Realities of food insecurity: India worse than Ethiopia in many indicators
India sees itself as an emerging world power, but doubts about the direction of its development remain
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Health workers form the backbone of Surat’s impressive monitoring and recording system, which reduced malaria positive cases in the city from 54,000 during 1988-1994 to 12,000 during 2003 -2016
Despite India’s fast economic growth and poverty reduction over the past few decades, food insecurity remains very high. This puzzle has been named the “South Asian enigma”. Some indicators of food insecurity, especially child undernourishment rates, are now worse in India than in Ethiopia. This is despite the fact that Ethiopia has only a quarter of India’s per capita income and has suffered many famines in the 20th century.
A comparison of how the governments of these two countries manage food insecurity suggests that the key to resolving the South Asian enigma lies in the nourishment and sanitation of children in their first 1,000 days of life – from conception to their second birthday.