Contents
Introduction
Economic Survey 2025–26 highlights human capital as India’s growth engine; yet NFHS-5 shows persistent malnutrition. POSHAN Pakhwada 2026 re-emphasizes that early childhood nutrition critically shapes learning outcomes and long-term productivity.
Biological Nexus of Nutrition as Foundation of Learning
- Early Brain Development: Nearly 90% of brain development occurs before age five; nutrition fuels synapse formation and neural connectivity, directly influencing cognition. Example: iron deficiency.
- Stunting and Cognitive Deficits: Chronic malnutrition reduces attention span, memory, and school readiness, leading to poor literacy and numeracy outcomes. Example: low reading scores.
- Health–Education Feedback Loop: Malnourished children suffer frequent illnesses, increasing absenteeism and dropout risks. Example: repeated absence.
Social and Intergenerational Impact
- Cycle of Poverty: Malnutrition limits educational attainment, perpetuating low-income traps across generations. Example: rural poverty.
- Gender Disparities: Intra-household food allocation biases affect girls nutrition, undermining future maternal and child health outcomes. Example: girl child neglect.
- Care Economy Gap: Informal workers lack childcare support, affecting both child development and women’s workforce participation. Example: migrant labour.
India’s Policy Framework for Early Brain Development
- POSHAN Abhiyaan: Shifted focus to holistic nutrition through Jan Andolan, targeting stunting, anaemia, and low birth weight.
- ICDS & Anganwadi System: Provides nutrition, immunization, and early learning, forming the backbone of Early Childhood Care and Education (ECCE).
- PM POSHAN Scheme: Addresses classroom hunger, improving attendance and retention. Example: mid-day meals.
- PMMVY & First 1000 Days: Targets maternal nutrition, ensuring better birth outcomes. Example: Integrated service delivery.
- NEP 2020 Integration: Recognizes ECCE as foundational, aligning education with nutrition policy.
Economic Returns and Human Capital Dividend
- Heckman Curve Logic: Nobel Laureate James Heckman showed highest returns on investment occur in early childhood (0-5 years).
- Future Earnings Potential: Well-nourished children can earn up to 20% more as adults.
- Reduced Social Costs: Better early development lowers future burden on healthcare, education, and justice systems. Example: High return-on-investment.
- Economic Survey Insight: Links improved human capital to sustained growth and demographic dividend realization.
Governance and Implementation Challenges
- Quality over Quantity: Focus remains on food distribution rather than cognitive stimulation. Anganwadi infrastructure exists, but quality of early stimulation and caregiving remains inconsistent.
- Hidden Hunger: Micronutrient deficiencies persist despite calorie sufficiency. Example: vitamin deficiency.
- Fragmented Convergence: Weak coordination among health, nutrition, and education sectors. Example: siloed delivery.
- Gender Disparity: Intra-household bias often results in poorer nutrition for the girl child. Example: Unequal feeding.
Way Forward
- Convergence Strengthening: Fully integrate ECCE under NEP 2020 with POSHAN 2.0 for nutrition-plus stimulation.
- Quality Enhancement: Upgrade Anganwadi workers’ training and introduce structured early learning modules.
- Targeted Interventions: Focus on urban slums and high-stunting districts with community-based crèches.
- Monitoring Outcomes: Track child development indicators beyond inputs like ration distribution.
- Public-Private Collaboration: Partner with NGOs and corporates for scalable models like mobile creches.
Conclusion
Focus on early brain development is a strategic realization that India’s Demographic Dividend will only pay out if it is backed by nutritional security. To build a Viksit Bharat, the state must ensure that every child’s cognitive potential is nurtured through a Nutrition-Plus approach.


