Private Sector Ideas on Nutrition Should Be Taken with a Pinch of ‘Fortified’ Salt

The article ‘No child left behind’ by Vinita Bali, in the Hindu (August 18, 2018), identifies three “urgent priorities” to address poor nutrition in India. The “solutions”, primarily placing the private sector as some kind of panacea, are all potential minefields that could take India’s hungry citizens further away from sustainable food security.

Unsurprisingly for someone who has been the managing director of Britannia industries, which has itself championed solutions like “fortified biscuits” to India’s nutrition crisis, Bali’s piece argues for widespread and “mandatory fortification.”

This flies in the face of more sustainable interventions promoted by the Right to Food campaign in India but not seen as viable or lucrative by the big food companies.

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Private sector meddling in nutrition

In Bali’s piece, the first priority is to “adequately re-engineer” the Integrated Child Development Scheme (ICDS), the Midday Meal Scheme (MDM) and the Public Distribution System (PDS), by creating a “disaggregated supply model” that “engages local communities”. She says this is an “ideal initiative for public private partnership” involving the ‘best nutritionists’ and ‘anchored’ by relevant private sector.

She fails to mention that most private sector interventions in nutrition in India, riding on the back of vested interests, have been a disaster. Here are some examples: