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Class 9 Economics: Food Security Q&A

The document provides extra questions and answers for Class 9 Economics Chapter 4 on Food Security in India, aimed at helping students revise effectively. It covers various aspects of food security, including definitions, factors affecting it, the role of government programs like the Public Distribution System, and the impact of calamities on food availability. The document emphasizes the importance of food security for different socio-economic groups and regions within India.

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
64 views20 pages

Class 9 Economics: Food Security Q&A

The document provides extra questions and answers for Class 9 Economics Chapter 4 on Food Security in India, aimed at helping students revise effectively. It covers various aspects of food security, including definitions, factors affecting it, the role of government programs like the Public Distribution System, and the impact of calamities on food availability. The document emphasizes the importance of food security for different socio-economic groups and regions within India.

Uploaded by

ajayyadav47572
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd

Home » Class 9 » Extra Questions » Social Science » Economics » Chapter 4 Food Security in

India

Extra Questions for Class 9 Economics Chapter 4


Food Security in India
Class 9 Social Science Economics Chapter 4 Food Security in India extra questions and

answers available here in PDF format. Solving class 9 extra questions help students to revise

the Chapter most competently. We prepared these questions with PDF as per the latest

NCERT book and CBSE syllabus. Practising these questions before the exam will ensure

excellent marks in the exam.

Class 9 Economics Chapter 4 Extra Questions and Answers

Table of Contents

Very Short Answer Questions

Short Answer Type Questions

Long Answer Type Questions

Very Short Answer Questions

1. What does ‘Food Security’ mean?

Answer: Food security means availability, accessibility and affordability of food to all people

at all times.

2. On what factors does food security depend on?


Answer: Food security depends on the Public Distribution System (PDS) and government

vigilance and action at times when this security is threatened.

3. How does the situation of starvation arise?

Answer: If any calamity happens in a very widespread area or is stretched over a large time

period, it may cause a situation of starvation. A massive starvation might take the form of

famine.

4. Which was the most devastating famine to have occurred in India?

Answer: The most devastating famine that had occurred in India was the famine of Bengal in

1943. This famine killed thirty lakh people in the province of Bengal.

5. What kind of people in rural areas are food insecure?

Answer: The worst affected groups are landless people with little or no land to depend upon,

traditional artisans, providers of traditional services, petty self employed workers and
destitute including beggars.

6. Which other parts of society are prone to food insecurity?

Answer: The SCs, STs and some sections of OBCs who have either poor land base or very low
land productivity are prone to food insecurity.

7. How people affected by natural disasters are food insecure?

Answer: The people affected by natural disasters, who have to migrate to other areas in
search of work, are also among the most food insecure people, since they are not settled in

their life.

8. Does hungers cause food insecurity?

Answer: Hunger is another aspect indicating food insecurity, arising from poverty.
9. Which states achieved the highest rate of growth in food grain production during

Green Revolution?

Answer: Punjab and Haryana achieved the highest rate of growth in the production of

wheat.

10. Which states continued to lag behind in food production despite Green Revolution?

Answer: Maharashtra, Madhya Pradesh, Bihar, Odisha and the northeastern states lagged

behind in food production, despite Green Revolution.

11. How did India become self sufficient?

Answer: India has become self sufficient in food grains during the last thirty years because of

a variety of crops grown all over the country.

12. What is buffer stock?

Answer: Buffer stock is the stock of food grains, namely wheat and rice procured by the

government through Food Corporation of India (FCI).

13. What are Fair Price Shops?

Answer: Ration Shops, also known as Fair Price Shops, keep stocks of food grains, sugar,

kerosene oil, etc. These items are sold to people at a price lower than the market price.

14. Which families can buy from these Ration Shops?

Answer: Any family which is below the poverty line gets a ration card. A ration card can buy

them a stipulated amount of certain essential commodities like food grains or kerosene, every
month from a nearby ration shop.

15. When was rationing system introduced in India?


Answer: The rationing system introduced in India in 1940s after the disastrous Bengal famine

occurred.

16. When was rationing system revived after Bengal famine?

Answer: The rationing system was revived in the wake of an acute food shortage during the

1960s prior to the Green Revolution.

17. Which important food intervention programmes were introduced by Indian

government after NSSO report?

Answer:(i) Public Distribution System – for food grains. (ii) Integrated Child Development

Service – in 1975 on experimental basis. (iii) Food for Work-Introduced in 1977-78.

18. What are the benefits of PDS?

Answer: The PDS has proved to be the most effective instrument of government policy over

the years in stabilising prices and making food available to the poor at affordable prices.

