×

UPSC Courses

editorial plus

Editorial Plus

GS-III : S&T

Covid-19 and issue of malnutrition

  • 27 April, 2021

  • 5 Min Read

Covid-19 and issue of malnutrition

Introduction

  • The political and social handling of the COVID-19 pandemic have added to the persisting issues of food insecurity faced by millions.
  • India consistently has ranked poorly in GHI (ranking 102 among 117 countries in the Global Hunger Index 2019).
  • With the second, more vigorous wave of COVID-19, the inability of those already on the brink of subsistence to absorb a second economic shock cannot be overlooked even as the current health crisis is creating havoc.

Data collection, findings

  • The Rapid Rural Community Response, or RCRC to COVID-19, a collective of over 60 non-governmental organisations has collected three rounds of data since the lockdown.
  • The data provide crucial evidence of the nature and persistence of food and financial insecurity among the poor residing in rural areas.

Cutting down on food

  • The most recent data suggest a persistence of cutting down on food even nine months after the first lockdown, during the seeming “revival” period.
  • While 40% of the sample cut down on food during the first lockdown.
  • Households reported cutting down on nutritious food80% cut down on milk, vegetables, pulses and oil (around 50% reported cutting down on pulses alone).
  • Disaggregating the figure, we find that the poorer, socially marginalised Dalits, and those with lesser access to food security schemes (such as migrants) faced more severe food insecurity.
  • Comparing similar households, we find households in Uttar Pradesh and Jharkhand were faring among the worst performing States.
  • These reductions will undoubtedly further accelerate the impending effects on children’s nutrition, as highlighted in the National Family Health Survey or NFHS-V (2019-20) and the Global Food Policy Report, 2021.
  • The loss in nutrition may have come as a consequence of people losing their jobs and/or being pushed into lower income brackets over time due to the nature and handling of the pandemic.

Reduction in incomes

  • Pew Research Center has indicated that the middle class in India has shrunk by over 32 million households in the past year.
  • We find an indication of a downward shift in incomes even among a much poorer sample of households.
  • It is thus unsurprising that around 30% households were also seeking loans, and among them, at least half of them reported needing loans for food, all indicative of the debilitating food and financial insecurities that poor households continue to face.

Migrants on the margins

  • The second wave of the pandemic comes on the back of an uneven recovery and persistence of crippling food and financial insecurity among the poorest households, especially migrants.
  • Migrants who have travelled to cities only months ago are again travelling back to their villages.
  • In our sample, 74% households had migrant members who had returned to the village during or after the lockdown (in mid-2020); 57% among them had gone back to the destination city by December-January, with 59% of those remaining also wanting to go back.
  • It was the relatively disadvantaged who had not been able to find their way back to the cities.
  • There was limited support for migrants even in existing social protection schemes such as the Mahatma Gandhi National Rural Employment Guarantee Act (MGNREGA).
  • For example, among the poorest, households with migrants were more likely to seek work than those without (43% versus 32%), but less likely to get work (49% versus 59%) under the scheme.

Steps to be taken

  • The Government has promised to restart the Pradhan Mantri Garib Kalyan Anna Yojana (PMGKAY) with 5 kg of rice/wheat per person per month for the next two months.
  • The government needs to provide similar support for stabler longer periods; expand the current offering to include nutritious foods like pulses;
  • Address issues faced in existing schemes such as MGNREGA (like delays in wages and rationing); and
  • New schemes such as a potential urban employment scheme should be explored.
  • Food security schemes such as ration provided to children through anganwadis, Public Distribution System and mid-day meal scheme in primary schools need to be ramped up systematically and urgently.
  • For migrants stuck in cities without work, community kitchens (such as Amma canteens) are required.
  • The most vulnerable will need more predictable and stable support than ever before.

 

 

Source: TH

Toppers

Search By Date

Newsletter Subscription
SMS Alerts

Important Links

UPSC GS Mains Crash Course - RAW Prelims Answer Key 2024