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| location = [[Bengal]]
| location = [[Bengal]]
| coordinates = <!-----(use {{coord}})----->
| coordinates = <!-----(use {{coord}})----->
| period = 1943–44
| period = 1942-1944
| excess_mortality= <!-----Deaths directly due to famine starvation----->
| excess_mortality= <!-----Deaths directly due to famine starvation----->
| from_disease = <!-----Indirect famine deaths from subsequent diseases----->
| from_disease = <!-----Indirect famine deaths from subsequent diseases----->
| total_deaths = Initial est.: 1.5 million; current est. 2.1 million
| total_deaths = Initial est.: 1.5 to 4 million
| death_rate = <!-----Death rate---->
| relief = <!-----Examples: 1 million tons of grain, no relief, etc----->
| relief = <!-----Examples: 1 million tons of grain, no relief, etc----->
| food_situation = <!-----Net food imports, examples: 10 million tons of wheat, can be negative for repressive regimes/genocide cases----->
| consequences = [[Income inequality]] increased; [[Indian independence movement]] intensified
| memorial = <!-----link to the memorial website or location of memorial, example: Ireland's Holocaust mural is located on the Ballymurphy Road, Belfast.----->
| preceded = <!-----Example: Orissa famine of 1866----->
| footnotes = <!-----Test footnote----->
| footnotes = <!-----Test footnote----->
}}
}}
The '''Bengal famine of 1943''' ({{lang-bn|পঞ্চাশের মন্বন্তর}}) struck the [[Bengal]] Province of pre-partition India. Estimates are that between 1.5 and 4 million people died of [[starvation]], [[malnutrition]] and disease, out of Bengal’s 60.3 million population, half of them dying from disease after food became available in December 1943<ref>See Dyson and Maharatna (1991) for a review of the data and the various estimates made.</ref> As in previous Bengal famines, <ref> Frere (1874); Hunter (1873); Bengal Administration (1897).</ref> the highest mortality was not in previously very poor groups, but among artisans and small traders whose income vanished when people spent all they had on food and did not employ cobblers, carpenters, etc.<ref> Mahalanobis,Mukkerjee, and Ghosh, (1946).</ref> The food crisis increased from the beginning of 1943, becoming a serious famine from mid-1943. This ended with the harvesting of the December 1943 rice crop, though continuing famine relief was needed for the next few months.
The '''Bengal famine of 1943''' ([[Bengali language|Bengali]]: ''Pañcāśēra manbantara'') was a major [[famine]] in the [[Bengal Presidency|Bengal province]]{{efn-ua|Now part of [[Bangladesh]] and the Indian states of [[West Bengal]] and [[Tripura]]}}{{efn-ua|It also affected the neighbouring province of [[Orissa Province|Orissa]], albeit to a far smaller degree ({{harvnb|Government of India|1945 |pp=1, 144–45}}; {{harvnb |Maharatna |1992|pp=320–33}}). Orissa was also hit by a cyclone on 10{{nbsp}}April 1943. See{{nbsp}}{{harv|Pati|1999}}.}} in [[British India]] during [[World War II]]. An estimated 2.1&nbsp;million{{efn-ua|This total, calculated by {{harvtxt|Maharatna|1992}}, reflects scholarly consensus&nbsp;{{harv|Ó Gráda| 2007|p=19}}. Initial official estimates of the {{harvtxt|Government of India|1945|pp=109–110}} indicated around 1.5 million deaths in excess of the average mortality rate, out of Bengal's then estimated 60.3 million population. The widely cited results of {{harvtxt|A. Sen|1980}} and {{harvtxt|A. Sen |1981a|pp=196–202}} used a variety of means to arrive at an estimate of between 2.7 and 3 million; {{harvtxt|Greenough|1982|pp=299–309}} suggested that Sen's figures should be raised to between 3.5 and 3.8 million. See either Maharatna&nbsp;(1996) or {{harvtxt|Dyson|Maharatna|1991}} for a detailed review of the data and the various estimates made.}} people died in the famine, the deaths occurring first from [[starvation]] and then from diseases, which included [[cholera]], [[malaria]], [[smallpox]], [[dysentery]], and [[kala-azar]]. Other factors, such as [[malnutrition]], [[population displacement]], unsanitary conditions, and lack of [[health care]], further increased disease fatalities. Millions were impoverished as the crisis overwhelmed large segments of the economy and social fabric, accelerating a trend toward economic inequality.


Bengal's economy was predominantly [[Agrarian society|agrarian]]. For at least a decade before the food crisis, between half and three fourths of those dependent on agriculture were already at or near <!-- do not wikilink "subsistence level"; not same topic -->subsistence level.<!-- do not wikilink "subsistence level"; not same topic --> Underlying causes of the famine included inefficient agricultural practices, population pressures, and de-peasantisation through [[usury]] and [[land grabbing]]. The list of proximate causes included localised natural disasters (a [[cyclone]], [[storm surge]]s and flooding, and [[Cochliobolus miyabeanus|rice crop disease]]) and at least five consequences of war: initial, general war-time [[inflation]] of both [[demand-pull inflation|demand-pull]] and [[monetary inflation|monetary]] origin; loss of rice imports due to the [[Japanese occupation of Burma]] (modern [[Myanmar]]); near-total disruption of Bengal's market supplies and transport systems by the preemptive, defensive [[scorched earth]] tactics of the Raj (the "[[#March 1942: Denial policies|denial policies]]" for rice and boats); and later, massive inflation brought on by repeated policy failures, [[war profiteering]], [[speculation]], and perhaps [[Hoarding (economics)|hoarding]]. Finally, the government prioritised military and defense needs over those of the rural poor, allocating medical care and food very much in favour of the military, labourers in military industries, and civil servants. All these factors were further compounded by restricted access to grain: domestic sources were constrained by emergency inter-provincial [[Embargo|trade barrier]]s, while access to international sources was largely denied by the [[Churchill war ministry|War Cabinet of Great Britain]].<!-- Do not add "due to a lack of shipping". That is debated. See #Debate over primary cause --> The relative impact of each of these contributing factors to the death toll and economic devastation is still [[#Debate over primary cause(s)|a matter of controversy]]. Different analyses frame the famine against natural, economic, or political causes.


==Background ==
The government was slow to supply [[humanitarian aid]], at first using [[propaganda]] to discourage hoarding. It attempted to drive rice paddy prices down through [[price control]]s and a series of procurement schemes. Price controls merely created a thriving [[black market]] and encouraged cautious sellers to withhold their stocks; moreover, prices soared when the controls were abandoned. [[#Relief efforts|Relief effort]]s in the form of gruel kitchens, agricultural loans and [[test work]]s were both insufficient and ineffective through the worst months of the food crisis phase. Despite having a long-established and detailed [[Indian Famine Codes|Famine Code]] that would have triggered a sizable increase in aid, the provincial government never formally declared a state of famine. Relief efforts increased significantly when the military took control of crisis relief in October 1943, and more effective aid arrived after a record rice harvest that December. Deaths from starvation began to decline, but "very substantially more than half" of the famine-related fatalities were caused by disease in 1944, after the [[food security]] crisis had subsided.{{sfnm|1a1=Government of India|1y=1945 |1pp=73–74 & 77|2a1=A. Sen|2y=1977|2p=36|3a1=A. Sen |3y=1981a |3pp=55 & 215|4a1=S. Bose|4y=1990|4p=701}}
{{TOC limit|3}}


India, and Bengal in particular, had food shortages by the beginning of 1943 for the following reasons.
==Background==
{{main|Economy of India under the British Raj|Agriculture in India}}
From the late nineteenth century through the [[Great Depression]], social and economic forces exerted a harmful impact on the structure of Bengal's income distribution and the ability of its agricultural sector to sustain the populace. These processes included a rapidly growing population, increasing household debt, stagnant agricultural productivity, increased social stratification, and alienation of the peasant class from their landholdings. The interaction of these left clearly defined social and economic groups mired in poverty and indebtedness, unable to cope with economic shocks or maintain their access to food beyond the near term. In 1942 and 1943, in the immediate and central context of the Second World War, the shocks Bengalis faced were numerous, complex and sometimes sudden.{{sfnm|1a1=Mishra|1y=2000|1p=81|2a1=J. Mukherjee |2y=2015|2p=6–7}} Millions were vulnerable to starvation.{{sfn|Patnaik| 1991|p=1}}


The food situation in India was tight from the beginning of the [[Second World War]] with a series of crop failures and localized famines which were dealt with successfully under the [[Indian Famine Codes]].<ref>Knight, 1954; Tauger, 2009, p.186</ref> In [[Bengal]] in 1940-41 there was a small scale famine although quick action by the authorities prevented widespread loss of life.<ref>Tauger, 2009, p.187</ref>
===Rice===
India as a whole faced a food shortage in 1943. After the Japanese occupation of Burma in March 1942, Bengal and the other parts of India and Ceylon which were normally supplied by Burma had to find food elsewhere. However, there were poor crops and famine situations in Cochin, Trivandrum and Bombay on the West coast and Madras, Orissa and Bengal in the East. It fell on the few surplus Provinces, mainly the Punjab, to supply the rest of India and Ceylon.<ref>Famine Inquiry Commission (1945a), (1945b). Knight (1954) gives a contemporary account of the Indian situation. Tauger (2006,(2009) covers both India and the region.</ref> India as a whole had a deficit, but exported small quantities to meet the urgent needs of the Indian Army abroad, and those of Ceylon. India had imported 2 million tons of grain a year in previous years but there were only small net imports in 1943..
The Government of India's Famine Commission Report{{nbsp}}(1945) described Bengal as "a land of rice growers and rice eaters".{{sfn|Government of India|1945|p=5}} Rice dominated the agricultural output of the province, accounting for nearly 88% of its [[arable land]] use{{sfn|Mahalanobis|Mukherjea|Ghosh|1946|p=338}} and 75% of all crops sown.{{efn-ua|Some land [[Multiple cropping|produced more than one crop a year]], sometimes rice in one season and other crops in another, reducing rice's yearly proportion of total crops sown {{harv|Government of India|1945|p=10}}.}} Overall, Bengal produced one third of India's rice.{{sfn|Mahalanobis|Mukherjea|Ghosh|1946|p=338}}


