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July 29, 2008 Tuesday Rajab 25, 1429



India behind Ethiopia in fighting child poverty



By Kathryn Hopkins


London: Four in every 10 children in India are malnourished despite the country’s economy growing at an average rate of 9 per cent a year, one of the world’s leading development economists warned on Sunday.

Kevin Watkins, who edited the UN’s Human Development Report, said that despite growing prosperity brought on by a sustained boom, child malnourishment in India is higher than in Ethiopia and well above the African average of 28 per cent.

“India dominates the world hunger league,” he said. “Economists like to debate the factors behind India’s spectacular take-off. Perhaps they should be asking how a country can grow so fast with such a limited impact on child hunger.”

Watkins’s warning follows comments by India’s finance minister, Palaniappan Chidambaram, who said last week that he wanted India to become an “economic superpower”.

“I have no hesitation in saying that I do not envy China,” he said. “I want to emulate China. I want India to become an economic power, an economic superpower.”

When it comes to economic growth, India is a long way ahead of Bangladesh but when it come to child survival rates, it lags behind. According to Watkins, an Oxford academic, Bangladesh has been cutting child deaths at a rate some 50 per cent higher than in India. If India, where there are about 1.1 billion people, had matched Bangladesh’s record on child mortality since 1990 there would be about 700,000 fewer child deaths this year.

“Both Bangladesh and Nepal are far poorer than India, but India has a higher child death rate than either,” said Watkins.

Poverty has also been falling far more slowly in India than in other high-growth developing countries, such as Vietnam and Brazil. Watkins believes that part of the problem is that the benefits of growth have been “highly skewed”.

“While wealth has been flooding into urban areas and middle-class suburbs, it has been trickling down in small doses to rural areas, poor states in the north of the country, rural labourers and low-caste groups,” he said.

Watkins also criticised India’s public health system. He said that India’s children did not receive the basic medication they so badly need such as immunisation, drugs for treating childhood diarrhoea and nutritional supplements. “Fewer than half of India’s children are fully immunised and the share has barely changed in a decade,” he added.—Dawn/The Guardian News Service







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