*Food security — of APL, BPL & IPL
 *P. Sainath
http://www.hindu.com/2010/07/06/stories/2010070652371000.htm
* The official line is simple. Since we cannot afford to feed all the
hungry, there must only be as many hungry as we can afford to feed. *

There was irony in the timing of the petrol price decontrol order. The
decision, which also covered major hikes in diesel and kerosene prices, and
affects hundreds of millions of people, came even as Manmohan Singh advised
world leaders in Toronto on the need for “inclusive growth.” And while we
are still debating “food security” and how best that should be achieved in
law. It came while food price inflation edges towards 17 per cent and
general inflation is in double digits. Who are we trying to “include” in
that growth?

No less tragic was the media's reaction to the price decontrol. Even as
Cabinet Ministers sought to distance themselves from it, the editorials
mostly reeked of triumphalism: “Free at Last,” screamed one. “A bold,
welcome move,” shrilled another headline. With rare exceptions, the edits —
in contrast to the response of millions to Monday's bandh — showed yet again
how far the mass media are from mass reality.

Most of the time, as the late Murray Kempton used to say, the job editorial
writers do, is to “come down from the hills after the battle is over and
shoot the wounded.” The media have done that definition proud. There's even
been an editorial on Bhopal in the same month that didn't wait for that
battle to be over. It finds the villains of Bhopal to be the “activist
industry that continues to milk the tragedy.” And mourns the real tragedy:
that “any corporation, across the world, would be forced to think twice
before proudly announcing to its shareholders that it has set up an
ancillary unit in Bhopal.” It does not once mention the words “Union
Carbide.” Roll over Kempton. The shooting's on.

The early protests against the price rise got short shrift in the media. In
the largest English daily, it earned a couple of stories spanning a modest
few inches across three or four columns. The same daily twice devoted a full
page — without an ad — on successive days to the death by suicide of a
fashion model in Mumbai. Also, passing off without much comment this week —
the elevation of our Food and Agriculture Minister to the post of president
of the International Cricket Council. At a time when the entire nation is
focussed on the issue of food prices and food security.

Mr. Pawar is quoted as saying (AFP, New Delhi, July 2) that he would request
the Prime Minister to lessen his ministerial workload. “I may suggest having
more hands to help me. I had asked for three Ministers but they have given
me only one,” he told journalists. “... If I request to reduce some of my
work, we may find some solution.” However, he does promise us that “I won't
allow my work in the government to suffer.” That's reassuring. Maybe it's
time for the Prime Minister to extend inclusive growth to bring the Food and
Agriculture Minister into food and agriculture. (Or we could include cricket
in that sector.) Four Ministers in the same field would be truly inclusive.

Yet the fuel price decontrol will profoundly affect the prices of just about
everything. At a time of already spiralling food costs. Punctuated by
periodic claims that “it should come down within a couple of months,” from
Ministers and UPA hacks.

Now comes the news that the food security bill may be set for a radical
overhaul. I guess that is welcome — it can't be worse than the early
attempts at drafting one. Take for instance the meeting of the Empowered
Group of Ministers held in February. They were to “discuss the enactment of
the proposed National Food Security Bill.” The first thing the EGoM came up
with was this gem. 2.1 (a) “The definition of Food Security should be
limited to the specific issue of foodgrains (wheat and rice) and be delinked
from the larger issue of nutritional security.”

Food security delinked from nutritional security? Note that the same line
concedes nutritional security is “the larger issue.” Why then the need to
delink the two?

Is 35 kg of rice at Rs. 3 a kilo (for a section of the population) food
security? Are there no other determinants of food security? Like health,
nutrition, livelihoods, jobs, food prices? Can we even delink the fuel price
hike from discussions on food security? Or from the wilful gutting of the
public distribution system? Or from the havoc wrought by the ever-growing
futures trade in wheat, pulses, edible oils and more?

The truth is the government seeks ways to spend less and less on the very
food security it talks about. Hunger is defined not by how many people
suffer it, but by how many the government is willing to pay for. Hence the
endless search for a lower BPL figure. To the government's great dismay, all
three officially-constituted committees have turned up estimates of poverty
higher than its own. Even the Tendulkar committee, closest to the ruling
elite's worldview, raises the estimate of rural poverty to 42 per cent. (On
a weak and fragile basis, it is true. But still higher than the government's
count.)

The BPL Expert group headed by N.C. Saxena raises that to around 50 per
cent. While the report of the National Commission for Enterprises in the
Unorganised Sector states on its first page that 836 million Indians (77 per
cent of our people) live on Rs. 20 a day or less. Accepting that, for
instance, would mean a few thousand crores more in spending on the hungry.
The official line is simple. Since we cannot afford to feed all the hungry,
there must only be as many hungry as we can afford to feed.

Most dishonest of all is the “there-is-no-money” line. The country spends
Rs. 10,000 crore on a new airport. There's Rs. 40,000 crore or more for the
Commonwealth Games. There's Rs. 60,000 crore happily lost in the spectrum
scam. There's Rs. 500,000 crore in write-offs under just three heads for the
super-rich and the corporate sector in the current Union budget. But funds
for the hungry are hard to come by. What would it cost to universalise the
PDS? Pravin Jha and Nilachal Acharya estimate that if rice/wheat were made
available to all Indians at Rs. 3 a kilo, it would add Rs.84,399 crore to
the food subsidy in coming budgets. That's about one-sixth of the tax
write-offs for the wealthy in this year's budget. (Other estimates place the
added expenditure each year at no more than Rs. 45,000 crore).

What will be the costs of not finding the money — in a country which ranks
at 66 among 88 in the Global Hunger Index? In a nation whose child
malnourishment record is worse than that of sub-Saharan Africa? A country
now ranking 134 in the United Nations Human Development Index below Bhutan
and Laos?

The same country that has 49 dollar billionaires in the Forbes list. (Many
of whom receive government freebies in diverse forms. Some for their IPL
involvements). If a government will not even try to ensure that no citizen
goes hungry, should it remain in power? Or should it, at the very least,
state honestly that the food security of every Indian is neither its aim nor
its intent? Why tag ‘food security' to a bill that will legitimise the
opposite? How can we call something a ‘right' if everyone does not have it?

A disclosure: I was a member of the BPL Expert Group. In a note annexed to
that report, I argued that in four sectors — food, healthcare, education and
decent work — access had to be universal. That flows from the Directive
Principles of State Policy of the Constitution. The rights of our people are
based on their being citizens. Not on their ability to pay. Not on their
being BPL or APL (or even IPL). Rights, by definition, are universal and
indivisible.

Will the features of the government's proposed food security bill take the
Directive Principles forward? Or will it weaken them? Diluting
constitutional rights and presenting the watered down mix as progressive
legislation is fraud. The only PDS that will work is a universal one. It is
only in those States that have the closest thing to a universal system —
Kerala and Tamil Nadu — where the PDS has functioned best.

Now there's talk of an “experiment” making access to food (that is, mainly
wheat and rice) “universal” in about 150 districts. While this might be a
step forward in thinking, it could prove a misstep in practice. This is
“targeting” in other clothes. It could collapse as foodgrain from districts
that are “universal” migrate to districts that are not. Better to go that
final mile. Universalise.

*~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
"Ours is a battle not for wealth or for power.
 It is a battle for freedom. It is a battle for the reclamation of human
personality."
- Dr BR Ambedkar
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~*

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