Bengal’s winter 1942 ‘aman’ rice crop, the most important one, was well below average.
Rice accounted for between 75 and 85% of daily food consumption.{{sfn|Government of India|1945|p=10}} Fish was the second major food source,{{sfnm|1a1=De|1y=2006|1p=13|2a1=Bayly|2a2=Harper|2y=2005|2pp=284–285}} supplemented by small amounts of wheat.{{efn-ua|Wheat was considered a staple by many in Calcutta, but nowhere else in Bengal {{harv|Knight|1954|p=78}}. The wheat-eating enclave in Calcutta were industrial workers who had come there from other provinces {{harv|Government of India|1945|p=31}}.}} The consumption of other foods was typically relatively small.{{sfn|Government of India|1945|p=10}}


In addition, Bengal was hit by a cyclone and three tidal waves on October 16, 1942. An area of 450 square miles were swept by tidal waves, 400 square miles affected by floods and 3200 square miles damaged by wind and torrential rain, destroying food crops. This killed 14,000{{sfnm|1a1=Mansergh|1y=1971|1p=357|2a1=Famine Inquiry Commission|2y=1945a|2pp=32, 65, 66, 236}} people. Reserve stocks in the hands of cultivators, consumers and dealers were destroyed.‘The homes, livelihood and property of nearly 2.5 million Bengalis were ruined or damaged.’{{sfn|Greenough|1982|pp=93–96}} The districts affected were normally an important supplier of food to Greater Calcutta.<ref>(Greenough,(1982, Famine Inquiry Commission(1945), Braund(1944)</ref>
There are three [[Rice#Ecotypes and cultivars|seasonal rice crops]] in Bengal. By far the most important is the winter ''aman'' crop, sown in May and June, and harvested in November and December. It comprises more than 70% of the rice grown in a given year. The second most important crop is the ''aus'' or autumn crop, sown around April and harvested in August and September, which accounts for more than 20% of the yearly harvest. Finally, there is a small amount of ''boro'' or spring crop, planted in November and harvested in February and March.{{sfnm|1a1=Government of India|1y=1945|1p=10|2a1=A. Sen|2y=1977|2p=36|3a1=Tauger|3y=2009|3pp=167–68}} Crucially, the [[#1942–43: Shortfall and carryover|(debated) shortfall]] in rice production in 1942 occurred during the all-important ''aman'' seasonal harvest.{{sfn|Government of India|1945|pp=32–33}}


The crop was then hit by a fungus infection, Helminthosporium oryzae, triggered by exceptional weather conditions: this hit the main December 1942 crop and caused serious falls in yield, as much as 50% to 90% in some varieties.<ref> Padmanabhan (1973), pp. 11-26.; Tauger 2006; Tauger 2009.</ref>. This was believed to have had more serious effects on supply than the cyclone <ref>Braund 1944, quotes the February 1943 evidence to the Second Food Conference on this. See also Famine Inquiry Commission 1945a p32.</ref>. The only evidence by an expert in the subject concludes, 'The only other instance [of disease damage]that bears comparison in loss sustained by a food crop and the human calamity that followed in its wake is the Irish potato famine of 1845.'<ref> Padmanabhan (1973), p11.</ref>.
===Population and agricultural productivity===
One reason for the high excess mortality of 1943–45 was a clash between soaring population levels and a shortage of land in Bengal, and a longstanding history of stagnant agricultural productivity in India. Bengal was very densely populated.{{efn-ua|{{harvtxt|Government of India|1945|p=4}} describes the ratio of population to land in European terms: "The area of the province is 77,442 square miles, rather more than the area of England, Wales, and one-half of Scotland. The population is a little over 60 millions, which is well in excess of that of the [entire] United Kingdom, and not much less than the aggregate population of France, Belgium, Holland, and Denmark." Bengal's area was thus roughly comparable to the US state of [[Nebraska]], but with 45% of the population of the entire US plus its territories as measured in 1940 ({{harvnb|State Area|2010}}; {{harvnb|1940 Census}}).}} Moreover, according to census figures, its population had been increasing at an accelerating rate: in ten-year periods, the rate of growth started at 2.8% from 1911 to 1921, then increased to 7.3% from 1921 to 1931, and soared to 20.3% from 1931 to 1941. Bengal's population rose by 43% (from 42.1 million to 60.3 million) between 1901 and 1941, while India as a whole increased by 37% over the same period.{{sfn|Government of India |1945 |pp=4 & 203}}{{efn-ua| Census statistics were considerably more accurate than those for foodgrain production&nbsp;{{harv|Knight|1954|p=22}}.}}


Bengal had been a food importer for the previous decade. Calcutta was normally supplied by Burma. The Allies had suffered a disastrous defeat at [[Battle of Singapore|Singapore]] in 1942 against the [[Imperial Japanese Army|Japanese military]], which then occupied [[Burma]]. Burma was the world's largest exporter of rice in the inter-war period.<ref>Nicholas Tarling (Ed.) ''The Cambridge History of SouthEast Asia'' Vol.II Part 1 pp139-40</ref> By 1940 15% of India's rice came from Burma.<ref>Bayly and Harper (2004), p.284</ref> From January 1942 until the end of the war, no Burmese rice reached India.
Aside from a great concentration of war factories in industrialised areas in Greater Calcutta,{{sfn|Government of India|1945|p=5}}{{efn-ua|"Two-thirds of Bengal's urban population lived in Greater Calcutta (which included the cities of Calcutta and Howrah, and 40 other municipal towns, most of which were industrial hamlets along the banks of the Hooghly river"&nbsp;{{harv|Bhattacharya|Zachariah|1999|loc= p.{{nbsp}}78, ''note{{nbsp}}30''}}}} and some mining in the extensive [[Raniganj Coalfield]] of the western districts, Bengal's economy was almost solely agrarian. In an agricultural society, [[arable land]] is the most important resource, and [[subsistence crop|subsistence]] and [[cash crop]]s are the most important [[commodity|commodities]]. However, agricultural productivity in Bengal was amongst the lowest in the world.{{sfn|Islam|2007b|p=185}} Agricultural production had traditionally been characterised by "dependence on monsoon rainfall [instead of controlled and reliable irrigation],{{efn-ua|In many regions of India, irrigated land constituted between 2 and 7% of the total cultivated land: "The failure of the colonial government to develop an irrigation system and increase land productivity had serious consequences for the aggregate output per worker"&nbsp;{{harv|Gupta|2012|pp=22, 29}}.}} archaic methods and crude tillage, low intensity of inputs, subsistence farming, proneness to famines, and the low productivity of land".{{sfn|Roy|2007|p=240}} Rice yield per acre had been stable{{sfn|Roy|2006|p=5391}} or falling for perhaps centuries,{{sfnm|1a1=Desai |1y= 1972|2a1=Desai |2y=1978}} and certainly since at least the beginning of the twentieth century.{{sfnm|1a1=Islam|1y=2007a|1p=433|2a1=Roy|2y=2007}}{{efn-ua| India's stagnant agricultural productivity has been attributed to various causes, including [[subinfeudation]], ecological degradation of arable land, lack of either an adequate irrigation system&nbsp;{{harv|Natarajan|1946|p=5}} or an [[Industrial Revolution]] to drive economic and social change, and low [[investment]] in agricultural [[Capital (economics)|capital]] by [[landlord]]s.}}


