http://www.tehelka.com/foodsecuritybill2013/?utm_source=wysija&utm_medium=email&utm_campaign=30_aug_2013#

How To Feed A Billion. And Why It
Pays<http://www.tehelka.com/foodsecuritybill2013/?utm_source=wysija&utm_medium=email&utm_campaign=30_aug_2013#>
*The Food Security Bill is not a spend; it is an investment, crucial for
India’s future and growth, says Shoma Chaudhury*
SHOMA CHAUDHURY <http://tehelka.com/author/shoma-chaudhury>  |
@shomachaudhury <https://twitter.com/@shomachaudhury>
August 28, 2013*
*
On 26 August, after months of wasted sessions, the Lok Sabha finally passed
a historic legislation: the Food Security
Bill<http://www.tehelka.com/tag/food-security-bill/>.
Many Indians woke two days later to headlines that the rupee had nosedived
and the Indian markets had been “food poisoned”. It was a smart phrase. It
captured the horror industry and what investors feel about the Bill. But it
also epitomised the damaging hysteria and misinformation around it. It
captured one of India’s most harsh dividing lines.

In the summer of 2012, I travelled with economists Jean Drèze and Reetika
Khera <http://www.tehelka.com/tag/reetika-khera/>through some of Uttar
Pradesh <http://www.tehelka.com/tag/uttar-pradesh/>’s most impoverished
districts. They were on a fact-finding mission, going door-to-door in the
searing sun, asking people whether they had enough to eat and whether the
government’s Public Distribution System (PDS<http://www.tehelka.com/tag/pds/>)
reached them. It was a deeply humbling experience. In hut after hut, one
was confronted by the sheer absurdity of the Indian situation. In some of
the country’s most forsaken landscapes — dust and bare scrub for miles, not
even the possibility of employment anywhere — destitute, bone-thin families
produced their pink and white ration cards with utter bewilderment. The
first, a BPL card — below poverty line — entitled them to rice, wheat, and
some sugar. The second, an APL card — above poverty line — got them only
some kerosene oil. (How can one satisfy one’s hunger with kerosene, a woman
asked in desperation?)

Often, they got neither. But what confused them the most was how one
neighbour — living in exactly the same set of debilitating circumstances —
had been picked for the pink card; and how others had been cursed with the
white. Then, of course, there were dozens of families who had no card at
all. Someone, somewhere, in some faraway city — beyond the realm of their
imagination — had determined how many poor people resided in their village,
and no matter how much their stomach ached or their children cried, they
could not get themselves on the map. They could not get work either. The
helplessness of it all was staggering.

Potentially, the Food Security
Bill<http://www.tehelka.com/tag/food-security-bill/> could
change all of that. It promises a minimum of 5 kg of cereal per person, per
month, to 75 percent of India’s rural households and 50 percent of its
urban poor at a price ranging from Rs 3 – Rs 1 a kg. This is being billed
as the largest welfare scheme in the history of the world. It is committed
to ensuring 800 million people get at least a minimum level of food in
their stomachs every day. Crucially, it also provides Rs 1,000 per month to
pregnant and lactating mothers for a period of six months; and a nutritious
meal to all children from age 0 to 3; and then, through the midday meal
scheme, up to the age of 14.

Ordinarily, this should have been a moment to celebrate. Instead,
bizarrely, a large section of India’s elite feels it has been robbed in
broad daylight. There is widespread fear that India absolutely cannot
afford such a scheme; that it will cripple an already devastated fiscal
deficit; that it will turn India into a lazy, unproductive society,
disinterested in searching for jobs; that India does not produce enough
foodgrain to meet such a commitment; that just one drought year would break
the back of the country; and that, assured of getting their food from the
government, small farmers will stop tilling their farms altogether and
India will be pushed to import foodgrain, further skewing the current
account deficit. Yashwant Sinha, a senior BJP leader and India’s former
finance minister, captured this zeitgeist when he said, “Why can’t people
work and put food in their own stomach?” One day in Uttar
Pradesh<http://www.tehelka.com/tag/uttar-pradesh/>’s
Sonbhadra district would answer that question.

The Bill is certainly not a perfect one. But the visceral hostility to it
is highly self-damaging. Firstly, its root lies in an essential failure of
vocabulary. Critics of the Bill see this as profligate government
“spending”. But to assess the merits and demerits of the Bill, one must
first correct the lens: this is not a spend, it’s an *investment*, crucial
for India’s future and growth.

