This
paper examines the extent and root causes
of hunger in developing countries with
special focus on India. Its starting point
is the recent release of The Challenge
of Hunger 2008 and Indian State Hunger
Index 2008 by IFPRI. The paper highlights
that ISHI study, although it shows alarming
level of hunger in Indian states, underestimates
the real level of hunger existing in the
country. Using a different benchmark,
it finds a much higher prevalence of undernourishment
in India. It also shows that trade liberalisation
may not solve the hunger problem as real
returns to cultivators have fallen after
trade liberalisation. It concludes that
public welfare policies should be strengthened
to reduce hunger and poverty.
November
7, 2008.
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