Carry-over stocks of grain, the stocks over and above the new crop, usually a protection against food shortages, were well below the normal two months' supply <ref> Greenough, (1982,) Government of India, (1942)</ref>, because the 1941 crop was below average, because of the lack of imports from Burma, because of exports from Bengal to provinces with shortages, and because of compulsory purchases by government for military and civil service use in 1942.<ref>Famine Inquiry Commission 1945a esp. pp 179-200</ref> Normally the carry-over would give extra supplies, cushioning the effect of a bad crop.
Prior to about 1920, the food demands of Bengal's growing population could be met in part by bringing undeveloped lands under the plough.{{sfn|Washbrook|1981|p=670}} Probably around the turn of the twentieth century, and certainly no later than the early 1930s, Bengal began to experience an acute shortage of land{{sfnm|1a1=Mahalanobis|1a2=Mukherjea|1a3=Ghosh|1y=1946|1p=382|2a1=S. Bose|2y=1982|2p=469}}{{efn-ua|{{harvtxt|Washbrook |1981|loc=p.{{nbsp}}670 ''note{{nbsp}}78''}} suggests that Bengal may have reached this ecological constraint as early as 1860, far earlier than most of India.}} and a chronic and growing shortage of rice.{{sfn|Mahalanobis|1944|p=70}} Bengal's agricultural inability to keep pace with rapid population growth changed it from a net exporter to a net importer of foodgrains.{{sfnm|1a1=Government of India |1y=1945 |1p=181 |2a1=Mahalanobis |2a2=Mukherjea |2a3=Ghosh |2y=1946 |2p=339|3a1=Islam|3y=2007b|3p=56}} Although imports constituted a small part of the total production,{{sfnm|1a1=Islam|1y=2007a|1p=433|2a1=Islam|2y=2007b|2p=56}} this may have been accompanied by a decrease in average consumption levels;{{sfn|Islam|2007a|p=433}} it was estimated in 1930 that the Bengali diet was the least nutritious in the world:{{sfn|C. Bose |1930 |pp=96–101}}
{{quote|Bengal's rice output in normal years was barely enough for bare-bones subsistence. An output of 9 million tons translates into one pound per day or less than 2,000 kcal per adult male. Even allowing for imports from neighboring provinces and Burma and trade accounted for only a small fraction of supplies in 1942/3 the province's margin over subsistence on the eve of the famine was slender.{{sfn|Ó Gráda|2015|p=12}}}}
Taken together, these conditions left a large proportion of the population continually on the brink of malnutrition or even starvation.{{sfn|Alamgir|1980|p=79}} In the end, the rising population and falling productivity created a long-term decline in food availability that left a large proportion of Bengal's citizens{{snd}}between one and two thirds{{snd}}living at or near subsistence level at all times. "So delicate was the balance between actual starvation and bare subsistence," asserted the Famine Inquiry Commission of 1945, "that the slightest tilting of the scale in the value and supply of food was enough to put it out of the reach of many and to bring large classes within the range of famine."{{sfn|Government of India |1945 |p=16}}


Bengal’s food needs rose at the same time from the influx of refugees from Burma: the number is not known but guesses from 100,000 to 500,000 were made. In addition, a substantial body of troops were stationed in Bengal to defend it against the expected invasion.
===Rural credit and land-grabbing===
{{See also|Permanent Settlement|Bengal Tenancy Act (1885)|Great Depression in India}}
The system of [[land tenure]]ship in India as a whole and Bengal in particular was very complex, and the credit transactions between landholders and tenants were equally complicated.{{sfn|Mishra|2000|pp=83 & 86}}{{efn-ua|Due to limited space, this section presents a highly condensed summary that omits many important historical processes and details. For an extended and detailed discussion of the landlord-sharecropper relationship in Bengal between 1930 and 1950, see {{harvtxt|Cooper|1983}}. For a more technical treatment, see {{harvtxt|S. Bose|1993|pp=84–90, 130–4, 162–9}}, {{harvtxt|Mukherji|1986}},{{harvtxt|Washbrook|1981}}, or {{harvtxt|Mishra|2000}}.}} Very broadly speaking, land rights and the resulting power and welfare gains within Bengal were divided very unequally among three diverse economic and social groups; moreover, this division of power evolved over time and expressed itself differently within the different geographic regions of the province. The three economic groups were: traditional absentee large landowners or ''[[zamindar]]s'',{{efn-ua|Colonial India at the time had four major land tenure systems: ''zamindari'', ''[[mahalwari]]'', ''[[ryotwari]]'', and ''[[jagirdari]]'', but the landholdings of Bengal were almost exclusively ''zamindar''-owned.&nbsp;{{harv|Bekker|1951|pp=319 & 326}}}} the upper-tier "wealthy peasant" ''[[jotedar]]s''; and at the lower socioeconomic levels, the ''[[ryot]]'' (peasant) smallholders and dwarfholders, ''bargadars'' ([[sharecropper]]s), and agricultural labourers.{{sfn|Das|2008|p=60}} ''Zamindar'' and ''jotedar'' landowners were protected by legal and customary status and rights.{{sfn|Cooper|1983|p=230}} At the bottom were the ones actually cultivating the soil, with small or no landholdings. These had very nearly no rights, and the few they had were vague, contradictory and commonly ignored.{{sfnm|1a1=Cooper|1y=1983|1p=230|2a1=Mishra|2y=2000|2pp=83, 86 & 88}} Typically this problem was compounded by a lack of written records.{{sfn|Mishra|2000|p=86}} They laboured within a power structure decisively stacked against them{{sfn|Roy|2006|p=5392}} and suffered persistent and increasing losses of land rights and welfare over time.{{sfn|Bhaduri|1973|p=122}}


Some politicians, officials, and traders stated from late 1942 that these factors alone made a serious famine in 1943 inevitable. Other politicians and officials stated that in spite of these factors, Bengal had plenty of food available to feed its population, and even to export, and they acted as though this was certainly the case. It is not known what they really believed. The Famine Inquiry Commission showed in detail that the people who stated that Bengal had plenty of food dominated the political and administrative decision-making up to mid 1943 at least, losing influence as the evidence accumulated that their assumptions were contradicted by observations on the ground, as their policies proved ineffectual, and as it became clear that a major famine was in progress. It was not until the new Viceroy, [[Archibald Wavell, 1st Earl Wavell|Archibald Wavell]], who was a successful general, took office in August 1943, that substantial quantities of grain started to move to Bengal: half a million tons of grain were eventually shipped there, but there was never enough food available to provide the minimum relief specified in the Famine Code.<ref>Famine Inquiry Commission 1945a.</ref>.{{sfn|Famine Inquiry Commission |1945a|pp=198- 199}}
Over the decades at the end of the nineteenth century and beginning of the early twentieth, the power and influence of the ''zamindars'' fell and that of the ''jotedars'' rose. The shift was caused by a rent crisis that was sparked by nineteenth century tenancy legislation,{{sfn|Das|2008|p=60}} and accelerated after the [[Great Depression]].{{sfnm|1a1=Chatterjee|1y=1986|1p=200|2a1=Iqbal|2y=2010|2pp=68 & 172}} ''Jotedars'' began to make substantial profits and gain power in their villages through their two defining roles: grain or jute traders, and more importantly, creditors who extended loans to sharecroppers, agricultural labourers and ryots.{{sfnm|1a1=Ray|1a2=Ray|1y=1975|1p=84|2a1=Brennan|2a2=Heathcote|2a3=Lucas|2y=1984|2p=9|3a1=Bhaduri|3y=1973|3p=122|4a1=Brennan|4a2=Heathcote|4a3=Lucas|4y=1984|4p=9}} The ''jotedars''{{'}} power in the commodity and credit markets translated directly into power over their tenants.{{sfn|Das|2008|p=60}} They began to leverage their economic and social clout to "[obtain] the land and occupancy rights of the [ryot] through both legal and coercive means".{{sfn|Iqbal|2010|p=107}} In a few districts in the southwest, such as [[Midnapore district|Midnapore]] and [[24&nbsp;Parganas]], they were able to employ political means.{{sfn|Chatterjee|1986|pp=180–81; 179–97}} However, their principal instruments of self-enrichment were a combination of [[debt bondage]] through the transfer of debts and mortgages, and parcel-by-parcel land-grabbing.{{sfnm|1a1=Mukherji|1y=1986|2a1=S. Bose |2y=1982 |2p=472–73 |3a1=Bhaduri |3y=1973 |3pp=120–121}}


The Famine Inquiry Commission was damning about the policies, actions and failures to act of the Government of India, of the Bengal Government, of other provincial governments and of the rice trade. It also called attention to the general corruption. Few governments have ever published such critical reports on their actions: the Government of India printed very few copies of the extremely embarassing report and suppressed the evidence that the report was based on.
Land-grabbing was typically accomplished through the manipulation of the informal credit market. Many formal credit market entities had disappeared during the Great Depression, and peasants who held smaller lots of land generally had no capital to utilise a formal credit market to purchase any good or service beyond their immediate means.{{sfnm|1a1=S. Bose |1y=1982 |1p=472 |2a1=Bhaduri|2y=1973|2pp=120–121}} They typically had to resort to informal local lenders;{{sfn|Ali |2012 |p =135–140}} for example, when they needed [[consumer credit]] for large, occasional expenses such as weddings, religious ceremonies, births, or deaths.{{sfnm|1a1=Bhaduri |1y=1973 |1p=129 |2a1=Cooper |2y=1983 |2p=241}}{{efn-ua|''Jotedars'' also extracted illegal charges (''abwab''), as for example to finance the wedding of the landowner's daughter, "with the landowner's servants and guards ready to enforce these payments"&nbsp;{{harv|Cooper|1983|pp=237–39}}.}} More frequently, they needed money to help purchase basic necessities during lean months between harvests,{{sfn|Chatterjee|1986|pp=176–77}}{{efn-ua|For around nine months of every year, a large fraction of Bengal's population had access to an amount of palatable rice available for consumption that was roughly equivalent to the amount required for sustenance.}} and so were "forced to sell their products at deflated prices during post-harvest glut, in order to pay loans taken during the pre-harvest 'starvation' season".{{sfnm|1a1=S. Bose|1y=1982|1p=472–73|2a1=J. Mukherjee|2y=2015|2p=39}} Moreover, though land had traditionally been relatively available, the means of production (such as seed or cattle for ploughing) had always been scarce,{{sfn|Abdullah|1980|p=2}} and smallholders' lands were sometimes sold in times of distress to purchase these.{{sfn|Brennan|Heathcote|Lucas|1984|p=4}} At other times, peasants were simply compelled by force to take on debt.{{sfn|Chatterjee|1986|pp=176–77}}
By 1945 it was generally agreed that governments, politicians, officials, firms and individuals were all, to some extent, responsible for the failure to deal with the famine, and were to some extent responsible for the fact that there was a famine at all.