19. How has Minimum Support Prices supported the farmers?

Answer: The minimum support prices and procurement has contributed to an increase in

food grain production and provided income security to farmers in certain regions.

20. Why has PDS been facing severe criticism?

Answer: Instances of hunger are prevalent despite overflowing granaries. FCI god owns are

overflowing with grains, with some rotting away and some being eaten by rats.

21 What is the role of ADS?

Answer: ADS is Academy of Development Science which has facilitated a network of NGOs

for setting up grain banks in different regions.


Short Answer Type Questions

1. Explain the three dimensions of food security.

Answer: Availability of food means food production within the country, accessibility means

food within reach of every person and affordability is that an individual has enough money to

buy sufficient safe food.

2. How is food security ensured in a country?

Answer: Food security is ensured in a country only if enough food is available for all persons,

all persons have the capacity to buy food of acceptable quality and there is no barrier on

access to food.

3. What kind of people faces food insecurity?

Answer: The poorest section of the society might be food insecure most of the times while

persons above the poverty line might also be food insecure when the country faces a national
disaster/calamity like drought, flood, tsunami, widespread failure of crops causing famine,

etc.

4. How is food security affected during a calamity?

Answer: Due to a national calamity say, drought, total production of food grain decreases. It

creates a shortage of food in the affected areas. Due to shortage of food the prices go up. At

the high prices, many people cannot afford to buy food.

5. How do famines lead to widespread deaths?

Answer: A famine is characterised by widespread deaths due to starvation and epidemics

caused by forced use of contaminated water or decaying food and loss of body resistance

due to weakening from starvation.

6. In which areas of India even today famine has caused starvation deaths?
Answer: Even today there are places like Kalahandi district and Kashipur tehsil in Raigarh

district of Odisha where Some starvation deaths have been reported due to famine like

conditions. Starvation deaths are also reported in Baran district of Rajasthan and Palamao
district of Jharkhand.

7. What type of people in urban areas are food insecure?

Answer: In the urban areas, the food insecure families are those whose working members are
generally employed in ill-paid occupations and casual labour market. These workers are

largely engaged in seasonal activities and are paid very low wages that just ensure basic

survival.

8. Is it true that a high incidence of malnutrition prevails among women?

Answer: This is a matter of serious concern as it is true. It puts even the unborn baby at the

risk of malnutrition. A large proportion of pregnant and nursing mothers and children under

the age of 5 years constitute an important segment of food insecure population.

9. In which regions are food insecure people disproportionately large in our country?

Answer: The food insecure people are disproportionately large in some regions of the

country, such as economically backward states with high incidence of poverty, tribal and

remote areas, regions more prone to natural disasters, etc.

10. Which states of India account for the largest number of food insecure people?

Answer: The states of Uttar Pradesh, Bihar, Jharkhand, Odisha, West Bengal, Chhattisgarh,

parts of Madhya Pradesh and Maharashtra account for the largest number of food insecure

people in the country.

11. How does ‘chronic hunger’ occur?


Answer: Chronic hunger is a consequence of having persistently inadequate diet in terms of

quantity and quality. Poor people suffer from chronic hunger because of very low income

and, in turn, inability to buy food even for survival.

12. What do you understand by ‘seasonal hunger’?

Answer: Seasonal hunger is related to cycles of food production. This happens in rural areas

because of the seasonal nature of agricultural activities and in urban areas because of the
casual labourers who get less work during rainy season.

13. What policies were adopted by Indian government to remove food insecurity?

Answer: After Independence, Indian policy makers adopted all measures to achieve self
sufficiency in food grains, for that a new strategy of ‘Green Revolution’ was introduced to

increase production of wheat and rice in our country.

14. How was the success of ‘Green Revolution’ felicitated by Indira Gandhi?

Answer: Indira Gandhi, the then Prime Minister, officially recorded the impressive strides of

the Green Revolution in agriculture by releasing a special stamp entitled ‘Wheat Revolution’ in

July 1968.

15. What is Minimum Support Price?

Answer: The FCI purchases wheat and rice from the farmers in states where there is surplus

production. The farmers are paid a pre-announced price for their crops. This price is called

Minimum Support Price.

16. How does FCI purchase grains from the farmers?

Answer: The Minimum Support Price (MSP) is declared by the government every year before

the sowing season to provide incentives to the farmers for raising the production of these

crops. The purchased food grains are stored in granaries.


