India’s high food inflation leaves less in lunch boxes of poor school children

Table of Contents

Despite surges in food prices, minimum budget remains unchanged which makes it difficult to provide nutritious meals to students.

Nearly two years of elevated food inflation in India is leaving less in the lunch boxes of impoverished children, as government-funded school meals suffer cutbacks because of rising prices of vegetables, fruits and pulses.

The three-decades-old programme, intended to draw poor children into school and provide them with basic nutrition, throws into sharp relief the inflationary impact of food on the nation’s most needy and the widening inequality in the world’s fastest-growing major economy.

Reuters interviews with 21 school teachers across four states, a dozen families and researchers show schools have been forced to scrimp on key ingredients as the meal budget under the scheme has not increased for the last two years despite soaring food prices.

Children sit inside a classroom of a government-run upper primary school in Ghugudipada village in Nayagarh district of the eastern state of Odisha, India, September 24, 2024.— Reuters/Stringer

The programme covers an estimated 120 million children across a million government and government-aided schools up to class 8, data available on the scheme’s website showed. Teachers and school administrators manage the quality of food provided.

“Budget for the mid-day meal scheme is not indexed to inflation regularly as it should be, compromising the quality of the meal,” said Dipa Sinha, an independent development economist and researcher who works with the ‘Right For Food’ campaign, an informal non-government network of organisations and individuals.

“While the government provides free grain for these meals, that does not compensate for a cut-back in other nutritious ingredients like vegetables, pulses, milk and eggs due to inadequate budgets,” said Sinha.

A plate of a lunch meal lies on the floor before it is served to a child at a government-run upper primary school in Ghugudipada village in Nayagarh district of the eastern state of Odisha, India, September 25, 2024.— Reuters/Stringer

A case in point is 8-year-old Ranjit Nayak, who lives in Ghugudipada village, 150 kilometres from Bhubaneshwar, the capital city of the eastern Indian state of Odisha.

Ranjit’s family of five survive on daily wages of about 250 Indian rupees ($2.98) and can afford to feed him and his 4-year-old brother little more than boiled rice on most days.

Often, the school provides his very first meal of the day, but the food price spike has left an unwelcome aftertaste in recent times.

My son is sometimes satisfied with the school meal, but other days it’s just yellow water with hardly any dal (lentils),“ said Arati Nayak, Ranjit’s 26-year-old mother who weaves dry leaves into disposable plates earning 25 rupees a day.

The rising cost of cooking oil, vegetables and potatoes has made it difficult to provide a nutritious meal for students, said Chhabi Nayak, head of the managing committee at the Ghugudipada school.

The school opts for a cheaper variety of lentils and skips more nutritious vegetables like carrots to manage budgets, he said.

Ranjit Nayak, 8, uses a serving plate to shield from rain as he runs to receive his lunch meal at a government-run upper primary school in Ghugudipada village in Nayagarh district of the eastern state of Odisha, India, September 25, 2024.— Reuters/Stringer

Source Link

Website | + posts

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Skip to content