==Lack of Meaningful Statistics==
Small landholders and sharecroppers were still required to pay rent and taxes and pay off their debts, which were characterised by usurious rates of interest.{{sfnm|1a1=S. Bose|1y=1982|1pp=471–72|2a1=Ó Gráda |2y=2009 |2p=75}}{{efn-ua|For example, "[over] and above the half share of the product that was the customary rent, the jotedars commonly recovered grain loans with 50% interest and seed loans with 100% interest at the time of harvest... they [also] arbitrarily levied a wide variety of [extra charges]."&nbsp;{{harv|S. N. Mukherjee |1987 |pp=256–57}}}}<!--and payment was often expected in kind (a percentage of the crop) rather than cash.--> Any poor harvest thus exacted a heavy toll, given their lack of legally defined security. The accumulation of consumer debt, seasonal loans, and crisis loans began a cycle of spiraling, perpetual indebtedness. This dynamic was reinforced by laws, originally designed to alleviate usury, that restricted access to credit and discouraged or prevented the practice of using farmlands as collateral for loans.{{efn-ua|Such laws included the Relief of Indebtedness Act of 1934, the Debtors' Protection Act of 1906 and the establishment of Debt Conciliation Boards.&nbsp;{{harv|Government of Bengal |1940b|p=55}}}} This had the unintended effect of making creditors less willing to accept farmlands as a pledge against a debt, and more likely to simply wait until their debtors were unable to repay their loans.{{sfnm|1a1=Mukherji |1y=1986 |1pp=PE-17–PE-19 |2a1=Ó Gráda |2y=2009 |2p=75|3a1=Washbrook |3y=1981 |3p=673}} Then it was relatively easy for the ''jotedars'' to use litigation to force debtors to sell all or part of their landholdings at a low price or forfeit them at auction. Debtors then became landless or land-poor sharecroppers and labourers, usually working the same fields they had once owned.{{sfn|Chatterjee|1986|p=179}} The credit-driven slide into poverty converted farmers from smallholders into dwarfholders, and from dwarfholders into sharecroppers or agricultural labourers. The accumulation of household debt to a single, local, informal creditor (who also held power over land and sometimes grain or jute) also bound the debtor nearly inescapably to the creditor/landlord; it became nearly impossible to settle the debt after a good harvest and simply walk away.{{sfn|Bhaduri|1973|p=129}} In this way, the ''jotedars'' effectively dominated and impoverished the lowest tier of economic classes in several districts of Bengal.{{sfnm|1a1=S. Bose|1y=1982|1p=472–73|2a1=Bhaduri|2y=1973|2pp=120–121|3a1=Das|3y=2008|3p=60}}


===Land alienation===
The end result of this process of exploitation, along with Muslim inheritance practices that divided up land among multiple siblings,{{sfnm|1a1=Government of Bengal |1y=1940b |1p=47 |2a1=Ali|2y=2012|2p=128|3a1=Roy |3y=2006 |3p=5393 |4a1=S. Bose |4y=1982 |4p=469}} was the substantial, progressive growth in the number of landless bargadars and paid labourers in Bengal.{{sfnm|1a1=Government of India|1y=1945|1p=6|2a1=Government of Bengal|2y=1940a|2p=37}} This in turn created both high degrees of [[social stratification]] and growing inequalities in land ownership.{{sfn|Hunt|1987|p=42}}{{efn-ua|See in particular {{harvtxt|Government of Bengal|1940a|pp=36–37}} See also {{harvtxt|Iqbal|2010|loc=chapter 5}} and {{harvtxt|Ram|1997}}.}} At the time of the famine, millions of Bengali agriculturalists held little or no land. "The number of actual tillers of the soil with occupancy rights is diminishing so rapidly," the Land Revenue Commission of 1940 reported with alarm, "that the disappearance of this class is imminent".{{sfn|Government of Bengal|1940c|p=30}} The Government of Bengal described this trend in 1940:
{{quote|The Census figures show an increase [in the population that are jotedars] of 62 per cent, between 1921 and 1931, and since 1931 there has been a further process of subinfeudation below the statutory [ryot], which will swell the figures still more. At the same time a steady reduction is taking place in the number of actual cultivators possessing occupancy rights, and there is a large increase in the number of landless labourers. Their number increased by 49 per cent, between 1921 and 1931. They now constitute 29 per cent of the total agricultural population, and the next Census will show a considerably larger increase.{{sfn|Government of Bengal|1940a|p=37}}}}


Two contemporary reports&nbsp;– the 1940 Report of the Land Revenue Commission of Bengal{{sfn|Government of Bengal|1940b}} and the field survey published in {{harvtxt|Mahalanobis|Mukherjea|Ghosh|1946}} &nbsp;– included measures of the amount of land held per Bengali family. These reports agree that even before the famine of 1943, at least half of the nearly 46 million in Bengal who depended on agriculture for their livelihood were landless or land-poor labourers under consistent threat of food insecurity, with landholdings barely adequate to provide for the dietary needs of the owner's family.{{sfn|Government of India|1945|p=6}}


Indian statisticians at the time considered that grossly unreliable statistics and gaps in the statistics were an important cause of the failure to recognize and tackle the famine.<ref>(Mahalanobis (1944), (Panse,(1954)</ref>. They launched a major programme to identify the weaknesses, and to remedy them. The consensus of this research programme was that the statistics available in 1942 and 1943 were meaningless and there was no possible statistical support for the view that Bengal had plenty of food, and no reason to reject or accept estimates that the rice crop was half to two thirds of the average. There was no statistical support for the view that India needed imports, let alone statistics of the imports required.
Given "an average production of 820 lbs. of rice per acre, an average consumption of about 320 lbs. per head per year and an average family size of 5.4 persons", approximately 2&nbsp;acres of farmland would provide subsistence-level food for an average family,{{sfn|Mahalanobis|1946|p=366}} and between 5&nbsp;and 8&nbsp;acres of farmland were needed to keep them in "reasonable comfort".{{sfn|Government of Bengal|1940a|pp=86–7}} According to the 1940 Land Revenue Board report, 46% of rural families owned two acres or less or were landless tenants. The 1946 field survey{{efn-ua|Survey conducted by the [[Indian Statistical Institute]] under the guidance of [[P.&nbsp;C.&nbsp;Mahalanobis]]}} found that 77.5% did not own sufficient land to provide subsistence for themselves. {{harvtxt|Passmore|1951}} describes the small- or dwarfholding ''ryot''{{'}}s economic state in the run-up to the famine: {{nowrap|"...}}{{nbsp}}after a century free from war and famine, the value of his savings, his credit, and his household goods combined could not provide the purchase for three weeks' supply of rice for his family, [at the greatly inflated prices during the famine]."{{sfn|Passmore|1951|p=303}} Millions of landless or land-poor agriculturalists in Bengal suffered from "serious undernourishment at all times",{{sfn|Government of India|1945|p=184}} living {{nowrap|"... on}} the narrow margin which separates subsistence from starvation".{{sfn|Das|1949|p=105}} For these Bengalis, according to anthropologist [[Tarak Chandra Das|T. C. Das]], {{nowrap|"[whenever]}} there was even a slight disturbance of the balance, either through natural or artificial causes, a large number of them fell victims of starvation".{{sfn|Das|1949|p=105}}


It was known by administrators and statisticians <ref>See Dewey (1978) for a review.</ref> well before the famine that India’s agricultural production statistics were ‘not merely guesses, “but frequently demonstrably absurd guesses”',<ref>Report of the Royal Commission on Agriculture in India, Parliamentary Papers (1928) VIII, P.605.</ref> ‘entirely untrustworthy’,<ref>Mahalanobis (1944) p.77</ref> ‘useless for any purpose’<ref>Bowley & Robertson (1934) P.35; Bengal Land Revenue Commission (1940) vol I p76</ref> <ref>Mahalanobis (1944) writing in 1943.</ref> and that there were ‘no meaningful production statistics’.<ref>Document no. 158 in Mansergh, 1973)’</ref><ref>Stuart (1919)</ref> <ref>e.g. Trevaskis, (1931) p.200; Government of India, (1915), Revenue Proceedings IR-Ag, March, 12-24; Panse (1954) p.26.</ref> Senior officers then changed the guessed or calculated statistics according to their whim: about half the estimates were adjusted and adjustments of 30-40 per cent were common; changes of 60-70 per cent were not unknown.<ref>Panse (1954) p.26; Dewey (1978) p305, citing Noyce (1920)</ref> It was suggested that 1942 estimates were adjusted for political reasons. <ref>Mahalanobis (1944) writing in 1943.</ref> Bengal’s agricultural statistics were particularly bad.<ref>Bengal did not need accurate figures for its land tax, as the Permanent Settlement fixed land tax, while in other provinces tax was based on planted area and yield, which revenue officers had to calculate each year. See Dewey (1978)</ref>
===Transport===
[[File:Sundarbans.jpg|thumb| left|The [[Sundarbans]] in [[NASA]] {{nowrap|[[Landsat 7]]}} satellite observations (merged from 1999 and 2000).]]
Boats were the only reliable means of transport in many areas throughout Bengal, given its "more than 90,000 villages and 20,000 miles of water communications winding through thick jungle".{{sfn|J. Mukherjee|2015|p=34}} This was true across most of the province during the rainy seasons or all the time in portions of eastern Bengal and the vast delta of the coastal southeastern [[Sundarbans]], where the rivers of the [[Ganges Delta]] merge into the [[Bay of Bengal]]. River transport was integral to many facets of Bengal's economic system: nearly irreplaceable for both the production and distribution of rice{{sfn|Government of India|1945|pp=4–10}} and [[jute]] and the livelihoods of fishermen and transport workers. It was also indispensable for the transport of the supplies and finished goods of various artisan trades, such as potters, weavers, and basket makers.{{sfnm|1a1=J. Mukherjee|1y=2015|1p=90}}


