Agriculture and Child Under-Nutrition in India: A State Level Analysis
Published By: Madras School of Economics | Published Date: July, 01 , 2014The literature review on agriculture-child nutrition linkage indicates that
the evidence base is weak and inconclusive (Kadiyala et al., 2013). This
paper explores the possible linkages between agricultural prosperity with
rural child nutrition at the macro level, controlling for sanitation and safe
drinking water, using panel data fixed effects and random effects models.
The four alternate indicators of agricultural prosperity viz., agricultural
growth, worker productivity, land productivity and food grain production
per capita used alternatively enable us to conclude that negative
influence of agricultural prosperity on child undernutrition exists, though
the influence of various aspects of prosperity on underweight and
stunting differ. Other aspects of agriculture considered, such as female
agricultural wages help to reinforce the negative influence of agricultural
prosperity on underweight in children and the land operational inequality
dampens the impact of agricultural prosperity as it increases the
incidence of stunting. Water and sanitation help reduce child
undernutrition albeit differently on stunting and underweight. The same
set of variables seems to influence stunting and underweight differently.
Their trajectories seem to differ. The present study enables us to
conclude that Indian agricultural growth through higher food grain
production and through higher land productivity, when percolates
through, labour productivity and higher wages, can reduce child
undernutrition in rural India. However, public policy has to promote social
provisioning of sanitation and health and make sure that agricultural
growth is consistent. Public policy should ensure that growth translates
into higher labour productivity and higher wages.
Author(s): Rohit Parasar, R.V. Bhavani, Vinodhini Umashankar, Swarna Sadasivam Vepa | Posted on: Dec 24, 2014 | Views(747) | Download (78)