Cannot remove hunger without functioning public institutions
ASIA: Cannot remove hunger without functioning public institutions
The year 2016 has proved to be a
difficult year in terms of food and livelihood security for
the poor and marginalized communities across Asia. There
have even been reverses in food security of the people in
countries like Sri Lanka. The year witnessed increasing
attacks on urban poor, most glaringly in the Philippines but
also across Asia, including in India, Pakistan, Bangladesh,
and Indonesia. It also saw reversal or dilution of several
hard-won legislations for ensuring and promoting food
security, the poor in India being the worst hit. The year
has also witnessed several other upheavals of all kinds,
from political to natural; these upheavals unfortunately
compromised endeavours to enhance food security of the
communities.
One of the worst things to happen to the
struggle for food security in the region in recent times,
however, is increasingly hostility of the governments to
human right defenders (HRDs). With new governments
consolidating themselves, human rights work has been hit
hard by exceedingly intimidating crackdowns by the states of
Bangladesh, India, and the Philippines. All these countries
have seen HRDs getting framed in fabricated cases, arrested,
and, in a few cases, even tortured. The year also witnessed
authorities hounding many non-government organizations,
often cancelling their licenses and stopping them from
receiving funding on the flimsiest of grounds; the crackdown
has been particularly severe in India with a partner
organization of the Asian Human Rights Commission
documenting over 400 criminal cases being slapped on its
members by authorities in Odisha, a province in Eastern
India. The Philippines State has displayed similar actions.
The Global Hunger Index Report, 2016, of the
International Food Policy Research Institute, and Concern
Worldwide, reflects the trends of the year[1]. The Report notes that despite
progresses made, levels of hunger remain alarming in 50
countries, many of them in Asia. A closer look betrays that
the level of hungers seems to be unrelated to “economic
growth” levels of the countries, and thus indicates a
widening gap between the food security status of mainstream
and poor / marginalized communities.
Take, for instance,
India’s ranking of 97 out of total 118 countries. It has
fared worse in eliminating hunger than all of its
neighbours, sans Pakistan (ranked 107). Even Nepal, a poor
country devastated by an earthquake in April 2015 ranks far
better at 72, as do countries like Myanmar (75), Sri Lanka
(84), and Bangladesh (90). That all of them, barring China,
have the same level of hunger (serious) may be consolation
for the government of India, but not for the poor who go
hungry.
Sri Lanka gives another example of political
stability not translating into lowering food insecurity of
vulnerable populations, with both the hunger levels in the
country and its rank worsening when compared to 2015! Sri
Lanka ranked 69th in 2015 as against 84th this year. The
following table[2] gives an idea of the hunger
situation in the countries where the AHRC works directly:
Country
& GHI rank
Undernourished
(%)
Wasting in under fives (%)
Stunting in under
fives (%)
Under five mortality (%)
1. Pakistan
(107) 22 10.5 45 8.1
2. India
(97) 15.2 15.1 38.7 4.8
3. Bangladesh
(90) 16.4 14.3 36.4 3.8
4. Sri Lanka
(84) 22 21.4 14.7 1.0
5. Nepal
(72) 7.8 11.3 37.4 3.6
6. Myanmar
(75) 14.2 7.1 31.0 5.0
7. Cambodia
(71) 14.2 9.6 32.4 2.9
8. Indonesia
(72) 7.6 13.5 36.4 2.7
9. Philippines
(68) 13.5 7.9 30.3 2.8
10. Thailand
(51) 7.4 6.7 16.3 1.2
11. China
(29) 9.3 2.1 6.8 1.1
The table demonstrates the extent of
hunger in Asia as well as the variations in the priorities
of the governments to eradicate the same. What it does not
showcase is of course how the statistical percentage points
gets translated into whopping numbers of real people
suffering on the ground. What it also missed is that most of
the countries in the region have the means to alleviate
hunger altogether.
For example, United Nations
Development Programme observed in its Human Development
Report, 2015, that India can provide “a basic and modest
set of social security guarantees for all citizens with
universal pension, basic health care, child benefits and
employment schemes”.
As against this meagre sum
required, a UNICEF study found out that government of
India’s expenditure on health care for children has ranged
from 0.28 to 0.31 percent of total expenditure between
2001-02 and 2014-05[3]. The trend has continued in recent
years with the incumbent government slashing health budget
by a whopping 20 percent[4] and exposing 63 million Indians to
face poverty every year, as the government’s draft
National Health Policy, 2015[5] itself notes.
This happened
simultaneously with India’s increasing Non Performing
Assets (NPA), a euphemism for loans taken by the
corporations and other bigwigs and never paid back. Face the
figures: Indian bank NPAs grew from Rs 53,917 crore in
September 2008 to Rs 3,41,641 crore in September 2015[6], i.e. much more than India spends on
its social sector.
Other countries in the region are not
doing much better. For example, on health, Pakistan spent a
mere 0.9 percent of its total GDP in 2014, Bangladesh 0.8,
the Philippines 1.6, Cambodia 1.3, Indonesia 1.1. Though
Nepal and Sri Lanka outperformed the region with 2.3 and 2.0
percent respectively, they too left a lot to be desired[7].