There were no crop estimates, just crop forecasts, which are necessarily less accurate and less reliable. In 1942, a revenue officer would guess at the area planted and the probable yield for a 750,000 acre (310,000 ha) area to give a crop forecast for that area. These forecasts were aggregated and "adjusted" by successive levels of officials.<ref>Famine Inquiry Commission (1945), pp. 44, 45</ref> There were no measures of actual yields or area. Nobody had any experience of this type of fungus outbreak, so they had no idea of how much of the crop was affected, nor of the loss in yield. Enumerators were instructed to ignore areas that were damaged by flood, disease, wind, etc, and only record undamaged crops when estimating average yield<ref>Department of Agriculture, Bengal, (1922)</ref> creating a particularly serious overestimate for the December 1942 crop when disease, flood and wind were critical.
The alternatives to water transport were roads and the rail system. Roads, however, were scarce and generally in poor condition.{{sfnm|1a1=Natarajan|1y=1946|1pp=10–11|2a1=Government of India|2y=1945|2p=5| 3a1=Iqbal |3y=2011 |3pp=273–74| 4a1=Mukerjee|4y=2014 |4p=73 |5a1=Brennan |5y=1988 |5p=542 & 548, ''note{{nbsp}}12''}} Bengal's extensive railway system was always dependent upon relatively small boats to deliver production supplies to peripheral riverine areas and transport crops to distribution centers, and was employed even less in the commercial sphere after the demands of war clogged trains and roads with military cargo. Some of the stations did connect with important grain centers; however, boats were required to transport commercial produce, traders and trade from remote areas. Moreover, after 1941, many "nonproductive" branches of the railways were dismantled, with engines and [[rolling stock]] shipped overseas,{{sfn|Government of India|1945|p=23}} and lines in eastern Bengal were later shut down or dismantled on the same premise as the "denial of boats" policy.{{sfn|Iqbal|2011|pp=273–74}} Those railway lines that were left intact were almost solely utilised for military and industrial transport until the very late stages of the crisis.{{sfnm|1a1=Mukerjee|1y=2014|1p=73 |2a1=Iqbal|2y=2011|2pp= 273–4}}


The official Third Crop Forecast was for a crop 1.2m tons lower than the ten year average of 6.2m tons.<ref name="Mahalanobis 1944 p71">Mahalanobis (1944) p71</ref> Others believed that these crop forecasts were wrong. The Director of Agriculture had believed even before the cyclone and the fungus outbreak that the official forecast overstated actual expected production by a quarter<ref name="Mahalanobis 1944 p71"/>, which implies a crop a third below the average, ignoring the effect of the cyclone and the fungus. Traders acted on their belief that there was a serious shortage and made a lot of money. They warned the Bengal Government of a famine situation.<ref>Famine Inquiry Commission 1945a p33; Bhatia (1967) p35</ref> These estimates all indicated that a famine was imminent.
The development of [[Rail transport in India|railway]]s in Bengal between roughly 1890 and 1910 contributed to the excess mortality of the famine. The construction of a network of [[Embankment (transportation)|railway embankment]]s disrupted natural drainage and divided Bengal into innumerable poorly drained "compartments".{{sfn|Iqbal|2010|p=14–15}} This brought about excessive silting, increased the tendency toward flooding, created stagnant water areas, damaged crop production, contributed (in some areas) to a partial shift away from the productive ''aman'' rice cultivar to less productive ''aush'' or ''boro'' cultivars, and provided a more hospitable environment for water-borne diseases such as cholera and malaria. Increased incidence of these diseases closely clustered around the tracks of the railways.{{sfnm|1a1=Kazi|1y=2004|1pp=154–57|2a1=Iqbal|2y=2010|2loc=chapter 6, see for example the map on page 187|3a1=Klein|3y=1973}}{{efn-ua| {{harvtxt |Iqbal |2010 |loc=Chapter 7}} suggests that the [[water hyacinth]], a very rapidly growing [[invasive species]], clogged waterways, reduced fish stocks, caused hardship to livestock due to its poor nutritional content, increased the incidence of water-borne epidemic and (in some areas) contributed to the partial shift away from the ''aman'' cultivar.}}


Subsequent research done by the Indian Statistical Institute using statistically valid samples and crop cutting rather than eye estimate of yield showed large errors in the official crop forecasts, with survey estimates being between 47% and 153% of the official estimate. The discrepancies also varied from year to year, with the sample estimate of the jute crop being 2.6% above the official estimate in 1941 and 52.6% above it in 1946.<ref>Desai (1953 p8), Dewey (1978 p311) quoting the Imperial Council of Agricultural Research (1950). Panse (1954 p27) points out that experience shows that 'eye estimation makes for a general tonng down of fluctuations' which would help explain why the degree of shortfall was not appreciated.</ref> This rules out analysis based on the level of the production forecast and, in particular, on year to year differences in production forecasts.
===Soil and water supply===
[[File:Jute Drying Roadside.jpg|thumb|Jute fiber being dried alongside a road after [[retting]]]]
The production forecasts did not cover any foods apart from rice, though these amounted to a third of calories consumed in normal years.
The Bengal soil profile interacted with the famine in two ways. First, the soil in eastern Bengal, in combination with abundant irrigation from monsoon rains, was unique for its ability to grow large amounts of high quality [[jute]]. This gave Bengal an effective monopoly on a cash crop.{{sfn|Iqbal|2010|p=42}} Jute of lesser quality was grown in smaller quantities in western Bengal, but eastern Bengal was clearly the center of jute production. During the famine, jute-producing districts suffered [[#Famine, disease, and the death toll|higher mortality rates]].{{sfn|Brennan|Heathcote|Lucas|1984|p=13}} Second, the sandy soil of eastern Bengal and the lighter sedimentary soil of the Sunderbans tended to drain more rapidly after the monsoon season than the [[laterite]] or heavy clay regions of western Bengal. As rule, malaria epidemics lasted approximately one month later in the areas with slower drainage.{{sfn|Iqbal|2010|loc=&nbsp;p.&nbsp;42, citing {{harvtxt|McClelland|1859|pp=32 &&nbsp;38}}}} This problem was compounded by the fact that [[soil exhaustion]] created the need for large tracts in western and central Bengal to be left fallow; eastern Bengal had far fewer fallow fields. Flooded fallow fields are one key breeding place for mosquitoes that carry malaria.{{sfnm|1a1=Hunt|1y=1987|1p=127|2a1=Learmonth|2y=1957|2p=56}}


There were no figures for food going into and out of Bengal. There are some figures on deliveries of rice and wheat to Calcutta by rail and by steamer, but none on exports and imports by Bengal as a whole – most trade being informal, by country boat.
Rural areas did not have sufficient access to safe water supplies in the event of an epidemic of [[waterborne diseases]]. Water came primarily from large earthen tanks, rivers and [[tube well]]s. In the dry season, partially drained tanks became yet another hospitable breeding area for malaria [[Vector (epidemiology)|vector]] mosquitoes.{{sfn|Roy|2006|p=5394}} Tank and river water, moreover, are readily susceptible to contamination by cholera; tube wells are much safer in this respect.{{sfn|Government of India|1945|p=128}}{{efn-ua|The strong link between tube wells and arsenic poisoning was not established or suggested until the 1990s, see {{harvtxt|Argos |Kalra |Rathouz |Chen|2010|p=252}} and {{harvtxt |Chowdhury |Biswas |Chowdhury|Samanta|2000}}}} However, landlords were often reluctant to sink tube wells for economic reasons, even when credit was extended for this purpose,{{sfn|Bhaduri|1973|loc=p. 136 ''note{{nbsp}}1''}} and as many as one-third of the existing wells in war-time Bengal were in disrepair due to government inefficiency and the high cost of materials.{{sfn|Government of India|1945|p=128}} The national government urged an initiative to repair these wells in November 1943, but actual work was not begun until after the cholera epidemic had subsided.{{sfn|Government of India|1945|p=136}}


