Inflation forces Indians to try to get more out of less food

? In India, even the gods are doing without.

Food inflation that has been stuck in the double digits for a year has had a deep impact on school lunches, family meals and holy offerings. Anger with high prices erupted into protests this week that disrupted flights, trains and traffic. While policymakers debate how to feed people without driving the country deeper in debt, Indians grapple with the sad arithmetic of how to do more with less.

Children from a shanty await their turn to receive free food Friday outside a mobile classroom in Mumbai, India. With food inflation that has been stuck in the double digits for a year and policymakers debating how to feed people without driving the country deeper in debt, Indians are grappling with the sad arithmetic of how to do more with less.

Fruit is becoming a luxury. People have cut back on protein. Vegetable sellers complain profits are down because people are buying less.

Take M. Sakkthivel, the cook at a temple in Machimal Nagar, a fishing village not far from south Mumbai’s financial center.

Each day Sakkthivel prepares a pot of sweet ground rice as an offering to Tirupati Balaji — a south Indian god, who sits on a throne draped with marigolds.

He used to use 7.7 pounds of sugar to prepare the prasadam, or offering, but with spiraling prices, he’s cut back to three.

Sakkthivel and the local pandit, or priest, have made their own sacrifices to keep their god in sweets.

“We used to drink tea whenever we wanted,” he said. “Now we avoid it.”

The residents of Machimal Nagar say rice, potatoes and onions cost about twice what they did two years ago.

Officially, food inflation neared 22 percent in December, a 17-year high. By March it had eased to 16.7 percent, with the cost of wheat 14 percent higher than a year ago and pulses like the lentils known as dal — a crucial source of protein in a nation full of vegetarians — up 31 percent.

It’s too early to say whether sustained high food prices will aggravate malnutrition, but advocates worry escalating costs are eroding the diets of millions in a country where one in two children was malnourished before the price spike.

“There are large numbers of people who even in good times don’t have sufficient food intake,” said Harsh Mander, who was appointed by the Supreme Court to monitor hunger in India.

He estimates that 80 million to 200 million Indians go to sleep hungry each night.

Mander is campaigning for a right to food law being debated within the ruling Congress Party. One version would give poor households the right to 55 pounds of grains like rice and wheat each month at $0.03 per pound, which has sparked heated debate over who qualifies as poor and how much a sweeping food subsidy would add to India’s swollen fiscal deficit.

Existing food subsidies have cushioned the poorest of the poor, but they aren’t pegged to inflation and, plagued by corruption, they don’t always work.

Deepa Sinha, a researcher who works with Mander, said the free rice and $0.05 per student subsidy public schools rely on to make hot lunches goes a lot less far these days.

“The dal quantity has come down drastically,” she said. “It’s mainly plain rice with a little bit of dal you can’t see. There’s no vegetables now.”