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Towards sustainable indicators of food and nutritional outcomes in India
Purpose - The purpose of this paper is to measure performance of India in food and nutrition security relative to other Asian countries like Bangladesh, China, Africa and also developed countries from 1991 to 2016. Design/methodology/approach - The study is based on FAO food security indicators unde...
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Published in: | World journal of science, technology and sustainable development technology and sustainable development, 2016-04, Vol.13 (2), p.128 |
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creator | Reddy, A. Amarender Rani, Ch. Radhika Cadman, Timothy Kumar, Soora Naresh Reddy, Anugula N |
description | Purpose - The purpose of this paper is to measure performance of India in food and nutrition security relative to other Asian countries like Bangladesh, China, Africa and also developed countries from 1991 to 2016. Design/methodology/approach - The study is based on FAO food security indicators under four dimensions, namely, food availability, access, stability and utilization. These indicators are further categorized into determinants and outcome indicators of food security. A comprehensive fifteen indicators are examined in depth. Findings - Food availability in terms of dietary calories and protein per capita was less in India compared to even Africa and Bangladesh. However, food access indicators like road density is better, food prices remain low and stable, which improved food access and stability. However, in utilization indicators, access to water and sanitation remained low, anaemia among pregnant women and undernourishment was relatively higher when even compared to least developed countries like Africa and Bangladesh. Depth of food deficit (an indicator of severity of food deficit) was higher in India except Africa. Research limitations/implications - Future research should focus on policies for decreasing undernourishment and anaemia and severity in depth of food deficit with focus on India. Practical implications - The results highlight the severity of food deficit and anaemia among women, undernourishment and provide benchmark to monitor sustainable development goals in zero hunger goal. Originality/value - This study examined the relative performance of India in various food and nutrition security indicators in comparison to other countries. |
doi_str_mv | 10.1108/WJSTSD-10-2015-0049 |
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Amarender ; Rani, Ch. Radhika ; Cadman, Timothy ; Kumar, Soora Naresh ; Reddy, Anugula N</creator><creatorcontrib>Reddy, A. Amarender ; Rani, Ch. Radhika ; Cadman, Timothy ; Kumar, Soora Naresh ; Reddy, Anugula N</creatorcontrib><description>Purpose - The purpose of this paper is to measure performance of India in food and nutrition security relative to other Asian countries like Bangladesh, China, Africa and also developed countries from 1991 to 2016. Design/methodology/approach - The study is based on FAO food security indicators under four dimensions, namely, food availability, access, stability and utilization. These indicators are further categorized into determinants and outcome indicators of food security. A comprehensive fifteen indicators are examined in depth. Findings - Food availability in terms of dietary calories and protein per capita was less in India compared to even Africa and Bangladesh. However, food access indicators like road density is better, food prices remain low and stable, which improved food access and stability. However, in utilization indicators, access to water and sanitation remained low, anaemia among pregnant women and undernourishment was relatively higher when even compared to least developed countries like Africa and Bangladesh. Depth of food deficit (an indicator of severity of food deficit) was higher in India except Africa. Research limitations/implications - Future research should focus on policies for decreasing undernourishment and anaemia and severity in depth of food deficit with focus on India. Practical implications - The results highlight the severity of food deficit and anaemia among women, undernourishment and provide benchmark to monitor sustainable development goals in zero hunger goal. 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Amarender</au><au>Rani, Ch. Radhika</au><au>Cadman, Timothy</au><au>Kumar, Soora Naresh</au><au>Reddy, Anugula N</au><format>journal</format><genre>article</genre><ristype>JOUR</ristype><atitle>Towards sustainable indicators of food and nutritional outcomes in India</atitle><jtitle>World journal of science, technology and sustainable development</jtitle><date>2016-04-04</date><risdate>2016</risdate><volume>13</volume><issue>2</issue><spage>128</spage><pages>128-</pages><issn>2042-5945</issn><eissn>2042-5953</eissn><abstract>Purpose - The purpose of this paper is to measure performance of India in food and nutrition security relative to other Asian countries like Bangladesh, China, Africa and also developed countries from 1991 to 2016. Design/methodology/approach - The study is based on FAO food security indicators under four dimensions, namely, food availability, access, stability and utilization. These indicators are further categorized into determinants and outcome indicators of food security. A comprehensive fifteen indicators are examined in depth. Findings - Food availability in terms of dietary calories and protein per capita was less in India compared to even Africa and Bangladesh. However, food access indicators like road density is better, food prices remain low and stable, which improved food access and stability. However, in utilization indicators, access to water and sanitation remained low, anaemia among pregnant women and undernourishment was relatively higher when even compared to least developed countries like Africa and Bangladesh. Depth of food deficit (an indicator of severity of food deficit) was higher in India except Africa. Research limitations/implications - Future research should focus on policies for decreasing undernourishment and anaemia and severity in depth of food deficit with focus on India. 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subjects | Developing countries Food prices Food security GDP Gross Domestic Product Industrialized nations LDCs Nutrition research Per capita Population Proteins Sanitation |
title | Towards sustainable indicators of food and nutritional outcomes in India |
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