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Children Are Hungrier In Modi's India Than In Kim's North Korea

onebyone

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Panos Mourdoukoutas
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published Global Hunger Index (GHI), which ranks India 100 out of the 119 countries surveyed. That’s seven notches below North Korea, and seven notches above the bottom of the list, which is occupied by Afghanistan.

The index includes four components: undernourishment, child mortality, child wasting, and child stunting. The survey finds a “disturbing reality of the country’s stubbornly high proportions of malnourished children” for India.

Apparently, Modi’s magic hasn’t touched India’s hungry children, at least not in a meaningful way.

High levels of hunger among children is a sign of persistent poverty in one of the world’s largest emerging market economies that has experienced rapid economic growth and booming equity markets in recent years.

Investors should pay close attention to it. Persistent poverty together with corruption are two factors that eventually kill emerging market growth and dampen equity market rallies.

High levels of child hunger in Modi’s India may come as a surprise to some. Modi’s Administration has been getting high marks from international organizations in a number of metrics. Like international competitiveness, ease of doing business, innovation, and credit rating, as was previously discussed here.

To be fair, persistent hunger among children is a chronic problem for India. And it is part of a bigger problem of rising income inequality in the country.
That’s well documented in the Thomas Piketty study, which finds that the gap between the rich and the poor today is worse than it was under British rule.

Apparently, children’ health, nutrition, and education haven’t been a priority for India’s upper or upper middle classes, which rule the country. “Policy making is still dominated by upper-class or upper middle-class people,” says LIU Post Economics Professor Udayan Roy.“They are interested in superficial aspects of national glory, such as sending a spacecraft to Mars. The upper classes are not interested so much in the health, nutrition, and education of the poor people. When I talk to my family people, they are bragging about their 4G mobile phones, they are bragging that they holidayed in Thailand, etc. When I talk about the statistics about the poor, they change the subject.”

Religious beliefs may be a problem here, too. “The Hindu religion takes a fatalistic view of these things: whatever is the current reality is irrelevant,” adds Professor Roy. “Just keep the gods happy. Then you will be reincarnated into a better life later. There is not much of an interest in making life better NOW.”

Still, child hunger rates have fallen under the Modi administration. And plans are under way to eliminate malnourishment by 2022.

But Modi has much more work to do to make sure that poverty doesn’t undermine its reforms.

My recent book The Ten Golden Rules Of Leadership is publishedby AMACOM, and can be found here.
https://www.forbes.com/sites/panosm...ndia-than-in-kims-north-korea/2/#6036fc2943b5
 
https://cdn.relaymedia.com/amp/www.weforum.org/agenda/2017/10/india-is-hungrier-than-north-korea

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India has a higher rate of malnutrition then North Korea and Myanmar, but aims to completely free by 2022
Image: REUTERS/Adnan Abid

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Religious beliefs may be a problem here, too. “The Hindu religion takes a fatalistic view of these things: whatever is the current reality is irrelevant,” adds Professor Roy. “Just keep the gods happy. Then you will be reincarnated into a better life later. There is not much of an interest in making life better NOW.”

Hinduism is an obstacle to development.
 
I wonder how regular Indian folk accepts these conditions.

Maybe they are really being kept perfectly uninformed.
No...you don't know the typical Indian. They are informed and they know how fck up their country is but they will never admit it. If we were in their shoes, we won't even be talking, they would argue back. This is their talent. Either way, nothing changes, they still starve.
 
No...you don't know the typical Indian. They are informed and they know how fck up their country is but they will never admit it. If we were in their shoes, we won't even be talking, they would argue back. This is their talent. Either way, nothing changes, they still starve.

Interesting mentality. On the other hand, perhaps the voices (braggers and the shameless) we hear belong mostly to the lucky few and the hundreds of millions of less lucky even do not have access to basic education. Maybe they are so busy with survival that pollution or children death from hunger becomes secondary.

If I were a corrupt politician, I would want to work in India, not in China.
 
98% brainwashed Indians believe India is way ahead like 15 years ahead of China.

What can you expect them to know ground realities
 
Religious beliefs may be a problem here, too. “The Hindu religion takes a fatalistic view of these things: whatever is the current reality is irrelevant,” adds Professor Roy. “Just keep the gods happy. Then you will be reincarnated into a better life later. There is not much of an interest in making life better NOW.”

This paragraph partially explained the reasons why they are so far behind China. They need social and cultural revolutions, otherwise there is no hope for this country.
 
That's weird, as far as I know Vietnam can harvest rice 3 times per year and export food.
We are a major food exporter, can feed the entire population of Japan by our food surpluses. The minority ethnics in mountainous regions constitute 90 percent of the poor. The government needs to create special programs to bring education, jobs and income to tackle the root of the poverty.
 
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