals and families cannot afford to
meet their need for food.
Latin America/Caribbean: 53 million-
Near East/North Africa: 44 million
b "
b "
Today worldb s population is 7 billion people.
b "
In the Asia and Pacific region 525 million or 17%
of the total population of 3 billion suffer from
undernourishment and the worst hit countries are
North Korea, Mongolia, Cambodia, and
Bangladesh.
Approximately 5.1 billion people live in the
developing countries.
b "
b "
820 million people in the developing countries
alone are hungry.B7
Among this group of poor people, many have
problems obtaining adequate, nutritious food for
b " The worst conditions continue to be largely; in
Africa one out of every three people in Sub-
(131)
themselves and their families. They consume Saharan Africa is undernourished. The worst hit
less than the minimum amount of calories
essential for sound health and growth.
countries are Angola, Burundi, Sierra Leone,
Guinea, Somalia, Sudan, and Ethiopia. In the north
East the worst affected country is Afghanistan.B7
In the Latin America and Caribbean region the
worst hit countries are Haiti, Nicaragua, Bolivia and
Honduras.
b "
The number of chronically hungry people
worldwide is growing by an average of 4
millionper year at current trends.
HUNGER POVERTY
Through Millennium Development Goals, United Nation
specifically intends to address the problem of extreme
poverty or what is popularly called as b Hunger Povertyb . A
poverty line of $1 a day has been estimated for low income
countries and $2 a day for middle income countries. Hunger
poverty is more invasive than income poverty in India, as
the proportion of people suffering from hunger was nearly
double the proportion below income poverty in 1999-00
i.e. 53 % vs. 26 % (Bajpai Nirupam, Jeffrey D. Sachs, Nicole
Volavika, 2005). Still as per this measure 35% of population
is suffering from extreme poverty, this is nowhere close to
even the latest estimates of poverty by planning
commission. According to the latest report of NCEUS
(
National Commission for Enterprises in Unorganized
Sector) nearly 77% of India lives on less than half a dollar
a day. Most of these living with Rs 20 per day are from
informal sector.
This again brings us to the fact that present official poverty
line has only allowed government an opportunity to gain
success in reducing percentage of poverty on paper.
However a more realistic approach will show that large
numbers of Indians are still deprived and are not recognized
as poor.
India ranks 66 out of 88 countries in Global Hunger Index 2010. Similarly the India State Hunger Index (ISHI) is
prepared as a tool to calculate hunger and malnutrition at the regional level in India. It calculated for 17 states
in India, covering more than 95 percent of the population. According to the index even the rich states like that
of Punjab ranks far below in comparisons to other 33 countries ranked under GHI. Other poor states of India
like Bihar, Jharkhand, and Madhya Pradesh have index scores similar to countries like Zimbabwe, Haiti, Ethiopia
and Chad. India also ranks below several Sub-Saharan nations, such as Cameroon, Kenya, Nigeria, and
Sudan, even though per capita income in these countries is much lower than Indiab s.
Conclusive Policies - Combating the demon of Hunger
In view of the large scale problem of hunger the following recommendations are made to combat the problem-
The solutions for eradicating the problem of hunger can view in following manner-
a)
Availability of required quantity of nutritional food. Can be provided through charity, public distribution
etc. This will include the age structure, growing population, change in food habits as per work and living
conditions.
b)
Timely and Economical access to food. This will include the buying capacity of people, economic
security and sustainable growth of people. This can be provided through market regulation, government
support, public private partnership etc.
Government Support
b "
Proper execution of PDS for distribution of subsidized food grains to the poor; this requires identification
of people living under below poverty line and collaborating with NGOs to reach the poorest sections of
the community.
(132)
b "
Government involvement is also required for peace keeping, easing civil unrest, maintaining diplomatic
relations with the neighboring nations, control extremist movements, , effective mobilization of media for
generating awareness among people and for activating state agencies to solve Hunger.
b "
b "
Following are some major government schemes addressing the issue of Hunger albeit; the fruits of these
schemes are yet to be reaped.
Nutrition education is delivered through multiple venues and involves activities at the individual, community,
and policy levels.Nutrition education makes a significant difference which needs to be provided consistently
to poor and illiterate people at village, urban slums and with the poor communities. Family level health
counseling for prevention of different diseases and malnutrition and for the better utilization of available
natural resources helps the poorest communities. Nutrition education to communities helps to solve the
problem of chronic persistent hunger.
REFERENCES
b "
Bhalla Surjit and Tirthatanmay das (2005), Pre and Post Reforms in India: A Revised Look at Emplyment,
Wages and Inequality, India Policy Forum.
b "
b "
Five Year Plans, Various, Planning Commission, Government of India.
Guruswamy Mohan and Ronald Abrham (Feb, 2006), Redefining Poverty: A New Poverty Line for a New
India, Centre for Policy Alternatives, New Delhi
b "
b "
Indian Planning Experience, a Statistical Profile (1999), Planning Commission, Government of India.
planningcommission.gov.in/data/stat/dt_pling99.pdf.
Kumar Jayant and Hitesh Bhatia 2008, Poverty Beyond Poverty: The Changing Perspectives, Conference
Volume, 38th-Gujarat Economic Conference, Gujarat Economic Association, SPIESR Ahmedabad.
b "
b "
National Commission for Enterprises in the Unorganized Sector (NCEUS, 2007), www.nceus.gov.in.
National Strategy for Urban Poor (NSUP, 2007), Urban Poverty: an Overview, http:/
www.nationalstrategyforurbanpoor.org/yashada/html/urban_poverty/u_p_overview_bottom.htm
b "
Sinha Archana (Dec, 2005), Book review, Urban Poverty in India, Vikalp. http://vakindia.org/archives/
Vikalp-Dec2005.pdf.
b "
b "
b "
The National Medical Journal Of India (2007), Health Care in Urban Slums in India, Vol 20, No 3,
http://nmji.in/archives/Volume_20_3_May_June/editorial/Editorial_2.pdf.
Thorbecke Erik (Aug, 2005), Multi-dimensional Poverty: Conceptual and Measurement Issue, UNDP
International Poverty Centre.
b "
Virmani Arvind (Feb, 2006), Poverty and Hunger in India: what is needed to eliminate them, Working
paper no 1/2006, Planning Commission, Government of India.
b "
b "
b "
World Bank (2011), India Country Overview, September 2011
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nutrition_Education
http://articles.economictimes.indiatimes.com/2012-04-23/news/31386876_1_exclusion-households-urban-
areas
b "
http://www.akshayapatra.org/role-ngos
(133)