india v/s vietnam : diversity in calorie sources and undernourishment

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Diversity in Calorie Sources and Undernourishment during Rapid Economic Growth [email protected]

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India and Vietnam are the two countries which have experienced rapid economic growth in the recent past. This presentation discusses up-to what what extent they have been successful in maintaining balance between controlling under nutrition and flourishing the economy.

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Page 1: India v/s Vietnam : Diversity in Calorie Sources and Undernourishment

Diversity in Calorie Sources and Undernourishment during Rapid

Economic Growth

[email protected]

Page 2: India v/s Vietnam : Diversity in Calorie Sources and Undernourishment

Topics to be covered

• Introduction• Data Sets and Food Consumption

Patterns• Calorie Shares of Food items• Comparison of Prevalence of

Under nutrition (POU)• Principal Determinants of Dietary

changes in Vietnam• Conclusion

Page 3: India v/s Vietnam : Diversity in Calorie Sources and Undernourishment

Introduction

• Comparing dietary diversity and under-nourishment in India and Vietnam from early 1990s to the middle of the first decade of the new millennium

• Studying the difference between poverty lines based on expenditure (POV) and calorie based (POU)

Page 4: India v/s Vietnam : Diversity in Calorie Sources and Undernourishment

Data Sets and Food Consumption Patterns

National Sample Survey (NSS) rounds taken:

43rd (June 1987 – June 1988)

50th (June 1993 – June 1994)

55th (June 1999 – June 2000)

57th (June 2001 – June 2002)

Indian Data Set used:

Page 5: India v/s Vietnam : Diversity in Calorie Sources and Undernourishment

Vietnamese Living Standard Survey

(VLSS)

1992-93 1997-98 2002 2004

Vietnamese Data Set used:

Vietnamese Household Living Standard Survey

(VHLSS)

Data Sets and Food Consumption Patterns

Page 6: India v/s Vietnam : Diversity in Calorie Sources and Undernourishment

Data Sets and Food Consumption Patterns• A household is classified as “undernourished”, if its

observed calorie intake is less than its required amount, given its household size and composition

• The POU is measured to be the percentage of households who are unable to meet their daily calorie requirements

• To calculate the prevalence of under nutrition (POU) rates, age gender specific daily calorie requirements for rural Indians

• The corresponding urban figures were obtained by scaling down these numbers by a factor of 0.875

Page 7: India v/s Vietnam : Diversity in Calorie Sources and Undernourishment

Data Sets and Food Consumption Patterns• Quantities consumed were converted into calorie

intake by applying FAO conversion factors

• For minor food items and “eating out” for which quantity information wasn’t available, the available expenditure information on these items was converted into calorie

• This was done by using the average price of calories to the household from the rest of the food items, i.e., those for which the quantity information was available

Page 8: India v/s Vietnam : Diversity in Calorie Sources and Undernourishment

Per capita consumption of Food items(in kg/30 days)

Rice Other Cereals

Dairy Meat/Fish Fruits/Veg0

2

4

6

8

10

12

14

16

India - 1988 India - 2002 Vietnam - 1992/93Vietnam - 2004

Page 9: India v/s Vietnam : Diversity in Calorie Sources and Undernourishment

21%

15%

5%12%

47%

2002 (India)

74%

7%

12%

0% 7%

1992-93 (Vietnam)

Expenditure Shares of Food items

25%

10%

4%10%

51%

1988 (India)

34%

5%30%

1%

31%

2004 (Vietnam)

Page 10: India v/s Vietnam : Diversity in Calorie Sources and Undernourishment

1992-93 1997-98 2002 20040

10

20

30

40

50

60

70

80

90

Rice - Rural Linear (Rice - Rural) UrbanLinear (Urban)

% Calorie Share of Rice in Vietnam

Page 11: India v/s Vietnam : Diversity in Calorie Sources and Undernourishment

% Calorie Share of Rice in India

1987-88 2001-020

5

10

15

20

25

30

35

40

45

50

Rural Linear (Rural) Urban Linear (Urban)

