Women and Child Welfare Minister Maneka Gandhi reacts during an interview with Reuters at her office in New Delhi yesterday.

Reuters/New Delhi


India’s main programme to fight child malnutrition has been hit by budget cuts that make it difficult to pay wages of millions of health workers, a cabinet minister said yesterday in a rare public criticism of Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s policies.
Modi’s government in February slashed social sector budgets to boost infrastructure spending in a bid to fasten the pace of economic recovery. States were asked to fill the gap from the larger share of federal taxes they receive from New Delhi.
But the cuts drew criticism for blunting India’s efforts to tackle one of the world’s highest rates of child malnutrition. Four of 10 stunted children in the world are Indian and about 1.5mn children die annually before turning five.
Maneka Gandhi, the women and child welfare minister who oversees a scheme to feed more than 100mn poor people, said the current budget was only enough to pay salaries of her 2.7mn health workers until January.
“We still have problems because our cut has still not been restored. Literally, it’s a month-to-month suspense on whether we can meet wages,” Gandhi told Reuters in an interview.
“It really calls for huge attention.”
She said the February budget cut, which saw her ministry’s outlay slashed by half to $1.6bn, had hit her plans to strengthen the fight against malnutrition.
Gandhi said that even before the cuts the food programme was in urgent need of modernisation, with lax supervision of health workers using training programmes not updated in the last four decades and the food on offer she described as “rubbish.”
She said about half the food was lost due to mismanagement.
“There is no door-to-door checking. The supervisors don’t check the workers, workers don’t check the women,” Gandhi said of the programme, which caters to children under six as well as pregnant and lactating women.
Reuters reported in May that Gandhi had privately sought additional funds from the finance minister after the budget cut. She also warned him the reduced funding could backfire politically if focus on her programmes is reduced.
The government in July approved an additional $618mn for her ministry. Gandhi indicated that was not enough.
“It’s not a question of giving a little bit back ... we actually need every little bit to pay workers and retrain them,” she said.
Modi’s federal budget changes have affected several social sectors in recent months. They have delayed salaries to millions of health workers in the national health scheme and the Aids control programme.

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