17. Why is buffer stock created by the government?

Answer: Buffer stock is created to distribute food grains in the deficit areas and among the

poorer strata of society at a price lower than the market price also known as issue price. It

also helps resolve the problem of shortage of food during adverse weather conditions or

during the periods of calamity.

18. What is Public Distribution System?

Answer: The food procured by the FCI is distributed through government regulated ration

shops among the poorer section of the society. This is called the public distribution system
(PDS).

19. How do PAPs enhance food security?

Answer: Poverty Alleviation Programmes such as PDS, mid-day meals, etc. are exclusively
food security programmes. Most of these PAPs are meant for rural areas and enhance food

security.

20. What do you know about National Food for Work Programme?

Answer: This programme was launched on November 14, 2004 in 150 most backward

districts of the country with the objective of intensifying the generation of supplementary

wage employment.

21. What is RPDS?

Answer: Over the years, the policy related to PDS has been revised to make it more efficient

and targeted. In 1992 Revamped Public Distribution System was introduced in 1,700 blocks in

the country. The target was to provide the benefits of PDS to remote and backward areas

22. What is TPDS?


Answer: From June 1997, in a renewed attempt. Targeted Public Distribution System (TPDS)

was introduced to adopt the principle of targeting the ‘poor in all areas’. It was for the first

time that a differential price policy was adopted for poor and non-poor.

23. Which two schemes were linked with the PDS system by the government?

Answer: In 2000, two special schemes were launched – Antyodaya Anna Yojana (AAY) and the

Annapurna Scheme with special target groups of ‘poorest of the poor’ and ‘Senior Citizens’,
respectively.

24. What is a ‘Subsidy’?

Answer: ‘Subsidy’ is a payment that a government makes to a producer to supplement the


market price of a commodity. Subsidies can keep consumer prices low while maintaining a

higher income for domestic producers.

25. Why is a high level of buffer stock undesirable?

Answer: There is a general consensus that high level of buffer stocks of food grains is very

undesirable and can be wasteful. The storage of massive food stocks has been responsible for

high carrying cost, in addition to wastage and deterioration in grain quality.

26. What is the impact of intensive utilisation of water in the cultivation of rice on the

environment?

Answer: The intensive utilisation of water in the cultivation of rice has also led to

environmental degradation and fall in the water level, threatening the sustainability of the

agricultural development in the states of Punjab and Haryana.

28. What kind of malpractices are there among PDS dealers?

Answer: PDS dealers are sometimes found resorting to malpractices like diverting the grains

to open market to get better margins, selling poor quality grains at ration shops, irregular
opening of the shops, etc.

29. What is the role of cooperatives in food security?

Answer: The cooperatives are also playing an important role in food security in India

especially in southern and western parts of the country. The cooperative societies set up

shops to sell low priced goods to poor families.

30 Give some important cooperatives running successfully.

Answer:(i) In Delhi Mother Dairy is making efforts in providing milk and vegetables to the

consumers at controlled rates decided by the government of Delhi. (ii) Amul is a successful

cooperative in milk and milk products from Gujarat.

31. What rights provide food security?

Answer: (i) Availability of food

(ii) Accessibility of food


(iii) Affordability of food.

32. How can you help poor people in providing food security?

Answer: (i) By providing standard level of nutrition


(ii) By aiming to raise awareness about self-sufficiency in food grains

(iii) By opening consumer cooperative stores.

33. What is the contribution of Grain Banks?

Answer: ADS tried to set up Grain Banks in Maharashtra to facilitate replication through other

NGOs and to influence the Government policy on food security. These are paying rich

dividends. It has been acknowledged as a successful and innovative food security

intervention.
34. What does ‘food security’ mean? On what factors does food security of a country

depend?

Answer: Food security means availability, accessibility and affordability of food for all people

at all times. It means something more than getting two square meals. Food security depends

on:
(i) The Public Distribution System.

(ii) The government acts at times when this security is threatened.

Long Answer Type Questions

1. What are the dimensions of ‘food security’?

Answer: The dimensions of food security are:

(i) Availability of food: It is the food production within the country including food imports and

previous year stock of food in government granaries.

(ii) Accessibility: This means food within the reach of every person.

(iii) Affordability: This means whether the individual has enough money to buy sufficient and

nutritious food.

2. Why do we need ‘food security’?

Answer: Food security is needed because:

(i) The poorest section of the society might be food insecure most of the times.
(ii) People above the poverty line might also be food insecure when the country faces a

national disaster or calamity like an earthquake, drought, flood, tsunami, etc.

