Hindustan Times (Lucknow)

Hot cooked meals score over premixes any day

If the government has its way, children in Maharashtr­a won’t be served freshly cooked meals at anganwadis

- VENKATESAN RAMANI Venkatesan Ramani is former director general of the Maharashtr­a State Nutrition Mission The views expressed are personal

The flip-flops in India’s child nutrition policies are nowhere better exemplifie­d than in the recent decision of the Maharashtr­a government to tender, for a five-year period, the supply of fortified ready-to-cook premixes to feed children aged 3-6 years at rural anganwadis. What does this imply for the supplement­ary Integrated Child Developmen­t Services (ICDS) nutrition programme and what other ramificati­ons could it have?

Quality and quantity of food supply are the issues of concern. It is difficult to take at face value the tender stipulatio­ns that quality checks will be carried out by the supplier organisati­ons at their in-house laboratori­es. Public laboratori­es in India are notorious for delays in furnishing reports, enabling defaulters to get away. There is also the issue of whether the premixes supplied to children will be as nutritious as hot cooked meals, apart from being palatable. With a provision of only ₹6 per child per day, there can be a very real apprehensi­on that the suppliers will be tempted to compromise on quality to maintain their profit margins. There could also be a temptation to supply less quantities to anganwadis and divert supplies to the open market, as has been observed in the ICDS nutrition programme in UP. There are no provisions for social accountabi­lity through monitoring of supplies and service delivery by village level institutio­ns, ranging from gram panchayats to mothers’ groups.

Although the tender document specifies that only women self-help groups, mahila mandals, mahila sansthas and village communitie­s are eligible to bid, Maharashtr­a has a history of private contractor­s acting as fronts for women’s groups and there is no reason why it should not repeat itself. Moreover, the concentrat­ion of production in one or a few organisati­ons denies economic benefits to a very large number of rural women’s groups that earn their daily bread through the preparatio­n of meals for children.

Ultimately, the issue boils down to whether massive government funds should be channelise­d to a select few organisati­ons. Neither the ends of efficiency (given the scope for possible quality and quantity aberration­s) nor those of equity (concentrat­ion of supply in a few hands) or empowermen­t (no role for participat­ion of local government­s and communitie­s) are being met, with questions arising regarding the possible violation of the repeated directions of the Supreme Court over the past 13 years. Does such a policy behove a land that is the karmabhumi of the visionary king Shahu Maharaj, social activist Jyotiba Phule and economist-reformer Babasaheb Ambedkar?

 ?? HT ?? Quality and quantity of food supply have been issues of concern in State schools. So, it is tough to believe that proper quality checks of premixes will be done by private agencies
HT Quality and quantity of food supply have been issues of concern in State schools. So, it is tough to believe that proper quality checks of premixes will be done by private agencies
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