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Why Hungry Indians Need Skinnier Politicians

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India is caught in an ugly societal whodunit: Although the per capita gross domestic product for the country’s 1.2 billion people has almost doubled over the past decade, to $838, malnutrition and hunger are still rampant, especially among children.

A months-long series of investigative reports by Bloomberg News highlights that India’s failure to adequately feed its people is a crisis born not from want of money but, more damningly, from lack of political will to confront pervasive corruption and incompetence.

Death by starvation is increasingly uncommon. Yet in 2005, when the most recent edition of India’s National Family Health Survey was published, 21 percent of all adults were malnourished, compared with 17 percent a decade earlier. India still has, by a large margin, the greatest number of malnourished children -- in India’s case, 46 percent of all children under 5. Half of all children under 3 are underweight, and eight in 10 are anemic -- a dismal distinction that puts India near the bottom of this particular global health scorecard.

India spends a growing amount of money to feed its poor. Since 1965, with the creation of the Food Corporation of India, it has operated the world’s largest public food distribution system. This year’s budget will allocate almost $14 billion to purchases of wheat, rice and other foods that the poor, who are issued Below Poverty Line ration cards, can purchase at cut-rate prices from almost half a million Fair Price Shops. The Food Corporation of India is required to stockpile 32 million metric tons of rice and wheat, and it now has more than twice that amount on hand, thanks to record harvests.
Rotten, Crooked

Unfortunately, less than half the food aid intended for the poor ultimately reaches them. Grain rots in open bins, sheds and warehouses before it can be distributed. Crooked politicians and middlemen divert it to resell at inflated prices. Ration cards don’t go to the right people: One 2009 study estimated not only that a majority of India’s poor did not have a BPL card, but also that about 44 percent of BPL cards went to the non-poor.

According to data compiled by Bloomberg, in the state of Uttar Pradesh alone, as much as $14.5 billion in food aid went missing during the past decade. One whistle-blower pointed the finger at the state’s food minister, Raja Bhaiya, who has separately been charged with (but never convicted of) attempted murder, kidnapping, armed robbery and electoral fraud. All told, according to a World Bank study released in 2011, 58 percent of India’s food aid is lost to graft and waste. A fact-finding commission for India’s Supreme Court said that the food system had failed in its mission and “fallen into a shambles.”

The Indian government’s response hasn’t been particularly commendable. When a Bloomberg reporter pressed K.V. Thomas, India’s food minister, for his response to reports of corruption and mismanagement, he denied any problems and kicked the reporter out. Five overlapping investigations over the past seven years into food diversion schemes have produced no convictions.

Notwithstanding the demonstrated weaknesses of the current approach, the coalition led by Prime Minister Manmohan Singh is seeking to introduce a Food Security Bill that expands the sale of subsidized grain to nearly 70 percent of the population, and increases the amount spent each year on the program by at least 320 billion rupees ($5.8 billion).

We don’t think that throwing more good money and grain down a literal rathole will help India’s poor. Instead, India would be better served by expanding direct cash payments, as a pilot program has done in three states. Moving cash is a lot easier and more transparent than moving grain, and seemingly more effective: recipients of the cash had better diets, and ration shops actually improved the quality of their food, presumably because they were worried about customers going elsewhere.
Savvy Leadership

What India needs to help its poor is the same kind of bold, savvy political leadership that enabled Brazil’s Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva to reduce hunger and poverty in his country with a program that relied on cash transfers. Sadly, that kind of innovation isn’t on the horizon.

Still, India can take steps to make the current approach work better. These include accelerating plans to institute photo IDs for assistance beneficiaries and to computerize the food delivery system, enabling better tracking of grain shipments. To target aid recipients better, the government could use not just national and state income and consumption benchmarks but also make greater use of local community appraisals, drawing on best practices in different states.

The national government also needs to collect more and better data on the extent of malnutrition. Activists were alarmed by the decision to shut down the website of the National Family Health Survey, and by reports that its next edition would be postponed. It needs instead to speed distribution of NFHS results. As it is, there will already be a 10-year gap between surveys, making it hard to judge the effectiveness of programs.

Of course, we can’t resist pointing out the added benefit of accelerated economic reforms: foreign investment that can create jobs and, not least, generate tax revenue to support food assistance programs. Indians may legitimately debate the role of the “foreign hand” in their economy. The inexcusable corruption and waste in its food aid programs, though, are the work of homegrown crooks, not foreign multinationals. That’s a problem only Indians can solve. As B. R. Ambedkar, the champion of the poorest castes, said in marking the introduction of India’s constitution, 62 years ago, “If hereafter things go wrong, we have nobody to blame except ourselves.”

Read more opinion online from Bloomberg View. Subscribe to receive a daily e-mail highlighting new View editorials, columns and op-ed articles.

Today’s highlights: the editors on how to improve lives of retail workers; Caroline Baum on watching the Fed and other gossip; Michael Kinsley on how voters don’t really want change; William Pesek on Indonesia’s failure to sustain reforms; Jonathan Weil on the accounting industry’s watchdog committee; Whitney Tilson and Anthony Scaramucci on coming together to raise taxes and cut entitlements.