It was not known how many people had to be fed. Censuses of populations in poor countries at the time were known to be to be unreliable at best, and the 1941 Indian Census was particularly bad.<ref>Mahalanobis (1944) p69; Dyson and Maharatna. (1991)</ref> There were no statistics on the number of refugees from Burma, nor the refugees from Bengal to other parts of India, escaping the threat of invasion, bombing and famine.
==Pre-famine shocks and distress==
Throughout 1942 and into early 1943,<!-- roughly January 1942–February/March 1943 --> a complex series of overlapping crises placed enormous, widespread stress on Bengal's economy, particularly on its more vulnerable segments. Distressing military and political events and subsequent government and market responses created escalating [[price shock]]s that overlapped with [[supply shock]]s caused by [[natural disaster]]s and [[plant disease]] later in the year.{{sfn|Tauger|2009|pp=194–95}} As Bengal's food needs rose from increased military presence and an influx of refugees from Burma,{{sfn|Maharatna|1992|p=206}} its ability to obtain rice and other foodgrains from outside the province was restricted by interprovincial trade barriers. The outlook of the typical Bengali, particularly in the countryside, deteriorated into a general belief in the inevitability of famine and devastating inflation, a lack of faith in the government's ability to overcome the crises, and a mood of isolation and panic. In nearly every sector of the population, the overriding concerns were the lack of food and personal safety,{{sfn|Government of India | 1945|p=98}} though a small number secured record profits amidst the havoc.{{sfn|Government of India|1945|p=67}}


===February–April 1942: Japanese invasion of Burma===
{{Main|Japanese conquest of Burma|Indian Ocean raid|Arakan Campaign&nbsp;1942–43}}
[[File:Burmese refugees flee along the Prome Road into India, January 1942.jpg|thumb|right| Indian refugees flee Burma along the [[Pyay Road|Prome Road]] from [[Rangoon]] to [[Mandalay]] and eventually on to India, January 1942]]
[[File:Prithipal Singh.jpg|thumb|right|Flight Lieutenant Prithipal Singh, commander of 'A' Flight, No. 1 Squadron Royal Indian Air Force, looks down from the cockpit of his Westland Lysander at Magwe, Burma, during operations in support of Allied forces retreating from the Burma, late 1941 or early 1942.]]
The Japanese campaign to conquer Burma began in late 1941, and from its outset a tide of refugees escaped into India through Bengal and Assam, helping to create conditions that would later set the stage for famine and epidemic in the region. The flow began with 70,000 after the [[Bombing of Rangoon (1941–1942)|bombing of Rangoon]] in late December 1941 and increased to a "mass exodus" in February 1942. For months thereafter, desperate people poured across the border.{{sfn|Rodger|1942|p=67}} The number of refugees who successfully reached India totaled at least 500,000; an unknown number, conservatively estimated between 10,000 and 50,000, died along the way. In later months, 70 to 80% of these refugees were afflicted with diseases such as dysentery, smallpox, malaria, or cholera, with 30% "desperately so".{{sfn|Tinker|1975|pp=2–3; 11–12}} On 26&nbsp;April, the British, Indian and Burmese soldiers of the Allied forces in Burma joined the civilians in a full retreat.{{sfn|Tinker|1975|p=10}}


== Why India did not act==
The influx of civilian and military evacuees from Burma had three immediate effects relevant to the famine of 1943. First, the spread of disease presented an increasingly apparent public health risk. As early as April 1942, the condition of the evacuees flooding in from Burma led Public Health Services officials in Bengal and Assam to begin generating weekly epidemiological reports on cholera, smallpox and plague.{{sfn|Bhattacharya|2002b|p=101}} Second, those who struggled through arrived in an alarming state, with "hair-raising stories of atrocities and sufferings".{{sfn|Government of India|1945|p=25}} The sudden and disturbing appearance of these distraught refugees bred foreboding, uncertainty, and panic amongst the government and populace of Bengal; this aggravated panic buying and hoarding that contributed to the onset of the famine.{{sfnm|1a1=Government of India |1y=1945 |1p=25 |2a1=Raghavan|2y=2016}} Third, the influx of refugees simply meant that more food,{{sfn|Maharatna|1992|p=206}} clothing and medical aid were needed, further straining the resources of the province. In the larger picture, the influx of soldiers retreating into Bengal further compounded the strain on resources, the lowering of morale, and the impression that the Raj was weak and would certainly fall to the Japanese.{{sfnm|1a1=J. Mukherjee|1y=2015|1p=88|2a1=Chakrabarty|2y=1992b|2p=91|3a1=Mukerjee|3y=2011|3p=91}}


India had suffered frequent famine situations because of the impact of a variable climate, the many different ecological zones, and the agricultural systems of the time. For the previous sixty years provincial governments had handled these efficiently and routinely using the Indian Famine Codes<ref>Brennan, (1984); Bengal Government (1913, 1941)</ref>, first ensuring that there was adequate food available in the affected areas, then making it available to those who could not afford to buy it, by food for work and by giving rations to the poor. Neither of these policies was carried out in Bengal in 1943 though they were used effectively in the Bombay Presidency and Travanacore for instance: ‘For the first time in the long history of famine administration in India since 1860, an attempt was made by the Government to meet the Bengal crisis in 1943 by control of prices and regulation of trade in foodgrains.<ref>(Bhatia, 1967) p 324</ref>
The fall of Rangoon also meant that Burmese exports of rice to India and [[Ceylon]] ceased. The impact on Bengal was indirect but powerful; although Burmese rice usually made up only around 5% of the consumption within Bengal,{{efn-ua|However, "much of the importation from Burma before the famine went unrecorded"&nbsp;{{harv|Ó Gráda |2008 |p=30, ''note{{nbsp}}108''}}}} other areas, such as [[Kingdom of Cochin|Cochin]], western India, and especially [[Travancore]] and Ceylon, suddenly lost a far greater proportion of their imports. This provoked an aggressive and competitive scramble for rice across India, causing a rapid, unprecedented price inflation in Bengal and elsewhere.{{sfn|Government of India|1945|pp=23–24; 28–29; 103}} Between 1941 and 1942, Bengal flipped from being a net importer of 296,000 tons of rice to a net exporter of 185,000 tons.{{sfn|Government of India|1945|p=28}} Under pressure from the UK,{{sfn|Mansergh |1971| p= 544, Document no. 362}} Bengal continued to export rice to Ceylon{{efn-ua|Ceylon (now [[Sri Lanka]]) was a vital asset in the Allied war effort. It was "one of the very few sources of natural rubber still controlled by the Allies"&nbsp;{{harv|Axelrod|Kingston|2007|p=220}}. It was also a vital link in "British supply lines around the southern tip of Africa to the Middle East, India and Australia".&nbsp;{{harv|Lyons|2016|p=150}} Churchill noted Ceylon's importance in maintaining the flow of oil from the Middle East, and considered its port of [[Colombo]] "the only really good base" for the [[Eastern Fleet]] and the defense of India.&nbsp;{{harv|Churchill|1986|pp=152, 155 & 162}}}} for months afterward, even as the beginning of a food crisis began to become apparent.{{efn-ua| In late January 1943, for example, the [[Victor Hope, 2nd Marquess of Linlithgow|Viceroy Linlithgow]] wrote to the Secretary of State for India, [[Leo Amery]]: "Mindful of our difficulties about food I told [the Premier of Bengal, [[A. K. Fazlul Huq]]] that he simply ''must'' produce some more rice out of Bengal for Ceylon even if Bengal itself went short! He was by no means unsympathetic, and it is possible that I may in the result screw a little out of them. The Chief [Churchill] continues to press me most strongly about both rice and labour for Ceylon" {{harv|Mansergh|1971|p=544, Document no. 362}}. Quoted in many sources, for example {{harvtxt|A. Sen|1977|p=53}}, {{harvtxt|Ó Gráda|2008|pp=30–31}}, {{harvtxt| Mukerjee|2011|p=93}}, and {{harvtxt|J. Mukherjee |2015|p=93}}.}} Moreover, the ease with which Burmese rice had been obtained in the past had always prevented hoarding and helped stabilise rice prices.{{sfnm|1a1=Mahalanobis|1y=1944|1p= 70, ''note{{nbsp}}8''|2a1=Brennan|2a2= Heathcote|2a3=Lucas |2y=1984|2pp=11–12}} The impact of this loss of foodgrains on price levels in rice markets in Bengal was vastly disproportionate to the size of the reduction.{{sfn|S. Bose|1990|p=703 & 715}} The sudden and alarming inflation from this scramble for rice, together with transport problems caused the government's [[#Denial of boats|"boat denial" policy]], were the direct causes of later [[#Mid-1942: Inter-provincial trade barriers|inter-provincial trade barriers]] on the movement of foodgrains,{{sfn|Government of India|1945|p=24 }} and contributed to a series of [[#1942–43: Price shocks and policy failures|failed government policies]] that further exacerbated the food crisis.{{sfn|Government of India|1945|p=29}}


The Government of India had the task of ensuring that India as a whole had enough food, and then coordinating the action of the different provinces and princely states so that those with deficits got enough food. The responsibility for famine relief lay firmly with the democratically elected government of Bengal, and, under the Government of India Act, the Government of India could not give orders on this.
A further consequence of Japanese military advances was the sinking of approximately 100,000 tons of merchant shipping in the Bay of Bengal, plus two [[heavy cruiser]]s ({{HMS|Dorsetshire|40|2}} and {{HMS|Cornwall|56|2}}), the [[aircraft carrier]] {{HMS|Hermes|95|2}}, and "some smaller naval vessels". This highlighted the powerlessness of the Eastern Fleet and heightened the fear of imminent invasion; shipping in the Bay of Bengal practically ceased, placing an additional strain on the railways{{sfn|Grehan|Mace|2015|pp=96–7; 100}} that made transport unavailable for famine relief until very late in the crisis.{{sfn|Iqbal|2011|pp= 273–4}}