(iii) There can also be a widespread failure of crops causing famines, etc.

3. How is food security affected during a calamity?

Answer:(i) Due to a natural calamity, total production of food grains decreases.

(ii) It creates a shortage of food in the affected area.

(iii) Due to shortage of food, the prices go up.


(iv) At higher prices, some people cannot afford to buy food.

(v) If such a calamity occurs in a widespread area, it may cause a situation of starvation. (vi) A

massive situation of starvation might turn into a famine.

4. What is a ‘famine’? Which states in India are affected by famines?

Answer: A famine is characterised by widespread deaths due to starvation and epidemics

caused by forced use of contaminated water or decaying food and loss of body resistance
due to weakening from starvation:

(i) The most devastating famine that occurred in India was the Famine of Bengal in 1943. This

famine killed 30 lakh people in the province of Bengal.

(ii) Even today, there are places like Kalahandi and Kashipur in Orissa, where famine-like

conditions have been existing for many years and starvation deaths have also been reported.

(iii) Starvation deaths are also reported in Baran district of Rajasthan, Palamau district of
Jharkhand and many other remote areas during the recent years.

5. Who are the most affected food insecure people in India?

Answer: Worst affected people in rural areas are:


(i) Landless people with little or no land to depend on.

(ii) The traditional artisans.

(iii) Providers of traditional services like Pandits performing religious ceremonies.

(iv) Petty, self-employed workers.

(v) Poor and the destitute including beggars.

Worst affected people in urban areas are:


(i) Those families are food insecure whose working members are generally employed in ill-

paid occupations.

(ii) Casual labour in the market.

(iii) These workers are mostly engaged in seasonal activities and are paid very low wages that

just ensure their bare survival.


6. How are food insecure people disproportionately large in some regions of the

country?

Answer:(i) There are some states which are economically backward states with high incidence

of poverty.

(ii) These are the tribal and remote areas, and regions more prone to natural disasters, etc. (iii)
In fact, the states of UP, Bihar, Jharkhand, Odisha, West Bengal, Chhattisgarh, parts of Madhya

Pradesh and Maharashtra account for the largest number of food insecure people in the

country.

7. Cite evidences which explain that India is self-sufficient in food grain production.

Answer: India has become self-sufficient in food grain production during the last thirty years.

(i) This is because of a variety of crops grown all over the country.

(ii) The availability of food grains even in adverse weather conditions or otherwise, has further

been ensured with a carefully designed food security system by the government. (iii) This

system has two components:


(a) Buffer stocks and

(b) Public distribution system.

8. Why is the Public Distribution System criticised?

Answer: The PDS has been criticised because:

(i) Instances of hunger are prevalent despite overflowing granaries.

(ii) The FCI god owns are overflowing with grains where some are rotting away and some are

eaten by rats.

(iii) Shopkeepers of fair price shops are black marketing the goods in the retail market,
though they are not allowed to do so.

9. What does Antyodaya Anna Yojana mean?

Answer: (i) The AAY was launched in December 2000.


(ii) Under this scheme, one crore of the poorest among the BPL (Below Poverty Line) families
covered under the targeted PDS system were identified.

(iii) Twenty-five kilograms of food grains were made available to each eligible family at a

highly subsidised rate.

10. How do PDS dealers resort to malpractices?

Answer: (i) The PDS dealers are diverting the grains to the open market to get better

margins.
(ii) They are selling poor quality grains at ration shops.

(iii) Opening the shops irregularly, which is inconvenient for the poor. It is common to find

that ration shops regularly have unsold stocks of poor quality grains left.

11. How does a calamity affect food security?

Answer:(i) Food security is severely affected by a calamity.

(ii) Due to a natural calamity like drought, flood, earthquake, total production of food grain

decreases.

(iii) Due to shortage of food, the prices increase, making the things more expensive for the

people. If it gets prolonged, it could lead to even starvation and starvation deaths also.

12. How is food security ensured in a country?

Answer: Food security is ensured in a country only if:

(i) Enough food is available for all the persons.


(ii) All persons have the capacity to buy food of acceptable quality.

(iii) There is no barrier on the access of food.

13. In which regions of India, starvation deaths are reported?

Answer:(i) It is disturbing to note that even today, there are places like Kalahandi and

Kashipur in Orissa where famine-like conditions have been existing for many years and where

some starvation deaths have also been reported.

(ii) Starvation deaths are also reported in Baran district of Rajasthan, Palamau district of
Jharkhand and many other remote areas during the recent years.

