KartavyaDesk
news

“The persistence of hunger in India reveals a crisis of governance, not of grain”. Explain the statement. Examine institutional bottlenecks in implementing food-security schemes. Evaluate how decentralisation and community participation can bridge these gaps.

Kartavya Desk Staff

Topic: Issues relating to poverty and hunger

Topic: Issues relating to poverty and hunger

Q4. “The persistence of hunger in India reveals a crisis of governance, not of grain”. Explain the statement. Examine institutional bottlenecks in implementing food-security schemes. Evaluate how decentralisation and community participation can bridge these gaps. (15 M)

Difficulty Level: Medium

Reference: InsightsIAS

Why the question: India’s paradox of food surplus coexisting with widespread hunger, highlighting governance and institutional challenges in implementing the National Food Security Act and related schemes. Key Demand of the question: The question requires explaining how hunger in India reflects governance failure rather than food scarcity, identifying key institutional weaknesses in food-security delivery, and evaluating how decentralisation and community involvement can improve governance outcomes. Structure of the Answer: Introduction: Mention India’s food surplus and continued hunger, showing the paradox as a governance issue. Body: Explain the statement by linking food abundance with poor access, coordination failures, and policy design gaps. Examine institutional bottlenecks such as PDS leakages, weak grievance systems, poor inter-agency coordination, and digital exclusion. Evaluate how decentralised governance, social audits, panchayats, and SHGs can strengthen transparency, inclusion, and accountability. Conclusion: Suggest building community-led, transparent, and convergence-based food governance to realise constitutional obligations under Articles 21 and 47.

Why the question: India’s paradox of food surplus coexisting with widespread hunger, highlighting governance and institutional challenges in implementing the National Food Security Act and related schemes.

Key Demand of the question: The question requires explaining how hunger in India reflects governance failure rather than food scarcity, identifying key institutional weaknesses in food-security delivery, and evaluating how decentralisation and community involvement can improve governance outcomes.

Structure of the Answer: Introduction:

Mention India’s food surplus and continued hunger, showing the paradox as a governance issue. Body:

Explain the statement by linking food abundance with poor access, coordination failures, and policy design gaps.

Examine institutional bottlenecks such as PDS leakages, weak grievance systems, poor inter-agency coordination, and digital exclusion.

Evaluate how decentralised governance, social audits, panchayats, and SHGs can strengthen transparency, inclusion, and accountability.

Conclusion:

Suggest building community-led, transparent, and convergence-based food governance to realise constitutional obligations under Articles 21 and 47.

AI-assisted content, editorially reviewed by Kartavya Desk Staff.

About Kartavya Desk Staff

Articles in our archive published before our editorial team was expanded. Legacy content is periodically reviewed and updated by our current editors.

All News