posted on 2024-09-05, 22:36authored byRudra Narayan Mishra
Nutritional deprivation among Indian children is one of the
parameters of underdevelopment mentioned in development discourse
in recent times. And such deprivation is more often associated with well
known socio-economic indicators of deprivation; prominent among them
is caste, which ranks the society into a hierarchy in terms of benefit and
welfare. Though caste dimension has been frequently considered as a
category of understanding deprivation, it is rare to find explicit
disadvantage of caste in what is said as transforming capabilities into
functioning. While caste disadvantage in any outcome shows a systematic
pattern, it is never made clear as to what is the dynamics of this
disadvantage in terms of characteristics bearing an association with a
given outcome. This paper makes an attempt in illustrating the dynamics
of caste-based deprivation considering the case of child under-nutrition.
It essentially demonstrates the patterns of differentials in nutrition
according to other potential correlates of under-nutrition within SC/ST
and others and comments on the limits of translating a given set of
capabilities in to functioning/outcome (child nutrition here). It finds that
while deprivation gap according to potential correlates is higher in general
compared with SC/STs, there is clear demonstration of differential
translation of capabilities like education, residential status, work status
into outcome like nutrition among the SC/STs vis-à-vis the others. The
results are also confirmed with application of a logit model. The study
uses the data from National Family Health Survey report (NFHS-2, 1998-
99) for the purpose of this illustration.
Key Words: Health, Under-nutrition, Child Under-nutrition, Caste,
Scheduled Caste, Scheduled Tribe, Inequality, Deprivation,
India
JEL Classification:- I 12, I 32
History
Publisher
Centre for Development Studies
Citation
Mishra, Rudra Narayan (2005) Dynamics of caste-based deprivation in child under-nutrition in India. CDS working papers, no.380. Trivandrum: CDS.