C4S Courses Banner

Equalising Primary Food Consumption in India

WhatsApp Channel
WhatsApp Channel
Edit Template
Telegram Channel
Telegram Channel
Edit Template
YouTube Channel
YouTube Channel
Edit Template

Source: TH

Context:

The publication, in February 2024, of a household consumption survey by the National Sample Survey (NSS) Office, after a gap of over a decade, has made it possible to estimate the poverty rate in India.

What is Primary Food Consumption?

  • The basic minimum food intake required to ensure energy, protein, and micronutrient sufficiency for a healthy life.
  • Components:
    • Cereals (carbohydrates)
    • Pulses (protein)
    • Vegetables (vitamins & minerals)
    • Fats (energy)
    • Milk/curd (calcium & micronutrients)
  • Metric Used: Thali Index – a standard South Asian meal (rice/roti, dal, vegetables, curd, salad).
Features of Primary Food Consumption
  • Balanced Nutrition: Goes beyond calorie sufficiency; ensures carbs–protein–micronutrient balance.
  • Universal Baseline: Sets a minimum desirable consumption level for all citizens.
  • Affordability Sensitive: Considers residual spending power after non-food essentials (rent, transport, health).
  • Equity-Oriented: Benchmarks disparities in food access.
  • Policy-Relevant: Provides a realistic yardstick for PDS design and subsidy targeting.
Current Reality (NSS 2024 Survey)
  • Food affordability gap:
    • Nearly 50% of rural India cannot afford 2 thalis/day.
    • About 20% of urban India also fall short.
  • PDS impact: Reduces deprivation but insufficient to fill the protein gap.
  • Cereal equality: Rich and poor consume nearly the same cereals → PDS success in cereals.
  • Pulses gap: Bottom 5% consume half the pulses of the top 5% → protein deprivation persists.
Public Distribution System (PDS)
  • Achievements:
    • Equalised cereal consumption across socio-economic groups.
  • Gaps:
    • Protein deficiency remains unaddressed.
    • Pulses missing from PDS in adequate measure.
  • Inefficiencies:
    • 80% coverage → even non-poor get cereals.
    • High FCI stocking, fiscal strain.
  • Urban vs Rural:
    • Urban subsidies more progressive.
    • Rural subsidies disproportionately benefit higher-expenditure households.
  • Policy Overhang: Cereal entitlements exceed actual needs → wasteful subsidy burden.
Challenges in Equalising Food Consumption
  • Fiscal Stress: Large cereal subsidies crowd out funds for nutrition diversification.
  • Nutritional Deficit: Protein-energy malnutrition, anaemia, stunting persist despite cereal sufficiency.
  • Logistics: Storage, buffer stocking, and transport of pulses are more complex.
  • Targeting Errors: Leakages, wrong inclusion/exclusion reduce efficiency.
  • Behavioural Factors: Food habits and awareness may limit uptake of nutrient-rich foods.
Restructuring PDS for Nutrition Security
  • Rationalise Cereal Entitlement:
    • Reduce rice/wheat quotas to match actual consumption of bottom deciles.
  • Diversify Food Basket:
    • Add pulses, millets, fortified oils, iodised salt.
    • Promote balanced nutrition, not just cereal sufficiency.
  • Remove Top-End Subsidies:
    • Withdraw subsidies for top 20% consumption fractile.
    • Free fiscal space for nutrition support.
  • Dynamic Targeting:
    • Use Aadhaar + SECC data for updated beneficiary lists.
  • Leverage Technology:
    • GPS-enabled grain movement, DBT for pulses, e-POS systems for accountability.

Popular Online Live Classes

Popular Bundle & Interview Guidance

How to Prepare for NABARD & IBPS AFO Together?

RBI GRADE B PHASE II Smart Strategy | How to consolidate Prep in 30 Days

Most Recent Posts

  • All Posts
  • Agri Business
  • Agriculture
  • AIC
  • Answer Key
  • Banking/Finance
  • Bill and Amendment
  • Blog
  • Current Affairs
  • Cut-off Mark
  • Daily English Editorial Analysis (DEEA)
  • Daily Quiz
  • Economy
  • Fact To Remember
  • General
  • International Affairs
  • International Relationships of India
  • IRDAI
  • Job Notification
  • NABARD Grade A
  • National Affairs
  • NICL
  • Organization
  • PFRDA
  • Preparation Tips
  • Previous Year Question Papers (PYQ)
  • RBI Grade A
  • RBI Grade B
  • Recruitment Notification
  • Result
  • Scheme & Yojna
  • Sci & Tech
  • SEBI
  • Study Material
  • Syllabus & Exam Pattern
  • UIIC
  • UPSC Exam
    •   Back
    • DEEA August 2025
    •   Back
    • RBI Previous Year Question Papers (RBI PYQ)
    • SEBI Previous Year Question Papers (SEBI PYQ)
    • IRDAI Previous Year Question Papers (IRDAI PYQ)
    • NABARD Previous Year Question Papers (NABARD PYQ)
    • SIDBI Previous Year Question Papers (SIDBI PYQ)

Category

Read More....

  • All Posts
  • Agri Business
  • Agriculture
  • AIC
  • Answer Key
  • Banking/Finance
  • Bill and Amendment
  • Blog
  • Current Affairs
  • Cut-off Mark
  • Daily English Editorial Analysis (DEEA)
  • Daily Quiz
  • Economy
  • Fact To Remember
  • General
  • International Affairs
  • International Relationships of India
  • IRDAI
  • Job Notification
  • NABARD Grade A
  • National Affairs
  • NICL
  • Organization
  • PFRDA
  • Preparation Tips
  • Previous Year Question Papers (PYQ)
  • RBI Grade A
  • RBI Grade B
  • Recruitment Notification
  • Result
  • Scheme & Yojna
  • Sci & Tech
  • SEBI
  • Study Material
  • Syllabus & Exam Pattern
  • UIIC
  • UPSC Exam
    •   Back
    • DEEA August 2025
    •   Back
    • RBI Previous Year Question Papers (RBI PYQ)
    • SEBI Previous Year Question Papers (SEBI PYQ)
    • IRDAI Previous Year Question Papers (IRDAI PYQ)
    • NABARD Previous Year Question Papers (NABARD PYQ)
    • SIDBI Previous Year Question Papers (SIDBI PYQ)

C4S Courses is one of India’s fastest-growing ed-tech platform, dedicated to helping students prepare for premier entrance exams such as NABARD Grade A and RBI Grade B.

Exam

RBI Grade B
NABARD Grade A

Download Our App

Copyright © 2024 C4S Courses. All Rights Reserved.

WhatsApp