Right to Food as a Fundamental Right

Food security in India is anchored constitutionally in the right to life (Article 21). In the landmark case People's Union for Civil Liberties (PUCL) v. Union of India (2001), the Supreme Court interpreted the right to food as an integral component of the right to life with dignity. On 28 November 2001, the Court passed interim orders directing the Central Government to operationalise food-related schemes — effectively converting entitlements under welfare programmes into justiciable rights. Judicial directions from this case included universalising the Mid-Day Meal Scheme and activating the Antyodaya component of the PDS.


National Food Security Act, 2013 (NFSA)

The NFSA, 2013 converted the political commitment of food security into a legal entitlement — the first time food access was made a statutory right in India.

Coverage:

  • 75% of the rural population
  • 50% of the urban population
  • Total coverage: approximately 813.5 million persons

Entitlement (post-PMGKAY merger, effective 1 January 2024):

  • Priority Households (PHH): 5 kg of foodgrains per person per month — FREE of cost (original Act specified ₹1–3/kg; now zero-price under PMGKAY-NFSA merger extended through December 2028)
  • Antyodaya Anna Yojana (AAY) households: 35 kg per household per month — FREE of cost
  • Total free grain commitment: ~₹11.8 lakh crore over the five-year period (2024–2028)

Grievance Redressal: State Food Commissions, District Grievance Redressal Officers (DGROs), and State Food Commissions established under the Act.


Public Distribution System (PDS) — Evolution

Phase Period Nature Key Feature
Universal PDS Until 1997 Universal All eligible households; regionally undifferentiated
Targeted PDS (TPDS) 1997 onwards Targeted BPL/APL distinction; Below Poverty Line families get subsidised grain
Antyodaya Anna Yojana 2000 Ultra-poor focus Poorest of poor; 35 kg/month at lowest prices
NFSA-era TPDS 2013 onwards Legal entitlement Right-based; Priority + AAY categories; state portability
PMGKAY 2020–2024 Emergency Free grains during COVID and post-COVID; merged with NFSA in Jan 2024

Pradhan Mantri Garib Kalyan Anna Yojana (PMGKAY): Launched in April 2020 during the COVID-19 pandemic, providing 5 kg free grains per person per month to NFSA beneficiaries over and above their entitlements. From 1 January 2024, PMGKAY was merged with the regular NFSA scheme — NFSA beneficiaries now receive their 5 kg entitlement free of cost.


Antyodaya Anna Yojana (AAY)

Launched in December 2000 to identify and support the "poorest of the poor." AAY households receive 35 kg of foodgrains per month at the cheapest rates (now free under PMGKAY-NFSA merger). Originally covered 1 crore households; later expanded to 2.5 crore.


PM POSHAN (erstwhile Mid-Day Meal Scheme)

Renamed Pradhan Mantri Poshan Shakti Nirman (PM POSHAN) in 2021, the scheme provides one hot cooked meal every school day to students from Balvatika (pre-primary) through Class VIII in all government and government-aided schools.

Coverage (2023–24): Approximately 11.63 crore (116.3 million) students across 10.67 lakh schools — the world's largest school meal programme.

Budget 2025-26: ₹12,500 crore (up from ₹10,000 crore in 2024-25).

Nutritional norms:

  • Primary classes: 450 calories, 12 g protein per meal
  • Upper primary: 700 calories, 20 g protein per meal

Significance: Addresses short-term hunger (enabling attendance), long-term malnutrition (micronutrient supplementation through fortified rice), and gender equity (girls' enrolment improved in states where the scheme is robust).


One Nation One Ration Card (ONORC)

Launched in 2019, ONORC enables any NFSA beneficiary to access their PDS entitlement from any fair price shop in the country — critical for migrant workers and mobile populations.

Metric Figure
States/UTs covered 36 (100% national coverage) — Assam was the last to join
Cumulative transactions (Aug 2019 – Dec 2024) 158.8 crore portability transactions
Foodgrains delivered via portability 315.8+ LMT (lakh metric tonnes)
Monthly transactions (2024 average) ~2.5–3 crore/month

For Mains: While ONORC has achieved 100% national coverage, research indicates that most transactions are intra-state (within the same state). Inter-state portability — which would most benefit seasonal migrant workers — remains limited. The scheme addresses Aadhaar-ration card linkage issues but digital literacy and shop-owner cooperation remain gaps.


Saksham Anganwadi and POSHAN 2.0 (formerly ICDS)

The legacy ICDS was restructured in 2021 as Saksham Anganwadi and POSHAN 2.0 under the Ministry of Women and Child Development — integrating ICDS, POSHAN Abhiyaan, National Nutrition Mission, Scheme for Adolescent Girls, and the National Crèche Scheme under a single umbrella.

