Kids Corner

No running water! -- the images, above and below, were taken in India's capital, New Delhi, on Wednesday, May 22, 2013 by Saurabh Das.

Current Events

India's Starving Millions Need Food, Not Helicopters

JOEL BRINKLEY

 

 

 

Talk about India always begins with recognition that it’s one of Asia’s rising powers, a state with a fast-growing economy and burgeoning political influence on the world stage.

But a closer look shows a dark underbelly that portends a sad time ahead.

Put simply, the state is so badly neglecting its young that India is threatening its very future.

“Why are the youth angry?” one politician asked pointedly a few weeks ago. He’s a prominent member of parliament and a fifth-generation member of the family that has dominated Indian politics since the state’s independence in 1947.

“There is a young and impatient India, which is demanding a greater say in the future,” he declares, mouthing the right words, adding: “We need to meet their urgent need for jobs.”

This is a refrain heard around the world where roughly 20 to 25 % of society consists of the young.

In India right now, though, half the population is under 25 years old. In the world’s second most populous state (after China), that’s not a trivial number of people. In fact it’s about 600 million -- twice the entire population of the United States. And they are governed by gerontocrats, leaders whose average age is about 65.

A World Bank report declared that one-third of the world’s desperately poor people live in India, 400 million people who survive on less than $1.25 a day.

The sad truth is, most extremely poor children are malnourished. As a result, nearly half of India’s children grow up stunted, according to UNICEF. As the organization describes this: “Undernutrition of children under age two diminishes the ability of children to learn and earn throughout their lives. Nutritional deprivation leaves children tired and weak and lowers their IQs, so they perform poorly in school.”

If almost half of India’s children have diminished IQs, what does that mean for governance and the economy when this generation matures? Actually, it seems as if these consequences are already being felt. The economy is faltering; India’s GDP growth for the fourth quarter of 2012 fell to 4.5 percent, the lowest in 10 years.

Still, China is unintentionally offering India and other developing states a great opportunity for galloping growth. China’s basic working wage has quadrupled in the last 10 years, leading many companies in need of low-wage workers to relocate.

Few of those jobs are coming to India, however. They’re going to Vietnam, Cambodia, Laos, Indonesia and similar states -- and not because those countries have more low-wage workers. India has more of these people than any of them.

Decades-old unfriendly labor laws that make it difficult for companies to fire unproductive workers are still on the books, even though economists have been urging the calcified government to change them for many years.

Foreign companies don’t want their hands tied by these laws. For the same reason, Indian companies hire what are called “informal” contract workers who aren’t subject to those laws. They generally earn far less than the minimum wage and get no employment benefits. Eighty-five percent of India’s workers are “informal” -- legions of contract security guards, delivery boys, brick porters and elevator operators.

These people may even count themselves as lucky because a government-sponsored survey published early this year found that, on average, 3,000 children die from malnutrition every day.

This month, the sad state of children did not seem to be in mind when the Indian government bought 16 new Russian-made, carrier-borne fighter jets, along with six helicopters, for $2.3 billion -- to fight an enemy not yet visible.

Won’t India’s leaders ever wake up and realize that food security poses a far greater threat for their nation than national security?

 

[Courtesy: Kansas City. Edited for sikhchic.com]

May 27, 2013


Read more here: http://www.kansascity.com/2013/05/24/4253999/india-buys-helicopters-while-its.html#storylink=cpy

 


Read more here: http://www.kansascity.com/2013/05/24/4253999/india-buys-helicopters-while-its.html#storylink=cpy

 

Conversation about this article

1: H. Kaur (Canada), May 27, 2013, 9:56 PM.

Come, come, Mr. Brinkley, you are asking for too much! Why would India not buy the helicopters or spend millions on its space program just because 3000 young "shudras" die a day from lack of food? As long as they are not the children of rich, privileged 'upper' caste people, what does it matter if they die, or don't go to school, or are kept in forced labour conditions that are just horrific; are raped, beaten, robbed of their organs, murdered, etc. These people's parents only matter on voting day and even then they may be dispensible if their particular group doesn't form a large enough voting block. Heck, some would even say it is even their own fault. They should have engaged in better karma in the last life and then the Brahmin god would have made them into rich, 'upper' caste, lighter skinned males at best, or or rich, 'upper' caste, lighter skinned females at worst. If ordinary people mattered in India, it would not be the what it is. It would be a civilized place, not a fake democracy run by numerous robbers, rapists, and mass murderers. Oh, by the way, a good quote that sums up their attitude is from Sonia Gandhi's son-in-law. He was forced to fly economy class and called it "cattle class."

2: Aryeh Leib (Israel), May 28, 2013, 2:50 AM.

Ah, but "cattle class", at least within a Hindu context, should mean FIRST class!

3: Dr Birinder Singh Ahluwalia (Toronto, Ontario, Canada), May 28, 2013, 5:22 AM.

Untimely demise of even a single child in any part of the world, in particular as a result of lack of food, is abhorrent and unacceptable, let alone to allow at least 3000 such children to perish. We as citizens of the world and of individual nations can do better than this!

4: Ranvir (Canada), June 13, 2013, 9:24 PM.

Sustainability comes from within, not by someone throwing his donations at you to help you out. This may be needed sometime, but don't let them sit and wait till it arrives. Like someone said - God provides every bird its food but it does not put it into its mouth. Necessity is the mother of invention - how come an almost illiterate boy in Africa figured out how to safeguard his herd of cattle from the predator lions by discovering the impact of shining lights. India is a country which has its share of intelligent individuals, but it appears too may of them sit and wait for someone else to solve their problems. Unless you are willing to solve your own problems, no one else will.

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