Global Hunger Index is erroneous, based on misinformation: govt

25 Oct 2022

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The government has been providing free foodgrains to millions of low-income people across the country for well over two years now, but its efforts have been brought to naught with the Global Hunger Report 2022 released by Concern Worldwide and Welt Hunger Hilfe - two non-government organisations from Ireland and Germany, respectively, ranking India at 107 among 121 countries.

The Indian government has called the report misinformed and that the so-called Global Hunger Index as an erroneous measure of hunger which suffers from serious methodological issues.
The government sees it as part of a consistent effort to taint India’s image as a nation that does not fulfill the food security and nutritional requirements of its population.. Three out of the four indicators used for calculation of the index are related to health of children and cannot be representative of the entire population. The fourth and most important indicator estimate of proportion of undernourished (PoU) population is based on an opinion poll conducted on a very small sample size of 3,000.
The report is not only disconnected from ground reality but also chooses to deliberately overlook the government’s efforts to ensure food security for the population, especially during the Covid Pandemic. 
Taking a one-dimensional view, the report lowers India’s rank based on the estimate of proportion of undernourished (PoU) population for India at 16.3 er cent. The FAO estimate is based on “Food Insecurity Experience Scale (FIES)” Survey Module conducted through Gallop World Poll, which is an “opinion poll” based on “8 questions” with a sample size of “3,000 respondents”. The data collected from a miniscule 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. The publishing agencies of the Global Hunger Report, Concern Worldwide and Welt Hunger Hilfe, have evidently not done their due diligence before releasing the report, according to the government.
The Indian government has taken u the matter with FAO not to use such estimates based on FIES survey module data in July 2022 as the statistical output of the same will not be based on merit. Though an assurance was forthcoming that there will be further engagement on this issue, the publication of the Global Hunger Index report irrespective of such factual considerations is regrettable.
Some of the questions asked to the respondent are:
“During the last 12 months, was there a time when, because of lack of money or other resources: You were worried you would not have enough food to eat? You ate less than you thought you should?
It is evident such questions do not search for facts based on relevant information about the delivery of nutritional support and assurance of food security by the Government.
The per capita dietary energy supply in India, as estimated by FAO from the Food Balance Sheets, has been increasing year-on-year owing to enhanced production of major agricultural commodities in the country over the years and there is absolutely no reason why the country’s undernourishment levels should increase.
The report comes at a time when the government is running the largest food security programme in the world. In the wake of economic disruptions caused by the unprecedented outbreak of Covid-19 in the country.
The government in March 2020 had announced the distribution of additional free-of-cost foodgrains (rice/wheat) to about 800 million National Food Security Act (NFSA) beneficiaries at the rate of 5 kg per person per month under the PM Garib Kalyan Anna Yojana (PM-GKAY), over and above the regular monthly NFSA foodgrains, ie, regular entitlements of their ration cards, thereby, effectively doubling the quantity of monthly foodgrains being normally delivered to the NFSA households, so that the poor, needy and the vulnerable households/beneficiaries do not suffer on account of non-availability of adequate foodgrains during the times of economic crisis. 
So far, under the PM-GKAY scheme, the government has allocated a total of almost 112.1 million tonnes foodgrains to the states/UTs valued at about Rs3,91,000 crore in food subsidy. The scheme has been extended till December 2022.
The distribution is  being done through state governments, who on their own further supplement the efforts by providing pulses, edible oils and condiments etc to the beneficiaries.
Under Anganwadi Services, since Covid-19 pandemic, supplementary nutrition was provided to approximately 77.1 nilion children up to the age of 6 years and to 17.8 million pregnant women and lactating mothers. 5.3 million tonnes of foodgrains (comprising 2.5 million tonnes of wheat, 1.1 million tonnes of rice, 1.6 million tonnes of fortified rice and 12,037 tonnes of jowar and bajra) was supplied.
The distribution of supplementary nutrition was undertaken by Anganwadi workers and helpers across 1.4 million anganwadis in India. Take home ration was delivered to beneficiaries at their homes every fortnight.
Under the Pradhan Mantri Matri Vandana Yojna, more than 15 million registered women were provided Rs5,000 each on the birth of their first child for wage support and nutritious food during pregnancy and post-delivery period.
The three other indicators apart from PoU, included in Global Hunger Index relate primarily to children, viz, stunting, wasting and under 5 mortality. These indicators are outcomes of complex interactions of various other factors like drinking water, sanitation, genetics, environment and utilisation of food intake apart from hunger, which is taken as the causative/outcome factor for stunting and wasting in the GHI. Calculating hunger based on mainly indicators relating to health indicators of children is neither scientific nor rational, the government pointed out.

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