The answer to why countries did
not spend such a meagre amount of their GDP to achieving
something this important and basic shows why hunger still
persists in the countries. Ironically, spending on
eradication of hunger and ensuring basic social security for
the population is no dole or favour done to the poor. It is,
quite on the contrary, an investment that brings massive
gains for the economy by building an efficient work force
and obliterating the prohibitive costs that hunger inflicts
on the economy in terms of lost human resources, health, and
other expenditures.
To put it simply, a massive section
of the population exposed to chronic hunger upsets the
‘demographic dividend’ that political leaders of these
countries keep exhorting about. Having a frail, hungry, and
unhealthy workforce is not that much different from not
having a workforce at all.
One basic reason behind many of the
countries in the region failing to take concrete steps for
eradicating hunger is the lack of the very idea of justice,
which is in turn rooted in the idea of citizenship in the
region. Despite their democratic façades, most of the
countries in the region operate exactly like their colonial
(feudal in Nepal’s case) predecessors and still treat
majority of their populations as dispensable natives devoid
of rights. They show callous disregard for the rights of
their citizen, which inalienably include the right to life
with dignity, something impossible for those exposed to
chronic hunger.
Sadly, the simultaneous lack of a
functioning justice system in these states denies the
discriminated against section of the citizenry the
opportunity to seek redress. It forces them into continuing
with their dehumanized existence, hungry, stunted, and
wasted.
In fact, completely defunct public institutions
just pretending to be functioning is one commonality among
all the countries which have failed to arrest hunger and
starvation. This denies, as noted earlier, their hungry
citizenry of any attempt at seeking redress. The rot in the
public institutions of these countries runs too deep; their
social welfare institutions remain, generally, so
frustratingly corrupt and inefficient that almost nothing
reaches the poor and is lost to vested interests entrenched
deep in the system.
The judicial institutions,
overcrowded, overburdened, understaffed, underfunded, and
often corrupt, complete the vicious cycle of denial of
justice to the violated people. Gary Haugen and Victor
Boutros brilliantly summarize the end result in their book,
The Locust Effect. They say countries remain stuck in the
cycle of poverty because of the failure of the justice
system, law enforcement, and the government in saving the
poor from day to day violence, slavery, or forced labour.
Governments, and the world community, might have a thousand
schemes ready to fight hunger. However, if the governments
are really interested in ending hunger and poverty, they
need to provide mechanisms of deterrence, on the ground,
fighting the bullies, be they State or non-State actors, who
inflict violence on the poor and marginalised and thereby
keep them in cycles of poverty and hunger. The mechanisms of
deterrence are none other than functioning justice systems,
treating everyone as equal and operating to punish criminals
swiftly, and ultimately providing redress to victims of
injustice.
A social justice bench of the Supreme Court
of India, comprising justices Madan B. Lokur and U.U. Lalit,
summed up the problem in September 2015 while criticizing
the Government of India over the “mismatch” between
“wonderful schemes” it creates and their woeful
implementation, leaving ground realities unchanged[8].
This mismatch, between plenty
of schemes, acts, and promises to fight hunger with abysmal
implementation, without financing and monitoring, is the
basic reason behind continuing hunger, not only in India but
also in the whole region. Sadly, the problem will not be
addressed even if the funding crisis is resolved, as there
would still not be functioning public institutions
delivering the benefits without pilferage, leaks, and
outright loot, due to corruption that is endemic in the
region.
________________________________________
[1] Von Grebmer, Klaus; Bernstein, Jill;
Nabarro, David; Prasai, Nilam; Amin, Shazia; Yohannes,
Yisehac; Sonntag, Andrea; Patterson, Fraser; Towey, Olive;
and Thompson, Jennifer. 2016. 2016 Global Hunger Index:
Getting to zero hunger. Bonn Washington, DC and Dublin:
Welthungerhilfe, International Food Policy Research
Institute, and Concern Worldwide. http://dx.doi.org/10.2499/9780896292260
[2] Complied by the desk with data from
GHI, 2016
[3] Dr. Loveleen Kacker, Child Budgeting
In India: Analysis of Recent Allocations in the Union
Budget, UNICEF, New Delhi, 2007.
[4] http://www.humanrights.asia/news/ahrc-news/AHRC-STM-019-2015/
[5] http://www.mohfw.nic.in/WriteReadData/l892s/35367973441419937754.pdf
[6] http://www.firstpost.com/business/explained-in-5-charts-how-indian-banks-big-npa-problem-evolved-over-years-2620164.html
[7] http://data.worldbank.org/indicator/SH.XPD.PUBL.ZS
[8] http://www.humanrights.asia/news/ahrc-news/AHRC-STM-161-2015/
# # #
The Asian Human Rights Commission (AHRC) works
towards the radical rethinking and fundamental redesigning
of justice institutions in order to protect and promote
human rights in Asia. Established in 1984, the Hong Kong
based organisation is a Laureate of the Right Livelihood
Award,
2014.