General Studies Paper 2
Introduction
- India may be the fastest growing large economy of the world, but it is also facing accelerating food-price inflation. The rise in the price of food first accelerated sharply in 2019, and has climbed in most years thereafter. In July this year, annual inflation exceeded 11%, the highest in a decade.
State of Food Security and Nutrition in the World
- The ‘State of Food Security and Nutrition in the World’ of the Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO) estimates the proportion of the population across countries unable to afford a healthy diet.
- The figure for India in 2021 is devastating to note — an estimated 74% of the population cannot afford a healthy diet.
- Given a population of 1,400 million, this makes for approximately one billion Indians.
Finding is plausible
- A study reported found that while the cost of preparing a thaali at home has risen by 65%, in this period, the average wage of a manual worker rose by 38% and that of a salaried worker by 28%.
- The implied reduction in purchasing power is considerable, and it would be reasonable to expect that food consumption has been impacted.
- This would be in line with the reported rise in the prevalence of anaemia, mostly induced by nutrient deficiency, in the latest National Family Health Survey undertaken over 2019-21.
- Over 50% of adult women were estimated to be anaemic. This suggests that the FAO’s finding, that over half of India cannot afford a healthy diet, is plausible.
- Ensuring that Indians have access to a healthy diet is the most important task of economic policy today.
- Macroeconomic policy, relied upon to control inflation, has proved to be useless in the context.
- The Reserve Bank of India has failed in this task, with the inflation rate mostly higher than the target for four years by now. Its approach of contracting output when the inflation rate rises — misleadingly termed “inflation targeting” — does nothing to manage food inflation stemming from the supply side.
- Central banks are incapable of solving this problem, it must be said within any time frame. It is necessary to intervene on the supply side to ensure that food is produced at a steady price by raising the yield on land.
The significance of the Green Revolution
- India has rich experience in this area, having engineered a Green Revolution in the 1960s, but it is not being tapped.
- At the time, reeling under extreme food shortage following two successive droughts, the government orchestrated a supply-side response by providing farmers with high-yielding seeds, cheap credit, and assured prices through procurement.
- This succeeded spectacularly. Within a few years India was no longer dependent on food imports.
- If there was a single event that aided India’s quest to be self-reliant in the highly polarised climate of the Cold War, it was this.
- However, to have engineered the Green Revolution in India at a time when it was a desperately poor country challenged by having to ensure food security to a staggeringly large number is perhaps more significant.
- With hindsight, we can see that mistakes were made, among them the rampant use of chemical fertilizer, fuelled by subsidy, which degraded the soil.
- There was also the reliance on procurement prices rather than productivity increase to ensure farm incomes, which fuelled inflation.
- We also see that the policy was almost exclusively focused on cereals rather than pulses, the main source of protein for most Indians.
- However, rather than carping about the errors made in an extraordinarily successful economic policy intervention, we should be correcting them now.
- At the same time, we should focus on the specific goal of lowering the cost of producing food.
Initiatives to work on
- Expanding on each of these proposals would be in order. It has been pointed out for some time that increased public expenditure on irrigation is not reflected in an increase in irrigated area — whether due to waste or the diversion of funds has not been established.
- The ongoing fragmentation of already small land holdings lowers the capacity for productivity-enhancing capital investment, for which leasing is a solution.
- India’s network of public agricultural research institutes needs to be energised to resume the sterling role they had played in the 1960s.
- Finally, extension has now more or less vanished from where once the gram sevak was a familiar figure in the village, playing a crucial role in the dissemination of best practices. It must be revived.
- These initiatives should be dovetailed into a programme for the manifold increase of protein production, which India is severely deficient in.
- In all the areas identified above, the role of States is crucial.
Conclusion
- It was the Green Revolution that made the first dent on poverty in India. So, the poor did benefit from this strategy. Similarly, now, in order to ensure that all Indians have permanent access to a healthy diet, no approach consistent with ecological security must be off the table.
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