(iii) Therefore, food security is needed in a country to ensure food at all times.

14. What does ‘Seasonal Hunger’ mean?

Answer: (i) Seasonal hunger is related to cycles of food growing and harvesting.

(ii) This is prevalent in rural areas because of the seasonal nature of agricultural activities and

in urban areas because of the casual labour. e.g., there is less work for casual construction
labour during the rainy season.

(iii) This type of hunger exists when a person is unable to get work for the entire year.

15. Why is the buffer stock created by the government?

Answer: (i) This is done to distribute food grains in the deficit areas and among the poorer

strata of society at a price lower than the market price, also known as issue price.

(ii) This also helps resolve the problem of shortage of food during adverse weather conditions

or during the periods of calamity.

16. What are the three important Food Intervention Programmes?

Answer: (i) Public Distribution System (PDS) gives provision of food grains for the poor at

subsidised cost. It was existing earlier also but strengthened thereafter.

(ii) Integrated Child Development Science (ICDS). It was introduced in 1975 on an

experimental basis.

(iii) Food For Work (FFW) was introduced in 1977-78. Over the years, several new programmes
have been launched and some have been restructured with the growing experience of

administering of the programme.

17. Why were the FCI granaries overflowing with food grains and how was the situation

controlled?
Answer:(i) In July 2002, the stock of wheat and rice with FCI was 63 million tones which was

much more than the minimum buffer norms of 24.3 million tonnes.

(ii) The stock eased after 2002-03 due to relief operations undertaken by the government as
the year was declared as draught year due to failure of monsoon.

(iii) The decline in stocks continued in subsequent years. However, these remained

consistently higher than the buffer norms. The situation improved with the distribution of

food grains under different schemes launched by the government.

18. What buffer norms are to be followed by the government?

Answer: (i) There is a general consensus that high level of buffer stocks of food grains is very

undesirable and can be wasteful.

(ii) The storage of massive food stocks has been responsible for high carrying cost, in addition

to wastage and deterioration in grain quality.


(iii) Freezing of Minimum Support Price (MSP) for a few years should be considered seriously.

The rising MSP has raised the maintenance cost of procuring food grains by the government.

19. How does social inability to buy food also play a role in food insecurity?

Answer: (i) The SCs, STs and some sections of the OBCs who have low land productivity are

prone to food insecurity.

(ii) The people who are affected by natural disasters and have to migrate to other areas in

search of work are also amongst the most food insecure people.

(iii) Malnutrition among women can even put the unborn baby at the risk of malnutrition. (iv)

A large proportion of pregnant and nursing mothers, and children under the age of 5 years
are also among the food insecure population.

20. What is ‘hunger’? Differentiate between Chronic and Seasonal hunger.

Answer: Hunger is another aspect of food insecurity. Hunger is not just an expression of
poverty, it brings about poverty. Its a situation when you feel hungry but are unable or cannot

afford food. Difference between Chronic and Seasonal hunger:


(i) Chronic hunger

(a)It is a consequence of diets persistently inadequate in terms of quantity and/or quality.

(b) Poor people suffer from chronic hunger because of their very low incomes and inability to
buy food even for survival.

(ii) Seasonal hunger


(a) It is related to the cycles of food growing and harvesting.

(b) This is prevalent in the rural areas because of the seasonal nature of agricultural activities.

(c) In urban areas, casual labour is unable to get work for the entire year which makes him

hungry.

21. How did India aim at self-sufficiency in food grains after independence?

Answer: (i) After independence, the Indian policy makers adopted all measures to achieve

self- sufficiency.

(ii) India has adopted a new strategy in agriculture called the ‘Green Revolution’, which is

introduced in the production of rice and wheat.


(iii) Indira Gandhi, the then Prime Minister of India officially recorded the success of the Green

Revolution by releasing a special stamp entitled ‘Wheat Revolution’.

(iv) The success of wheat was later replicated in rice.

(v) The highest rate of growth was achieved in Punjab and Haryana where food grains

production jumped to an all-time high.


(vi) Tamil Nadu and Andhra Pradesh on the other hand, recorded significant increase in rice

yield.

22. What is ‘buffer stock’? Why was it created by the government?

Answer: Buffer stock is the stock of food grains, namely wheat and rice procured by the

government through Food Corporation of India (FCI).

(i) The FCI purchases wheat and rice from the farmers in states where there is surplus

production.

(ii) The farmers are paid a pre-announced price for their crops. This price is called Minimum
Support Price (MSP).