Anganwadi Centres: ~13.96 lakh registered Anganwadi Centres on Poshan Tracker (March 2025); sanctioned strength ~14 lakh.

Six core services (unchanged from ICDS): Supplementary nutrition, immunisation, health check-ups, referral services, pre-school non-formal education, and nutrition & health education.

Beneficiaries covered: 8+ crore children (under-6), 1+ crore pregnant/lactating mothers, 20 lakh adolescent girls (aspirational districts and Northeast).

Budget 2025-26: ₹21,960 crore for Saksham Anganwadi + POSHAN 2.0 (up from ₹20,071 crore in 2024-25).


Malnutrition — Data from NFHS-5 (2019–21)

The National Family Health Survey-5 (NFHS-5), conducted in 2019–21, remains the most recent nationally representative data on child malnutrition. NFHS-6 (2023-24) fieldwork has been completed but results have not been published as of April 2026. Notably, anaemia measurement has been removed from NFHS-6 and shifted to ICMR's Diet and Biomarkers Survey (DABS-I) — so NFHS-5 anaemia data remains the reference.

Indicator NFHS-4 (2015–16) NFHS-5 (2019–21) Trend
Stunting (height-for-age) 38.4% 35.5% Improved
Wasting (weight-for-height) 21.0% 19.3% Improved
Underweight (weight-for-age) 35.8% 32.1% Improved
Anaemia in children (6–59 months) 58.6% 67.1% Worsened

Despite improvements in stunting and wasting, anaemia increased sharply — reflecting the multiple dimensions of malnutrition (macronutrient vs micronutrient deficiency).


Global Hunger Index 2024

India ranked 105th out of 127 countries in the Global Hunger Index (GHI) 2024 with a score of 27.3, placing India in the "Serious" hunger category (down from 28.7 in 2023). India fares worse than neighbours Sri Lanka, Nepal, Myanmar, and Bangladesh on this composite index (measuring undernourishment, child wasting, child stunting, and child mortality).

The Government has disputed the GHI methodology, particularly the use of a small-sample Gallup poll for the undernourishment indicator, but the ranking continues to highlight the gap between food grain production records and nutritional outcomes.


Food Fortification

India's food fortification programme (rice, wheat flour, oil, milk, double-fortified salt) addresses micronutrient deficiencies (iron, folic acid, Vitamin B12, Vitamin A, iodine). Fortified rice was being scaled up through the PDS and PM POSHAN scheme as a targeted intervention against anaemia.


Food Security and Social Justice

Food security intersects directly with social equity:

  • Caste and tribe: SC and ST households have higher malnutrition rates than national averages (NFHS-5)
  • Gender: Women's anaemia at 57% (NFHS-5) directly affects maternal and infant health
  • Urban poor: Migrant workers and urban informal sector households can now access PDS anywhere via One Nation One Ration Card (ONORC) — 100% national coverage (36 States/UTs), but inter-state portability (most useful to migrants) remains low

Exam Strategy

Key data points to memorise:

  • NFSA 2013: 75% rural, 50% urban coverage; ~81.35 crore beneficiaries; 5 kg/person/month
  • PMGKAY-NFSA merger (1 Jan 2024): NFSA grain now FREE (zero cost) — extended through December 2028
  • NFHS-5 (2019-21): stunting 35.5%, wasting 19.3%, anaemia in children 67.1% (worsened)
  • GHI 2024: India 105/127, score 27.3, "Serious" category
  • PM POSHAN 2023-24: 11.63 crore children, 10.67 lakh schools — world's largest school meal programme
  • ICDS: 14+ lakh Anganwadi Centres nationwide; six services including supplementary nutrition

Budget 2025-26 food sector allocation:

  • Food Subsidy (BE): ₹2,03,420 crore — India's largest single welfare expenditure (96% of DFPD total allocation of ₹2,11,406 crore)
  • PM POSHAN: ₹12,500 crore (BE 2025-26, up from ₹10,000 crore in 2024-25)
  • Saksham Anganwadi + POSHAN 2.0: ₹21,960 crore (BE 2025-26)
  • ONORC: 100% national coverage (36 States/UTs); 158.8 crore portability transactions since 2019

Essay/answer angles: "Despite being the world's largest food producer, India struggles with food security" — link NFSA implementation gaps, PDS leakages, PMGKAY merger's fiscal cost, malnutrition dimensions (anaemia despite food surplus), and GHI ranking controversy.

Cross-link: For current-affairs developments on food subsidy and PDS reform, follow Ujiyari.com.