challenges of public distribution
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sorry but the question will be challenges of public distribution system..
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Over the past six decades and since the great “Bengal famine”, India had come a long way. We have increased production significantly to ensure that we have enough for all. But we still have difficulty in converting this availability into effective accessibility to food in every nook and corner of the country, and particularly where it is most needed.
Besides ensuring access to food for all, we also need to ensure that our citizens get basic nutrition to become more productive and be able to take advantage of the opportunities that come from our rapid economic development.
The realization of food security for all has to be the basic building block in our efforts to steer the economy in meetings its larger development goals. Food and nutrition is indeed the most basic need without which education, work opportunities and wealth creation will remain a distant dream.
As India develops and living standards improve there is going to be an increase in demand for food grains and other items of consumption. We have seen the consequences of this phenomenon particularly in the past two years.
Sustained high economic growth in recent past has led to improvements in purchasing power in both rural and urban areas. The 12th Plan Approach Paper says that average real wage rate between 2007 and 2010 has increased by 16 per cent at the all India level.
The growth was fastest in Andhra Pradesh, 42 per cent and Odhisa, 33 per cent. Even in States like Bihar and UP the real farm wages went up by 19 and 20 per cent respectively over this period. This has increased demand for certain goods and services, which has translated into persistent high inflationary pressures for those goods in the economy
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Over the past six decades and since the great “Bengal famine”, India had come a long way. We have increased production significantly to ensure that we have enough for all. But we still have difficulty in converting this availability into effective accessibility to food in every nook and corner of the country, and particularly where it is most needed.
Besides ensuring access to food for all, we also need to ensure that our citizens get basic nutrition to become more productive and be able to take advantage of the opportunities that come from our rapid economic development.
The realization of food security for all has to be the basic building block in our efforts to steer the economy in meetings its larger development goals. Food and nutrition is indeed the most basic need without which education, work opportunities and wealth creation will remain a distant dream.
As India develops and living standards improve there is going to be an increase in demand for food grains and other items of consumption. We have seen the consequences of this phenomenon particularly in the past two years.
Sustained high economic growth in recent past has led to improvements in purchasing power in both rural and urban areas. The 12th Plan Approach Paper says that average real wage rate between 2007 and 2010 has increased by 16 per cent at the all India level.
The growth was fastest in Andhra Pradesh, 42 per cent and Odhisa, 33 per cent. Even in States like Bihar and UP the real farm wages went up by 19 and 20 per cent respectively over this period. This has increased demand for certain goods and services, which has translated into persistent high inflationary pressures for those goods in the economy
plzzzz..mark it as a brain list..
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