Why Hungry Indians Need Skinnier Politicians - Bloomberg
 
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Coming from a bangladesi? Most of hungry indians are illegal bangladesis.... Last time i heard was india donated rice to bangladesh.... (sorry to hurt bangladesi people's feelings but this guy MBI dont care about poor people let alone indians).... i have seen this guy enjoys every death take place in india.... this kind of people lives short and vanishes.... The problem with short life people is they dont believe in Karma....
 
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Skinnier politicians will die quickly! Or maybe some skinnier people who will come as politicians and do corruption and become fat and healthy. Lol
 
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Wastage through the Food distribution system is definitely there - lakhs of tons of food grains go waste.

Malnutrition is a definite problem - guess Indians as a habit do not take proper food consumption very seriously, even people who can afford do not consume proper levels of nutrients to qualify as properly nutritioned.

It will improve slowly and surely.
 
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skinnier dark complexion are more racist hatred comparatively fat one which is done in a test in recent survey in the university of USA which is proved, and people in india like skinnier same as bal takeray leader of Hindu extremist wing shiva cena parasite who was skinnier too and spread-ed out pool of bloods in india
 
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Wastage through the Food distribution system is definitely there - lakhs of tons of food grains go waste.

Malnutrition is a definite problem - guess Indians as a habit do not take proper food consumption very seriously, even people who can afford do not consume proper levels of nutrients to qualify as properly nutritioned.




It will improve slowly and surely.
India needs to a major reform on food distribution. There is definitely enough. But it's policies towards storage and consumption need to be changed. And knowing Indian bureaucracy, that can take a $hit load of time.
 
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In order to cover up indian dirt poor indians and hungry population, india often tag them as illegals. But sheer lie and numbers are catching western media attention and indian lie is falling apart.
 
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In order to cover up indian dirt poor indians and hungry population india often tag them as illegals. But sheer lie and numbers are catching western media and indian lie is falling apart.

Bangladesh is the tenious beacon of hope and prosperity in an otherwise grim and desolate Indian subcontinent.

_63992461_bangladesh_flood_dhaka_g.jpg


As seen above, one can see the river of prosperity runs high in this mighty nation. Its people are drenched in wealth, both physical and emotional. Such a righteous and industrious persons.
 
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Bangladesh is the tenious beacon of hope and prosperity in an otherwise grim and desolate Indian subcontinent.

_63992461_bangladesh_flood_dhaka_g.jpg


As seen above, one can see the river of prosperity runs high in this mighty nation. Its people are drenched in wealth, both physical and emotional. Such a righteous and industrious persons.

:rofl: :rofl: :rofl:
 
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Once again Bangladeshi come up with their agenda. Claiming them most Prosperous in south asia and other as most poor,hungry. Bangladesh can not survive one flood.
 
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In order to cover up indian dirt poor indians and hungry population india often tag them as illegals. But sheer lie and numbers are catching western media and indian lie is falling apart.

Bro do you even manufacture except some low quality chaddi and other garments? Bangladeshis talking about poverty in other countries be it any is hilarious
 
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I went to the website and read few of the comments and one Nisha Talwar has put forward some nice observations

Nisha Talwar 2 days ago
Well, many Indian journalists and economists have investigated these issues for a long time - so your investigation doesn't throw up anything that is new - if I may say so. (and you are relying on some old statistics). I have been investigating food security in India as part of my academic research. A couple of points.....

1. There is very little hunger in India, except among a small section of the vulnerable people. The people who go hungry are primarily the homeless and others who are utterly destitute. A graduate student from my university did a careful survey in two slums in Calcutta - she found that according to the USDA food security questionnaire (a gold standard) around 12% of the population in the slums are food insecure.And this was IN a slum. The percentage of Indians who are food insecure is likely to be around 5% or less.

2. What about malnutrition? The biggest mistake in public commentary on this issue is that hunger is confused with malnutrition. People think malnutrition is explained by the fact that poor people can't afford to buy food. Mostly it is not that. Even the middle class in India have an absurdly high malnutrition rate by global standards. It could be due to certain peculiarities of the Indian diet or many other factors. Poor public sanitation and gender discrimination are also discussed as factors explaining the high malnutrition rate.

3. You are right that the public distribution system is mismanaged and vastly corrupt - that has been known a long time. But in such matters, talking about "India" is quite meaningless, because administering the programs is the duty of the state government. The better governed states have already reformed the system which had minimized corruption. An example is Chattisgarh - it is a poor, tribal dominated state, but they have an excellent distribution system for food subsidies with minimal leakage (interestingly they don't rely on cash transfers, but on food distribution). But some very large states like U.P are poorly governed and the system is a mess. I broadly support the call for cash transfers and discontinuing food subsidies in kind, but remember that won't necessarily fix malnutrition, because the problem of malnutrition is complex and it is not about hunger.

4. Food security law proposed by the government is going to be a fiscal disaster - it is also based on mistaking malnutrition for hunger. The Indian government is ignorant enough to formulate their policies based on a shallow understanding of issues and demands by activists/media. That's one reason why India will continue to do poorly.
 
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