People's Democracy(Weekly Organ of the Communist Party of India (Marxist) |
Vol.
XXVII
No. 18 May 04, 2003 |
Jayati Ghosh
ONE of the more startling, but less discussed, features of Indian development over the past several decades, is the decline in per capita calories consumption which is revealed by the official National Sample Surveys. Average calorie consumption in India was already low by international standards. If it has actually declined despite apparently high aggregate economic growth rates, this is clearly something that merits much more attention.
The
most recent data that we have on calories consumption, from the 55 Round of the
NSS, is unfortunately not comparable with data from the earlier rounds, because
of changes in the pattern of questions. Mostly, this means that estimates
of food consumption are likely to be overestimates when compared to the earlier
rounds. But even these overestimates indicate a decline in per capita
calorie consumption for rural India in 1999-2000, as shown in Table 1 alongside.
LONG-TERM
The
more significant trend, of course, is the long-term decline since the early
1970s. In addition, there is what appears to be a convergence between rural and
urban patterns of calorie consumption by the most recent period. In fact, by
1999-2000, the average calorie consumption in urban India was higher than in
rural India. This is surprising given the perception that the rural population
tends to consume more calories because of the greater intensity of work in rural
areas.
There
has been some discussion on how to interpret the long-term tendency towards
declining per capita calorie consumption, especially in rural India. One
argument that is frequently made is that the early NSS Rounds, including those
of the 1970s and early 1980s, tended to overestimate calories (and especially
foodgrain) consumption, so the later estimates are simply closer to reality.
Even
if this were the case, there are still other questions to ponder. In rural
India, it seems to be fairly clear that per capita calorie consumption fell over
the period after the early 1980s, including in the period when all the estimates
suggest (without controversy) that the incidence of absolute poverty was on the
decline.
Some explanations of this trend have rested on the idea that this reflects a natural and positive change in eating habits, because of changes in rural work and life styles. One argument is that as more agricultural work has become mechanised, and as transport facilities have become more available, rural people have to do less physically difficult work and walk for less distances than before. This has meant a reduction in the biological requirement of energy.
Also,
the increasing “urbanisation” of rural areas has meant that urban
lifestyles, including food habits, have penetrated into rural areas. This has
caused the narrowing down of rural-urban differences in food consumption.
NUTRITIONAL
So
is it the case, then, that the decline in per capita calorie consumption is
simply a positive reflection of development in various forms? Unfortunately,
such an optimistic conclusion cannot be arrived at so easily, and may probably
be misleading. This becomes clear when we look at the extent of “nutritional
deficit”. This is the proportion of people who get less than 90 per cent of
the prescribed norm of calories per day, which also takes age and sex into
account.
Table
2 alongside provides estimates of how such nutritional deficiency has moved over
time. The results are quite stark. In the rural areas, the percentage of
population with less than 90 per cent of the norm of calorie intake increased
from 40 per cent in 1983 to 45 per cent in 1999-2000. And if the sense that the
latest period survey overestimated food consumption is correct, the ratio is
likely to be even higher. In the urban areas, the proportion of nutritionally
deficient population declined to around 48 per cent by the early 1990s, but
appears to have remained at that level thereafter.
REGIONAL
Of
course, this all-India figure hides very substantial regional variation. The
lowest rural average nutrient intake is to be found in the states of Assam,
Gujarat, Kerala, Maharashtra and Tamil Nadu. These are not (except Assam) states
with above-average incidence of rural poverty, and indeed have higher than
average per capita income. Furthermore, in several of these states (except
Kerala and Maharashtra) the average intake worsened over the 1990s.
State-wise
variations are also related to differing physiological requirements and cultural
habits. In West Bengal, average calorie consumption, at 2095 calories per day,
is less than the national average of 2149, although in West Bengal the number
has increased since 1983.
But two other factors are very important: local production in states, and the role of price movements of food, and cereals in particular. This latter factor may be a key element in explaining the calorie consumption puzzle, especially in the 1990s, since the decline in calorie intake is closely related to the fall in cereals consumption. Also, the expansion of rice production in West Bengal probably played an important role in ensuring some stability of calories consumption over the past two decades.
Price
factors have been very important. The 1990s was marked by rising relative prices
of cereals, all over India. While cereals consumption declined and that of
non-cereals increased, the share of cereals in food expenditure did not fall, because of price increases. The fact that
cereals prices increased faster than other food prices may have prompted a shift
towards other kinds of food to the extent possible, and caused the decline in
actual cereal intake (and therefore calorie intake).
All
in all, the picture that emerges is that
the current state of nutritional intake in the country is quite appalling, and
needs immediate policy attention to ensure adequate access to food to people
across the country.
Per
capita calorie consumption, all-India
Kcal
per day |
1972-73 |
1983 |
1993-94 |
1999-2000 |
|
Rural |
|
2266 |
2221 |
2153 |
2149 |
Urban |
|
2107 |
2089 |
2071 |
2156 |
Per
cent of population with
less
than 90 per cent calorie intake
|
1983 |
1993-94 |
1999-2000 |
Rural |
40.9 |
42 |
45.2 |
Urban |
52 |
48.8 |
48 |