It was widely believed by politicians, the Government of India, the Government of Bengal, other provincial governments, some administrators, some public servants and some of the general public that Bengal had plenty of food available and food shortages were due to hoarding, speculation and inflation and so should be dealt with administratively, not by providing starving people in Bengal with food.<ref>(Famine Inquiry Commission(1945)</ref> ‘And at the Third Food Conference in Delhi on the 5th to the 8th July, … the suggestion that “the only reason why people are starving in Bengal is that there is hoarding” was greeted at the Conference by the other Provinces with applause.’ <ref>Braund, (1944) p31, Knight, (1954)</ref> Similarly, some officials in the Government of India refused to accept the evidence on the ground, preferring their own idiosyncratic interpretations of the market. The Viceroy wrote to Governor of Bengal in June 1943, when the famine was well underway, ‘I understand that Christie. (ICS; Deputy Secretary, Food Department, Government of India), has been in Calcutta recently and that he came away with a feeling of very cautious optimism.<ref>June 16 1943, Mansergh 102 IV p8</ref> ‘ . . . as late as November 1943, ‘The Government of India would admit no intrinsic shortage in Bengal in the Spring of 1943 and, even in November, at the height of the famine, the Director-General of Food in the Council of State said that “the major trouble in Bengal has been not so much an intrinsic shortage of essential foodgrains as a breakdown of public confidence.’ <ref>Braund, 1944 p31, 18</ref> On 19 October 1943, when the famine was serious, the new Viceroy, Wavell, noted in his journal “On the food situation Linlithgow [The outgoing Viceroy] says chief factor morale.”<ref> Moon, 1973 p34</ref>
===1942–45: Military build-up, inflation, and displacement===
{{See|Monetary inflation|demand pull inflation|deficit spending}}
[[File:AmericanSoldiersCalcutta1943.jpg|thumb|right|Calcutta was a hub for hundreds of thousands of allied troops stopping ''en route'' to the front or returning for [[R&R (military)|R&R]].{{sfn|J. Mukherjee|2015|pp=131–132}} Shown here are U.S. soldiers at the [[Calcutta Jain Temple]], 1943.]]
[[File:HawkerMarkIModifiedForChinditSupport.jpg|thumb|right|Hawker Hurricane Mark I, Z4575 'L', of No. 2 Squadron IAF at Risalpur, North-West Frontier Province, while converting to the Hurricane and before moving to Eastern India for training in support of the Chindits in Burma 1943]]
The fall of Burma brought Bengal close to the war front; its impact fell more strongly on the region than elsewhere in India.{{sfn|Government of India|1945|p=103}} As 1942 and especially 1943 wore on, major urban areas in Bengal (most especially Calcutta) swelled with ever-increasing numbers of workers in the military industries and troops from many nations. The docks of [[Kidderpore]] employed perhaps 60,000 workers{{sfn|S. Das|1995|pp=61–2}} (and nearby were large American and British Army depots);{{sfn|J. Mukherjee|2015|p=150}} railway sheds in [[Howrah]] and [[Lilloah]] employed perhaps another 25,000; there were cotton mills, iron and steel works, gun and shell factories, pharmaceutical works, engineering firms, and other support industries of every kind.{{sfn|S. Das|1995|pp=61–2}} Because of its proximity to Burma, an unprecedented number of large-scale civil and defense-related construction works were carried out in Bengal, much more than in any other region of India.{{sfnm|1a1=S. Bose|1y=1990|1p=716|2a1=A. Sen|2y=1977|2p=50}} Unskilled labourers from Bengal and nearby provinces were employed by military contractors for numerous small tasks and large projects, particularly the construction of American and British airfields.{{sfn|Iqbal|2011|p=278}}{{efn-ua|There are numerous defunct former airfields of the [[Royal Air Force]] and [[United States Air Force]] in the former province of Bengal, including [[Asansol Airfield|Asansol]], [[Charra Airfield|Charra]], [[Dudhkundi Airfield|Dudhkundi]], [[Guskhara Airfield|Guskhara]], [[Kanchrapara Airfield|Kanchrapara]], [[Pandaveswar Airfield|Pandaveswar]] and [[Piardoba Airfield|Piardoba]] in [[West Bengal]], plus [[Dohazari Airfield|Dohazari]], [[Fenny Airfield|Fenny]] and [[Hathazari Airfield|Hathazari]] in [[Bangladesh]]. Other former Allied airbases are still in operation under domestic ownership, such as [[Kalaikunda Air Force Station]], [[Barrackpore Air Force Station]], [[PAF Base Nur Khan]], [[Shah Amanat International Airport]] and [[PAF Base Korangi]].}}


In provinces with grain surpluses there was a belief among many politicians, public servants, district officials and the public that Bengal had enough food. Possibly more important was the general belief that farmers were being asked to sell their grain below the market price, so that it could be sent to Bengal where it would be sold cheaply to merchants who would make fantastic black market profits from it.<ref>Knight, (1954)</ref> Both sets of beliefs made it politically difficult for an elected Provincial government to export. The surplus provinces had committed themselves to send ‘an agreed total of nearly 370,000 tons of rice to Bengal over a period to be reckoned from December 1942. Actually, in the 7 months December 1942 to June 1943 only a little over 44,000 tons reached Bengal’, a little over a tenth of the agreed amount.<ref>Mansergh, (1973) p43; Famine Inquiry Commission p51</ref>
At the same time, hundreds of thousands of troops poured into the province from various countries, especially the United States, the UK, India, and China.{{sfn|J. Mukherjee|2015|pp=131–132}} Calcutta was the main resupply base for American troops fighting in China, and its grassy [[Maidan (Kolkata)|Maidan park]] the airfield for transports flying over the [[Himalayan mountains]].{{sfn|Stevenson|2005|p=ix}} Troops also passed through Bengal on their way to the border with Burma.{{sfn|De|2006|p=2}} This massive influx of industrial workers and domestic and foreign troops{{sfn|J. Mukherjee|2015|p=132}} placed further strains on domestic supplies of every kind{{snd}}especially medicine and food.{{sfnm|1a1=Dando|1y=2012|1p=137|2a1=De|2y=2006|2p=2}}


In 1942, with the permission of the central government, trade barriers between provinces were introduced by the [[Indian Provincial Elections, 1937|democratically elected Provincial governments]]. The politicians and civil servants of surplus provinces like the Punjab introduced regulations to prevent grain leaving their provinces for the famine areas of Bengal, Madras and Cochin. There was the desire to see that, first, local populations and, second, the populations of neighbouring provinces were well fed, partly to prevent civil unrest. Politicians and officials got power and patronage, and the ability to extract bribes for shipping permits. Marketing and transaction costs rose sharply. Traders could not get grain to Bengal, however profitable it might be.
These enormous public expenditures and resulting increases in demand sparked wartime inflation across India, especially in Bengal.{{sfn|S. Bose|1990|p=716}} There were local scarcities of daily necessities such as kerosene, cloth, sugar, cooking oil, [[Legume|pulse]]s, fish, matches, yarn, coal and ice;{{sfnm|1a1=Government of India |1y=1945 |1p=170–71 |2a1=Greenough |2y=1980 |2p=222 |3a1=J. Mukherjee |3y=2015 |3pp=40–41; 110; 191}} prices rose rapidly due to the general inflationary pressures of a war-time economy.{{sfn|A. Sen|1977|p=50}} Generalised [[demand-pull inflation]] spread across the entire spectrum of goods and services, including such things as bamboo umbrellas and haircuts.{{sfn|A. Sen|1981a|pp=67–70}} The productive capacity of Indian industry, which had been relatively meagre after the stagnation arising from the Great Depression, faced significant capacity constraints that drove up prices of Indian goods and commodities. The rise in prices of essential goods and services was initially "not unsatisfactory" and "not disturbing", but became more alarming in 1941.{{sfn|Government of India |1945 |pp=19–20}} Then in early 1943, the rate of inflation for foodgrains in particular took an unprecedented upward turn.{{sfn|S. Bose|1990|p=715}}


In December 1942 [[Calcutta]],’s grain supplies were very small and a major but unsuccessful campaign was launched to obtain grain from Bengal.<ref> Famine Inquiry Commission, 1945a pp36-39.</ref> ‘There is no doubt that the stocks in Calcutta at the beginning of the year [1943] were being consumed far more rapidly than they were being replaced. By the beginning of March, stocks were down to such a low level that ilooked as if the city must starve within a fortnight unless large supplies arrived quickly.’ .<ref> Famine Inquiry Commission, 1945a p 35.</ref> That is to say 2 to 4 million urban people in the second biggest city in the Empire, faced imminent famine. The provinces with grain surpluses were prevailed upon to supply enough grain to feed Calcutta throughout the famine year, though not the rest of Bengal.<ref>Famine Inquiry Commission, 1945a.</ref>
Nearly the full productive output of India's cloth, wool, leather, and silk industries was sold directly to the military.{{sfn|Mukerjee|2011|pp=221–22}} In the system that the UK Government used to procure goods through the Government of India, rather than outright requisitioning the means of production, the productive capacity of Indian industries was left in private ownership. Firms were required to sell goods to the military on credit and at fixed, low prices,{{sfn|Rothermund|2002|pp=115–122}} but were left free to charge any price they desired in their domestic market for whatever they had left over. In the case of the textiles industries that supplied cloth for the uniforms of the UK military, for example, they charged "a very high price indeed" in domestic markets.{{sfn|Rothermund|2002|pp=115–122}} By the end of 1942, cloth prices had more than tripled from their pre-war levels; they had more than quadrupled by mid-1943.{{sfn|Natarajan|1946|p=49}} Much of the goods left over for civilian use were purchased by speculators.{{sfn|Mukerjee|2011|pp=222}} As a result, "civilian consumption of cotton goods fell by more than 23 per cent from the peace time level by 1943/44".{{sfn|Mukherji|1986|p=PE-25}} The effects were felt by the rural population in a "[[#Cloth famine|cloth famine]]", one of the severe hardships of the crisis in Bengal that was not alleviated until military forces began distributing relief supplies; for example, the [[United States Air Force]] flew 100 tons of warm clothing into eastern Bengal.{{sfn|Knight|1954|p=101}}


