India’s Role in Ending Global Hunger

GS2 – Social Sector

Context:

According to the UN’s State of Food Security and Nutrition in the World 2025 report, global undernourishment has declined, with India making significant contributions.

Global and National Trends
  • Global Hunger: 673 million people (8.2%) were undernourished in 2024, down from 688 million in 2023.
  • India: Undernourishment fell from 14.3% to 12% between 2020–2024, reducing the hungry population by 30 million.
Key Drivers of India’s Progress
  • Public Distribution System (PDS): Digitalisation through Aadhaar-linked authentication, One Nation One Ration Card portability, and e-PoS monitoring improved efficiency; now serving over 800 million people.
  • Nutrition-Focused Schemes:
    • PM POSHAN enhances school meals with dietary diversity.
    • Integrated Child Development Services (ICDS) supports child and maternal nutrition, alongside efforts to keep healthy diets affordable.
  • Digital Platforms: Tools like AgriStack, e-NAM, and geospatial technologies improve market access and agricultural efficiency.
Emerging Concerns
  • Malnutrition: Rising rates of micronutrient deficiencies, obesity, and poor diets despite reduced hunger.
  • Affordability of Healthy Diets: Over 60% of Indians cannot afford nutrient-rich foods due to high costs and weak cold-chain infrastructure.
  • Food Loss: Approximately 13% of food is lost between farm and market, affecting availability and affordability.
Way Forward
  • Increase production and affordability of nutrient-rich foods.
  • Invest in post-harvest infrastructure, including cold storage and logistics.
  • Strengthen Farmer-Producer Organisations (FPOs) with a focus on climate resilience.
  • Leverage India’s digital food security model to support SDG 2 (Zero Hunger) and serve as a template for South-South cooperation.
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