(iii) The MSP is declared by the government every year, before the sowing season to provide

incentives to the farmers for raising the production of these crops.


(iv) The purchased food grains are stored in granaries by the government.

(v) This is done to distribute food grains in the deficit areas and among the poorer strata of

society, at a price lower than the market price also known as Issue Price.

(vi) This also helps resolve the problem of shortage of food during adverse weather

conditions or during the periods of calamity.

23. What is the Public Distribution System?

Answer:(i) When the food procured by the FCI is distributed through government regulated

ration shops among the poor sections of the society, it is called the Public Distribution System

(PDS).
(ii) Ration shops are now present in most localities, villages, towns and cities.

(iii) Ration shops are also known as ‘Fair Price Shops’, which keep stock of food grains, sugar,

kerosene oil for cooking.

(iv) Items such as these are sold to people at a price lower than the market price.

(v) Any family with a ration card can buy a stipulated amount of these items every month

from a nearby ration shop, depending on the number of family members.

24. What is the ‘rationing system’?

Answer:(i) It was introduced in India in the 1940s after the Bengal Famine.

(ii) The rationing system was revived in the 1960s due to food shortage in India.
(iii) Due to high incidence of poverty in the mid-1970s reported by NSSO, three food

intervention programmes were introduced:

(a) Public Distribution System (PDS) for food grains; already existed but strengthened later on.

(b) Integrated Child Development Services (ICDS) introduced in 1975 on an experimental

basis.

(c) Food For Work (FFW) Programme launched in 2004 in 150 most backward districts of the
country to intensify the generation of supplementary wage employment.
25. What is the current status of the Public Distribution System?

Answer: PDS is the most important step taken by the government of India towards ensuring

food security.

(i) In the beginning, the PDS system was universal with no discrimination between the poor

and the rich.


(ii) Over the years, the policy related to PDS has been revised to make it more efficient and

targeted.

(iii) In 1992, Revamped Public Distribution System (RPDS) was introduced to provide the

benefits of PDS in remote and backward areas.

(iv) From June 1997, Targeted Public Distribution System (TPDS) was introduced to target the

‘poor in all areas’. It was for the first time that a differential price policy was adopted for the
poor and non-poor.

(v) In 2000, two special schemes were launched:

(a) Antyodaya Anna Yojana (AAY)

(b) Annapurna Scheme with special target groups of ‘poorest of the poor’ and ‘indigent

senior citizens’, respectively.

26. What are some of the important features of the PDS?

Answer: (i) It is the most effective government policy in stabilising prices and making food

available to consumers at affordable prices.


(ii) It helps in averting widespread hunger and famine by supplying food from surplus regions

of the country to the deficit areas.

(iii) The prices have been under revision in favour of poor households in general.

(iv) Minimum Support Price announcement has increased the food production and provided

income security to farmers.

27. What is the role of ‘Cooperatives’ in food security? Or Write a note on the role of

cooperatives in providing food and retained items.


Answer: (i) The Cooperative societies set up shops to sell low priced goods to poor people.

(ii) In Delhi, ‘Mother-Dairy’ is making efforts to sell milk, milk products and vegetables at

controlled rates.
(iii) Amul is another cooperative in milk and milk products in Gujarat. It has brought about the

‘White Revolution’ in the country.

(iv) In Maharashtra, Academy of Development Science (ADS) has a network of NGOs for

setting up grain banks in different regions. They organize training and capacity building

programmes on food security for NGOs. Grain banks are now slowly taking shape in different

parts of Maharashtra.
(v) There are many more cooperatives running in different parts of the country, ensuring food

security for different sections of the society.

28. Who are food insecure in India? What is their social composition? How are they

scattered over in the country?

Answer: (i) Although a large section of people suffer from food and nutrition insecurity. In

India, the worst affected groups are landless people with little or no land to depend upon,

traditional services petty self employed workers and destitute including beggars. In the urban

areas, the food insecure families are those whose working members are generally employed

in ill paid occupations and casual labour market. Rickshaw – puller.

(ii) The Social composition along with the inability to buy food also plays a role in food
insecurity. The SCs , STs and some sections of the OBCs, who have either poor land base or

very low land productivity are prone to food insecurity. The people affected by natural

disasters who have to migrate to other areas in search of work, are also among the most food

insecure people. A large proportion of pregnant and nursing mothers and children’s under

the age of 5 years constitute an important segment of the food insecure population.

(iii) The food insecure people are disproportionately scattered our large areas regions in the

country.

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