Malnutrition, especially among children, is growing despite abundant availability of food and coverage of two-thirds of the country’s population under the National Food Security Act. This bitter truth has time and again been highlighted by various studies and surveys. The latest alert has come from the National Family Health Survey 2019-20 released by the health ministry. It shows that the proportion of children suffering from stunting (low height), wasting (underweight) and anaemia (emaciation) has risen perceptibly since the last such survey in 2015-16. Earlier, the Global Hunger Index 2020, released in October, had placed India at 94th position among 107 nations, in the “serious” hunger category, mainly because of rampant undernourishment and malnourishment (hidden hunger) among children below five. Insufficient and unbalanced nutrition results in poor physical and mental growth, leading to low productivity in adulthood. Research has suggested that 90 per cent of the brain grows by age five, so proper nutrition in the early years can make future decades 50 per cent more productive.

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