ppt on food security india

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FOOD SECURITY

Food Security in India

JAWAHAR NAVODAYA

VIDYALAYA,SURANGI,GANJAM

SESSION:- 2016-17GUIDED BY-SCIENCE

&SOCIAL SCIENCE DEPT.

PREPARED BY:- CHANDAN KU.

SETHY

FOOD SECURITY MEAN...

Affordability

Availability

Accessibility

ENSURING FOOD SECURITYI. Enough food is available for all the

persons ll persons have the capacity to buy food of acceptable quality Iii .There is no barrier on access to food.

NEED FOR FOOD SECURITY

poor sections

of the society Natural disasters

or calamityWidespread crop failure

How drought affects food security?

Drought takes placeTotal

production of food grains

Shortage of food in the affected areas

Prices

Some peoplecannot afford to buy food =

Food Insecurity

• If such calamity happens in a very wide spread area or is stretched over a longer time period, it may cause a situation of starvation.

STARVATION

FAMINE

A massive starvation might take a turn of famine.

Food Insecure GroupsWorst Affected Groups: landless people traditional artisans traditional services providerspetty self-employed workersHomeless, beggars etc.Families employed in ill-paid occupationscasual labourers (seasonal activities+ very

low wages) SCs, STs and some sections of the OBCs (lower castes among them) –having poor land-base or very low land productivity

Migrants ( as a result of natural disasters ) Women and children

States facing problem of food insecurity

• Uttar Pradesh (eastern and south-eastern parts), Bihar,• Jharkhand, • Odisha• West Bengal,• Chhattisgarh, • parts of Madhya Pradesh and• Maharashtra

Hunger, another aspect of Food Insecurity

Inadequate diet for a long time

Poor people suffer from chronic hunger

Chronic

Hunger

Due agricultural

activities-rural regions

& urban areas- casual

labourWhen a person is unable to get work for the entire year

Seasonal

Hunger

ON THE OTHER HAND…

‘WASTAGE’

India’s attempts at attaining Food Security

Highest Growth

Punjab and

Haryana

Tamil Nadu and Andhra

Pradesh

Low Growth

Maharashtra,

Madhya PradeshBihar, Orissa

and the N-E

states

Green Revolution: Food grain Production

India’s Food Security System Buff

er Stoc

k

Public Distribut

ion System

Food Securit

y System of India

Increasing Nuclear

Families and Working Women

Food Processing Demand

DriversChanging

demographics – Rise in incomes Organised

Retail and Private Label Penetration

Demand for Functional

Foods

Increasing spends on

health foods Increasing

Urbanisation – Lifestyle and Aspirations

How the Public Distribution System works:

Farmers or

Producers

States

Fair Price Shops

F.C.I (maintai

ns Buffer Stocks)

Grains MSP

Allocates Grains

Central Issue Price

C.I.P Distributes Grains

Government schemes

• PDS (initial Public Distribution System scheme)• RPS (Revamped Public Distribution System)• TPDS (Targeted Public Distribution System)

Special Schemes:• AAY (Antyodaya Anna Yojana)• APS (Annapurna Scheme)

Government schemes

Benefits from the PDS:

• Stabilizes prices of food grains • Makes food available at affordable prices• By supplying food from surplus regions of the country to

the deficit ones, it helps in combating hunger and famine• Prices set with poor households in mind• Provides income security to farmers in certain regions

GOVT. TAKEN STEP TOWARD CHILDREN

FOR THE MOTHER

Problems faced by PDS:

• Problem of Hunger still exists in many areas of India• Footstock in granaries often above specified levels• Deterioration in quality of stored food grains if kept for longer time• High storage costs• Increase in MSP has led to shift from coarse grain to rice and

wheat production among the farmers• Cultivation of rice has also led to environmental degradation and

fall in the water level

• Average consumption of PDS grain at the all-India level is very low

• Malpractices on part of PDS dealers: Diverting the grains to open market to get

better margin, Selling poor quality grains at ration shops, Irregular opening of the shops• Low Income families earning just above

poverty line have to pay APL rates which are almost equal to open market rates – lower incentive to buy from Fair Price Shops

STEPS TO STOP MALPRACTICES

CONCLUSION

THANK YOU

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