Over the past two decades, economic planners and corporates alike have held
up India’s “demographic dividend” — its millions of young people, second
only to China — as one of the major keys to its buoyant
economy<http://www.tehelka.com/tag/economy/>.
But mystifyingly, against all economic logic, they refuse to invest in this
dividend. What we have, therefore, is this: almost 50 percent of India’s
children — that is one out of every two children — suffer from severe
malnutrition <http://www.tehelka.com/tag/malnutrition/>, at levels worse
than sub-Saharan Africa. They also have almost no access to healthcare;
clean water; quality schooling; toilets; or housing. What this means is
that we are nurturing literally hundreds of millions of Indians who are
bursting with aspiration but who have no tools to satisfy them. How can
they possibly become productive members of the country’s
economy<http://www.tehelka.com/tag/economy/> until
they have access to a basic platform of human dignity? (From a corporate
point of view too, how can the buying power of India’s demographic dividend
— its huge “market” — be unleashed, unless they are given basic rights and
capacities?)

For many privileged Indians — who are willing to buy bathtubs for a couple
of lakh rupees but who are aghast at their taxes being used to feed the
poor — the idea ofmalnutrition <http://www.tehelka.com/tag/malnutrition/> is
a value-neutral word. Unless one has gone chronically and repeatedly hungry
to bed, it is hard to imagine what that can do to one’s body and mind. But
this is not just bleeding-heart faff. Set aside the human and moral
catastrophe of having hundreds of millions of people going hungry every
day, but consider this: the impact
ofmalnutrition<http://www.tehelka.com/tag/malnutrition/> poses
a very real and imminent economic danger for the country. Malnutrition
severely stunts intellectual, emotional and physical growth.

Studies also show that the effect of
malnutrition<http://www.tehelka.com/tag/malnutrition/> is
most acute in the age group from 0 to 3 and this cannot be mitigated in
one’s adult life. In effect then, it’s not just that there is no employment
to be had; the fact is we are complicit in systematically creating
unemployable and under-par fellow-citizens. We are building a storm-bank of
frustration. By guaranteeing food, by guaranteeing every pregnant mother at
least a minimum level of nutrition, the Food Security
Bill<http://www.tehelka.com/tag/food-security-bill/> attempts
to strike at the very heart of this fundamental economic problem.

As Pratap Bhanu Mehta <http://www.tehelka.com/tag/pratap-bhanu-mehta/>,
director of the Centre for Policy Research, put it in an excellent *Indian
Express* column: “Has any modern society evolved without robust welfare
protection?” He goes on to add, “It’s no accident that even so-called
right-wing politicians from Bismarck to Churchill and Nixon have supported
an efficient and humane basic income guaranteed by the State.”

Or as UPA chairperson Sonia Gandhi put it, “It’s not a question of whether
we can afford to have this Bill, but rather can we afford not to?”

The question of what the Food Security
Bill<http://www.tehelka.com/tag/food-security-bill/> will
cost though is indeed a highly aggravated one. Defenders of the Bill say
the government is already spending Rs 90,000 crore on food
subsidy<http://www.tehelka.com/tag/subsidy/>:
expanding the net of beneficiaries will cost an additional Rs 30,000 crore.
This, they argue, is not something India cannot afford. Rs 1.2 lakh crore
on securing food for one’s citizens amounts to only 1.2 percent of the
country’s GDP. How can one grudge that when one compares this with other
subsidies?

Development economist Reetika Khera<http://www.tehelka.com/tag/reetika-khera/>,
for instance, points out that tax exemptions given to Indian industry in
2012-13 alone amounts to a whopping Rs 5 trillion. India’s fuel
subsidy<http://www.tehelka.com/tag/subsidy/> —
much of which is enjoyed by the rich — is approximately Rs 1.6 lakh crore.
Tax breaks given to the gold and diamond industry in the last year is Rs
60,000 crore, nearly 20 percent of the revenue forgone. (For perspective:
this industry employs 1.8 million people, which is less than 1 percent of
the Indian workforce. The Food Bill would benefit 67 percent of the
population at merely an additional cost of Rs 30,000 crore. ) The list
could go on. The point is, shaving just a little from all this would help
balance the books.

