Sustainable Food and Nutritional Security
for All – A priority Agenda for the Nation
From a
grain deficit country to a surplus producer of wheat and rice within a span of
four decades or so, India notwithstanding its huge population has managed to
feed them without resorting to imports.
As the World
Food Day is being celebrated today, it would be fascinating to trace
incredible journey of India from a food importing country to a surplus one
within a span of around four decades.
Since
independence from the British-rule in 1947, India, having the second biggest
population in the world, faced two key economic challenges: achieving food
security and alleviating poverty.
In a
country which relies predominantly on agriculture, the focus was to promote
growth in agricultural sector to meet both of these challenges. Agricultural
promotion programmes were initiated to increase food production for feeding
close to 30 crore people in the 1950s. It was the time (1950s and 60’s) when
India faced huge food shortage and had to receive food under PL 480, a
programme initiated by the United States for providing assistance to countries.
Dependence
on agricultural imports till early 1960s convinced planners that India's
growing population, as well as concerns about national independence, security,
and political stability, required self-sufficiency in food production. This led
to formulation of measures such as agricultural improvement called the Green
Revolution, the public distribution system and price supports system for
farmers
From a
net importer of food since 1950s, India has transformed itself in the
production of food grains (mainly rice, wheat, coarse cereals and pulses)
during the last few decades. From a mere 50 million tonne of annual food grain
production in 1950s, India last year (2013-14) has produced an all-time record
264 million tonne of food grains, mainly attributed to the significant jump in
rice and wheat output.
In the
last few years, India has also emerged as the world’s biggest exporters of rice
after shipping more than 10 million tonne of grain annually.
The
introduction of high-yielding varieties of seeds and the increased use of
fertilizers and irrigation under the 'Green Revolution' initiative in late
1960s resulted in rapid expansion of agricultural land and boost in
agricultural production. The Green Revolution continued with the policy of
expanding cultivable land. The striking feature of green revolution was taking
up of double-cropping which implies planting two crops per year on the same
agricultural land.
The
Indian Council for Agricultural Research (ICAR) under the Ministry of
Agriculture played a crucial role in the Green Revolution era of the late
1960s. ICAR developed new strains of high yield value seeds, mainly wheat and
rice, millet and corn. The most noteworthy seed was the K68 variety for wheat
which pushed up food grain production significantly during the subsequent
decade.
The
‘Green Revolution’ resulted in a record grain output of 131 million tons during
1978-79. This established India as one of the world's biggest
agricultural producers. No other country in the world which attempted the Green
Revolution recorded such levels of success. India also became an exporter of
food grains during the same time.
Public
Distribution System (PDS): a key instrument in poverty alleviation
Public
Distribution of essential commodities had been in existence in India since
independence. PDS, with its focus on distribution of foodgrains in urban
scarcity areas, had emanated from the critical food shortages of the 1960s. The
distribution of subsidised foodgrains through PDS had substantially contributed
to the containment of rise in foodgrains prices and ensured access of food to urban
consumers. As the national agricultural production had grown in the aftermath
of Green Revolution, the outreach of PDS was extended to tribal blocks and
areas of high incidence of poverty in the 1970s and 1980s.
PDS, till
1992, was a general entitlement scheme for all consumers without any specific
target. The Revamped Public Distribution System was launched in June 1992 in
1775 blocks throughout the country. The Targeted Public Distribution System
(TPDS) was introduced with effect from June, 1997.
The scheme when introduced, was intended to benefit about 6 crore poor families, for whom a quantity of about 7.2 million tonne of food grains was earmarked annually. TPDS also envisaged subsidized distribution of food grains to poor families -- classified in India as Below Poverty Line, Above Poverty and poorest of poor families identified as Antyodaya Anna Yojana - AAY.
Since
1997, the scale of issue of the BPL families has been gradually increased from
10 kg to 35 kg. per family per month. The quantum of allocation of foodgrains
to BPL families was increased from 10 kg to 20 kg per family per month with
effect from 1st April, 2000. The allocation of foodgrains for the BPL families
was further increased from 20 kg. to 25 kg. per family per month with effect
from July, 2001.
