Hunger comes down in India to 13.7 pc

Extreme poverty

Rama Krishna Sangem

In what could come as a piece of good news, hunger in India — as measured by the Prevalence of Undernourishment (PoU) by the United Nation’s Food and Agriculture Organisation (FAO) — has come down from 16.6 per cent of the population in the 2020-2022 to 13.7 per cent in 2021-23, the latest report on the State of Food Security and Nutrition in the World (SOFI 2024) showed.

This means that around 39.3 million people have come out of undernourishment between the two periods, NITI Aayog member Ramesh Chand said on Tuesday. Chand was discussing the report and its findings with a select group of journalists on the sidelines of a press meet held to announce the 32nd International Conference of Agricultural Economists to be held in Delhi from August 2.

The conference, which will see participation of over 700 delegates from across the world, is being held after almost 60 years and will discuss all topical issues related to agriculture, including the rising subsidy burden, climate change, and growing nutritional challenges.

 

No rise in hunger after Covid

Chand, meanwhile, said that the latest findings of the UN-FAO report, which is based on updated data furnished by the central government, also put to rest the controversy on whether hunger as measured by the prevalence of malnourishment has risen in India post-Covid.

Back in October last year, the central government had roundly criticized the UN-FAO’s SOFI 2023 that showed that PoU in India has increased post-Covid from 14 per cent in 2017-19 to 16.6 per cent of the population in 2020-22 (see chart).

The government had then said that the FAO estimate is based on the “Food Insecurity Experience Scale (FIES)” survey conducted through Gallop World Poll, which is nothing but an “opinion poll” based on eight questions with a sample size of “3,000 respondents”.

“The data collected from a minuscule sample for a country of India’s size through FIES has been used to compute PoU value for India, which is not only wrong and unethical, it also reeks of obvious bias,” an official statement had said.

Rama Krishna Sangem

Ramakrishna chief editor of excel India online magazine and website

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Rama Krishna Sangem

Excel India national news magazine is a media startup founded and piloted by Rama Krishna Sangem, a Hyderabad based senior journalist with over three decade experience in the field of media, mostly in print journalism. His rich experience in reporting for both Telugu and English newspapers and heading a TV news channel and some online outfits will be of immense use to this venture. Excel India English news magazine seeks to fill the gap of analytical understanding to our readers who today are confronted with myriad media platforms. Our online version not only offers regular updates and commentary on happenings around us, but also gives larger stories not limited by space constraints of a print magazine. Excel India is ably run by a team of senior journalists committed to values and quality standards in the profession. We urge you all to support and guide us in this endeavour. Reach us at excelindiaweb123@gmail.com