Or reverse the gaze. Examine the scams: just the irrigation scam in
Maharashtra is worth Rs 70,000 crore. Tax evasions from private mining
companies would cross many trillion. Why not urge government to fix this?
Why is it that the market can withstand this waste with stoicism, but it
panics at the prospect of providing food?

There are robust answers for many of the other fears the Bill triggers too.
For instance, it is absurd to imagine that getting a mere fistful of rice
in one’s belly every night is going to kill India’s aspiration and turn it
into a lazy society. Can one really argue that India’s poor will not work
towards better clothes, shoes, schooling and living standards for their
children, because they have allayed the basic gnawing in their stomach?

As for India’s capacity to produce foodgrain: in good monsoon years, almost
700 lakh metric tonnes of foodgrain lie rotting in warehouses or in the
open. If you laid these sacks out in a row, it would cover one million
kilometres: a road to the moon and back. Often, rather than distribute this
successfully to its poor, the government exports it at a loss to other
countries to feed cattle and pigs.

There are many other well-grounded fears about the Bill, however, that
deserve closer scrutiny. For instance, what indeed will the country do in a
drought year? Are there hidden costs about infrastructure and delivery
mechanisms that the government has not fixed before getting its Bill
passed? Will these load the costs further in unplanned ways? Is it better
to have direct cash transfers rather than undertake the unwieldy process of
acquiring and distributing foodgrain to far-flung corners of the country?
How will the Bill affect the farm sector? How will it fix the existing 40
percent inefficiency and leakages in the system? Is the design too
centralised?

Many of these questions are posed and answered in the interviews and
columns that follow.

The real significance of this Bill, however, is that in every democracy,
the starting point must always be an articulation of rights and intention.
A legislation itself can never be a magic wand: but the syllables of
idealism rightfully belong to it. Enacting the Abolition of Untouchability
did not mean the curse of caste disappeared overnight. Nor will the Right
to Education ensure every child turns into a scholar in a day. Nor indeed
can the Right to Information ensure governments will reveal all their dark
truths. What legislations do is set forces into motion. They might take
decades to mature but they create the correct moral framework. They give
citizens the right to demand.

The outrage over the enactment of the Food Security
Bill<http://www.tehelka.com/tag/food-security-bill/>,
therefore, should turn its glare not on the promise but the delivery: we
should want our citizens fed, but we should demand it is done efficiently.

This is not an impossible task. On the same trip to Uttar
Pradesh<http://www.tehelka.com/tag/uttar-pradesh/>,
we also travelled through the Sarguja district of
Chhattisgarh<http://www.tehelka.com/tag/chhattisgarh/>.
Here, miraculously, almost every citizen was getting their food
entitlement. The state had taken some simple steps to make this happen.
Most importantly, it had removed the unfeasible practice of giving targeted
subsidies.

In the current PDS <http://www.tehelka.com/tag/pds/> system, there are 13
parameters to determine who is poor: how many sets of clothes a person has,
whether they live in a *kacha* or *pucca* house, whether they own a patch
of land; possess a cow, and so on. This is then marked on a scale of 0-5
and a percentage of the poor who make it to that scale are computed as
worthy to receive subsidies. It does not need a particularly fertile brain
to imagine how boggling this sort of classification can be. Uttar
Pradesh<http://www.tehelka.com/tag/uttar-pradesh/> is
proof of that.

In Chhattisgarh <http://www.tehelka.com/tag/chhattisgarh/>, however, rather
than undertake the gargantuan task of looking for its poor, the state
pretty much universalised its beneficiaries. This means whoever needs it,
just asks for it; those who don’t, don’t bother. The state also took away
fair-price shops from private operators and gave them to cooperatives,
panchayats or women’s self-help groups; it raised the commission earned by
these mediators; it set up computerised ledgers in godowns and, among other
things, sent out a diktat that all food-related grievances must be settled
by district magistrates within 15 days. According to Chief Minister Raman
Singh, their leakage is down from 40 percent to four.

There is no reason why other states cannot replicate this. The return on
investment promises to be very high. As a woman in Sarguja told us: “For
the first time in our life, we are sure we have enough to eat. So instead
of spending 15 hours a day trying to find money to buy roti and salt, we
have started a cooperative and are running a dairy.”

The destitute have become the dividend.

[email protected]
**


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Peace Is Doable

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