Initially,
the Antyodaya families were provided 25 kg of food grains per family per month
at the time of launch of the scheme in December, 2000. The scale of
issue of foodgrains under APL, BPL and AAY has been revised to 35 kg per
family from the beginning of fiscal year 2002-3 with a view to enhancing the
food security at the household level.
The
central issue price for rice to be distributed under TPDS for BPL and APL
families in the states was fixed at Rs 5.65 and Rs 8.3 per kg respectively
while in the case of wheat it had been fixed at Rs 4.15 and Rs 6.10 per kg
respectively.
The
Antyodaya families get the rice and wheat at Rs 3 and Rs 2 a kg respectively.
However the state governments have prerogatives to provide cheaper foodgrains
below the central issue price under TPDS by contributing their own financial
resources.
The
government currently allocates grain to 6.52 crore BPL families besides 2.43
crore chronic-poverty-affected families under the Antyodaya families under
TPDS. The TPDS also covers around 8 crore APL families
For
ensuring uninterrupted supplies of foodgrains mostly consisting of wheat and
rice and ensuring sufficient buffer stocks, the Food Corporation of India (FCI)
was setup under an act in 1964. The key objective of the FCI was to also ensure
effective price support operations for safeguarding the interests of the
farmers through providing Minimum
Support
Price (MSP) to farmers. Since its inception, FCI has played a significant role
in India's success in transforming the crisis management oriented food security
into a stable security system.
However
since last few years, the government was contemplating providing legal status
to the food security to large mass of people. After debate and deliberations in
and outside parliament, the National Food Security Act (NFSA), 2013 was passed
last year. Under the NFSA, each person in identified households will get the 5 kg
of grain a month at heavily subsidised prices — Rs 3 per kg for rice, Rs 2 for
wheat and Rs 1 for coarse grains.
NFSA will
expand the base of TPDS to around 84 crore population from the current coverage
of around 48 crore population. The government is expected to incur an
expenditure of more than Rs 1.2 lakh crore annually after NFSA is rolled out
nationally.
Meanwhile,
the government has asked states to roll out NFSA by April, 2015. Till now eleven states and union
territories – Punjab, Haryana, Rajasthan, Himachal Pradesh, Madhya Pradesh,
Bihar, Chhattisgarh, Maharashtra, Karnataka, Delhi and Chandigarh have so far
implemented the Act — some of them fully and others partially.
However,
many of the larger states, including Uttar Pradesh, West Bengal, Odisha,
Jharkhand, Andhra Pradesh and Telengana, with a substantial poor population,
have yet to take the plunge.
“We want whole supply chain management of Foodgrains under NFSA to be digitized and many states have been rather slow in their work,” a food minister Ram Vilas Pawan said.
Due to
increase in Foodgrains production and procurement by FCI, the government
agencies have huge foodgrain stocks which far exceed the requirement. On
October 1st this year FCI along with state government owned agencies
had a grain stocks of more than 52.3 million tonne (32.2 million tonne wheat
and 20.1 million of rice). These huge grains stocks are against buffer stocks
and strategic reserve norms of 21.2 million tonne.
“Huge
grains stocks have not only helped uninterrupted supplies of grains to TPDS, it
has also ensured that domestic prices remain stable,” Shri Paswan said.
Impact on
poverty reduction:
As far as
India is concerned, it has taken a substantial leap on the Global Hunger Index.
According to a recent report, India has gone up to the 55th position as
compared to last year's 63rd. This means that there has been significantly
lesser number of hungry and malnourished people across the country. The credit
goes to the several government programmes including TPDS that were rolled out
to tackle malnutrition.
Experts
say that the government must in collaboration with states plug loopholes in the
TPDS so that grains reach the targeted population. Computerization of TPDS and
beneficiaries lists have been going on a fast pace.
The
government at present has its task cut out for creating huge modern
infrastructure for storing and transporting food grains. More than 15 million
ton of food grains storage capacity would have to be added during next few
years. For saving food grains from vagaries of weather, the government needs to
take up food grains storage creation in a mission mode so that access to the
food grains could be improved. Better stocks management would also lead to
keeping prices under control and ensure smooth supply of grain under NFSA.
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