Page 12: India v/s Vietnam : Diversity in Calorie Sources and Undernourishment

Calorie Shares of Food items

• In both India and Vietnam, nutritional importance of rice is of much higher order than that suggested by its expenditure share

• This confirms that, in both countries, rice and other cereal items were performing a useful role as an inexpensive calorie source, especially for poorer households

Page 13: India v/s Vietnam : Diversity in Calorie Sources and Undernourishment

Rice Other Cereals

Fruits/Veg Sugar/Spices Processed Food

05

101520253035404550

% Calorie Share of Food items in India(by expenditure class)

Rice Other Cereals

Fruits/Veg Sugar/Spices Processed Food

05

101520253035

Urban

Rural

Page 14: India v/s Vietnam : Diversity in Calorie Sources and Undernourishment

% Calorie Share of Food items in Vietnam(by expenditure class)

Urban

Rural

Rice (1992-93) Rice (2004) Other Cereals (1992-93)

Other Cereals (2004)

0

20

40

60

80

Rice (1992-93) Rice (2004) Other Cereals (1992-93)

Other Cereals (2004)

0

20

40

60

80

Page 15: India v/s Vietnam : Diversity in Calorie Sources and Undernourishment

Comparison of Prevalence of Under nutrition (POU)• The POU measure is regarded as a “direct”

method of measuring poverty unlike the more commonly used expenditure based poverty rates (POV) that are referred to as “indirect” methods

• This suggests a weakening of the link between the official poverty lines and calorie requirements due to the changes in dietary practices in India that have been reported above

• Unlike in India, the decline in the POU rates in Vietnam is consistent with the decline in her POV rates [World Bank 2000]

Page 16: India v/s Vietnam : Diversity in Calorie Sources and Undernourishment

POU versus POV in India

Poverty Rates (1987-88)

POU Rates (1987-88) POU Rates (2001-02)0

10

20

30

40

50

60

70

80

Rural Urban

Page 17: India v/s Vietnam : Diversity in Calorie Sources and Undernourishment

POU in Vietnam

1992-93 1997-98 2002 20040

10

20

30

40

50

60

Rural Urban

Page 18: India v/s Vietnam : Diversity in Calorie Sources and Undernourishment

Principal Determinants of Dietary changes in Vietnam• Dietary changes in favour of increased dietary

diversity have been much larger in Vietnam than in India

• Increased dietary diversity is associated with an increase in calorie consumption

• Traditional dietary pattern in Vietnam has been high in carbohydrates and low in fat; but the situation is changing fast with rapid increases in calorie intake

Page 19: India v/s Vietnam : Diversity in Calorie Sources and Undernourishment

Principal Determinants of Dietary changes in Vietnam• This raises a question: Which are the factors that

have been driving these larger dietary changes in Vietnam?

• Overall, the Vietnamese results suggest that differential income growth between regions, ethnic communities, and expenditure classes, during a period of strong economic growth, along with increased education levels and changes in household composition, lead to large dietary changes with nutritional implications for the country as a whole

Page 20: India v/s Vietnam : Diversity in Calorie Sources and Undernourishment

Conclusion

• The Indian budget surveys show a decline in calorie intake and rise in undernourishment rates throughout the 1990s, the Vietnamese data shows the exact reverse with a sharp increase in calorie intake in the late 1990s

• The Vietnamese diet showed much greater changes in favour of increased diversity than happened in case of India

• There is clearly scope for greater diversification in the Vietnamese diet with a potentially greater role for fruits, vegetables and dairy products

Page 21: India v/s Vietnam : Diversity in Calorie Sources and Undernourishment

Conclusion

• One of the chief conclusions of this study is that there is nothing inevitable in the Indian experience of declining calorie intake and increasing undernourishment during a period of rapid economic growth

• The Indian evidence shows that one should not automatically associate poverty reduction with a reduction in undernourishment

Page 22: India v/s Vietnam : Diversity in Calorie Sources and Undernourishment

Thank You!