PM-POSHAN Scheme Expansion

Context:
A Parliamentary Committee has recommended expanding the PM-POSHAN scheme to include breakfast and extend coverage up to Class 12, aiming to improve nutrition and educational outcomes.

Key Highlights:

  • Policy Recommendations
  • Introduce breakfast along with mid-day meals under PM-POSHAN.
  • Extend scheme coverage:
    • Up to Class 10 initially
    • Up to Class 12 within five years
  • Rationale
  • Adolescence is a critical growth phase requiring enhanced nutrition.
  • Improved nutrition linked to better cognitive performance and reduced dropouts, especially among girls.
  • Current Scheme Status
  • PM-POSHAN currently covers students up to Class 8 in government and aided schools.
  • Related Concerns
  • Resource concentration in PM-SHRI schools questioned.
  • Recommendation to release pending Samagra Shiksha funds to some states.
  • Key Schemes
  • PM-POSHAN: Nutritional support via cooked meals.
  • PM-SHRI Schools: Model schools under NEP 2020.
  • Samagra Shiksha: Integrated education scheme (pre-school to Class 12).
  • Significance
  • Addresses malnutrition and learning outcomes simultaneously.
  • Supports human capital development.

Relevant Prelims Points:

  • PM-POSHAN is the revised Mid-Day Meal Scheme.
  • Covers government and aided schools.
  • Samagra Shiksha integrates SSA, RMSA, and teacher education.
  • PM-SHRI schools aim to implement NEP 2020 vision.

Relevant Mains Points:

  • Nutrition-Education Link
    • Proper nutrition enhances learning ability, attendance, and retention.
    • Critical for reducing dropout rates, especially among girls.
  • Social Justice Dimension
    • Supports children from economically weaker sections.
    • Reduces inequality in access to nutrition and education.
  • Challenges
    • Financial burden on Centre and States.
    • Infrastructure and logistics for breakfast provision.
    • Ensuring quality and hygiene standards.
  • Governance Concerns
    • Unequal resource allocation (PM-SHRI vs regular schools).
    • Delays in fund release affecting implementation.
  • Way Forward
    • Phase-wise expansion with adequate funding support.
    • Strengthen monitoring and nutrition standards.
    • Integrate with health and ICDS programmes.
    • Ensure equitable distribution of resources across schools.

UPSC Relevance:
• GS 2: Social Justice (Nutrition, education)
• GS 2: Governance (Scheme implementation)
• GS 3: Economy (Human capital development)

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