The Government of India realized a mistake had been made and decreed a return to free trade. The surplus Provinces refused. “The Punjab representative at the Fourth Food Conference emphasized that some 50 per cent of the combatant ranks of the Indian Army at that time were drawn from the farming classes of the Punjab and that ‘grave administrative and political repercussions; would follow if rationing, statutory price control and requisition of food grains were put into force.”<ref>Knight p 158</ref>
The method of credit financing was also tailored to UK wartime needs. The UK agreed to pay for defence expenditures over and above the amount that India had paid in peacetime (adjusted for inflation). However, their purchases were made entirely on credit accumulated in the Bank of England and not redeemable until after the war. At the same time, the Bank of India was permitted to treat those credits as assets against which it could print currency up to two and a half times more than the total debt incurred. India's money printing presses then began running overtime, printing the currency that paid for all these massive defence expenditures. The tremendous rise in nominal money supply spurred [[monetary inflation]], reaching its peak in 1944–45. The accompanying rise in incomes and purchasing power fell disproportionately into the hands of industries in Calcutta (in particular, munitions industries).{{sfnm|1a1=S. Bose|1y=1990|1p=715|2a1=Rothermund|2y=2002|2pp=115–122|3a1=Natarajan|3y=1946|3p=iii|4a1=A. Sen |4y=1977 |4p=50 |5a1=Bhattacharya |5a2=Zachariah|5y=1999 |5pp=79–80|6a1=Brennan |6a2=Heathcote |6a3=Lucas|6y=1984|6p=9}}


The [[Government of India Act 1935]] had removed most of the Government of India’s authority over the Provinces, so even when the Government of India decreed that there should be free trade in grain, politicians, civil servants, local government officers and police obstructed the movement of grain to famine areas.<ref>Famine Inquiry Commission 1945a p57, 93</ref> ‘But men like Bhai Permanand say that though many traders want to export food [to Bengal] the Punjab Government would not give them permits. He testified to large quantities of undisposed-of rice being in the Punjab’<ref>Chandra, Mahesh, (August 1943) quoted in Stephens (1966) p181.</ref>
Finally, the urgent need for housing for the massive influx of workers and soldiers from 1942 onward also created problems. Military barracks were scattered around Calcutta.{{sfn|J. Mukherjee|2015|p=150}} Perhaps a thousand homes, including entire villages, were requisitioned for military use and at least 60,000 occupants expelled.{{sfn|J. Mukherjee|2015|p=214}} The Famine Commission report of 1945 stated that the owners had been paid for these homes, but "there is little doubt that the members of many of these families became famine victims in 1943."{{sfn|Government of India|1945|pp=27 & 101}}


In some cases Provinces seized grain in transit from other Provinces to Bengal.<ref>Braund p12 (citing Government of India letter to all Provinces dated the 13th February, 1943.)</ref>
===March 1942: Denial policies===
British authorities also feared that the Japanese would proceed through captured Burma and on into British India, attacking over the eastern border of Bengal. As a preemptive measure, a two-pronged [[scorched-earth]] initiative was launched in eastern and coastal Bengal. The objective of these "denial policies" was to prevent or impede the expected Japanese invasion by denying access to food supplies or transport (plus other resources) from eastern India.{{efn-ua|However, at least two sources have suggested that the avowed objective of denying supplies to an invading Japanese army was less important than a covert goal of controlling available rice stocks and means of transport so the rice supplies could be directed toward the armed forces, see {{harvtxt|Iqbal|2010|p=282}} and {{harvtxt|De|2006|p=12}}}} The policies' impact on the development of the famine&nbsp;— the extent to which they compounded or even caused the later crisis&nbsp;— has been the subject of much discussion.{{efn-ua| See for example {{harvtxt|J. Mukherjee|2015|pp=58–67}} and {{harvtxt|Iqbal|2011}}.}}
Most contemporary commentators thought the Hindu-Muslim conflict an important factor, both within Bengal and in India generally.<ref> Dutt, 1944; Ghosh, 1944; NSR Rajan 1944; Mansergh vol III 1971; Mansergh vol IV, 1973 p 358; Famine Inquiry Commission 1945a p84</ref> It was even claimed by a leading politician that ‘Bengal had been deliberately starved out by other provinces’ which refused to permit the export of grain.<ref> Moon (1973) p 239)</ref>


== What the Bengal Government did and did not do==
The first policy, called "denial of rice", was carried out in three southern districts along the coast of the Bay of Bengal that were expected to have surpluses of rice&nbsp;– [[Backergunge District|Bakarganj]] (or Barisal), [[Midnapore district|Midnapore]] and [[Khulna District|Khulna]]. In late March 1942, [[John Herbert (Conservative politician)|Governor Herbert]], acting under orders from the UK, issued a directive requiring surplus stocks of paddy (rough, unhusked rice) and other food items to be removed or destroyed in three districts.{{sfnm|1a1=Government of India|1y=1945|1p=25–26|2a1=Iqbal|2y=2011|3a1=De|3y=2006|3p=|4a1=Ó Gráda |4y=2009|4p=154}} Great urgency was attached to the task; the Governor instructed various agents to do it almost immediately.{{sfnm|1a1=Mukerjee|1y=2011|1p=66|2a1=J. Mukherjee|2y=2015|2p=217, ''note{{nbsp}}23''; note refers to page 59}} Some rice was apparently simply destroyed,{{sfn|Mukerjee|2011|p=66}} but paddy was also purchased by government agents in coastal districts and stored in various locations.{{sfn|Brennan|1988|loc=&nbsp;p. 543, ''note{{nbsp}}3''}} Official figures for the amounts of rice and paddy impounded were relatively small; reductions of this level would inflict only limited damage, reducing local peasants' access to rice and contributing to local scarcities in an already perilous period.{{sfnm|1a1=A. Sen |1y=1977 |1p=45|2a1=S. Bose|2y=1990|2p=717}} Evidence that fraud, corruption and coercive practices by the purchasing agents drained far more rice from the market than officially recorded, not only in the three designated districts, but also in unauthorised areas, suggests that the impact may have been greater.{{sfnm|1a1=Weigold|1y=1999|1p=67|2a1=J. Mukherjee|2y=2015 |2pp=62 & 272|3a1=Greenough|3y=1982|3p=92}} Far more damaging, finally, was the policy's disturbing impact on regional market relationships and contribution to a sense of confusion and public alarm.{{sfnm|1a1=J. Mukherjee |1y=2015 |1pp=61–63 | 2a1=Ghosh|2y=1944|2p=52}}


It was generally agreed that in 1943 the Bengal Government failed completely in its remit of famine relief. It did not declare a famine or institute relief in the areas hit by the cyclone and tidal waves, though the Bengal Famine Code<ref> Bengal Government (1913, 1941)</ref> stated that relief should commence instantly. Indeed, it did not declare an official famine situation even after the much wider scale of the famine became apparent, initially because of a belief that it was unnecessary, later on the grounds that there was not enough food available to give the rations laid down in the Bengal Famine Code. Only in August, nine months after the cyclone, was a committee set up to tackle the famine on orthodox lines and action started on setting up famine relief systems.<ref>Stevenson, (2005</ref> The Bengal Government failed to implement the rationing programme recommended by the Government of India in 1942 until 1944 though it had proved very successful in Bombay. The supporters of the two democratically elected Bengal Governments involved, that of [[A. K. Fazlul Huq]] (December 1941 to March 1943) and of [[Khawaja Nazimuddin]]'s [[All-India Muslim League|Muslim League]] (April 1943 to March 1945) each held the other government responsible for the catastrophe, because of its inaction and corruption.{{sfn|Sen, Shila|1976|pp=174, 175}} Both of these clashed with the Governor of Bengal, John Herbert, who, it has been claimed, bore as much of the responsibility.<ref>Stevenson, (2005) p110.</ref>
====Denial of boats====
A boat-denial policy was also demanded by the military,{{sfnm|1a1=Brennan |1y=1988|1p=542–43, ''note{{nbsp}}3''|2a1=A. Sen|2y=1977|2p=45}} designed to deny Bengali vehicles to any invading Japanese army. The policy applied to districts that were readily accessible via the Bay of Bengal and the larger rivers that flow into it,{{efn-ua|The [[Ganges]] and its tributaries the [[Padma River|Padma]] and [[Hooghly River|Hooghly]], the [[Brahmaputra]] and its tributaries the [[Jamuna River (Bangladesh)|Jamuna]] and [[Meghna River|Meghna]].}} as well as the important ports of [[Chittagong]] and Calcutta. The three rice-denial districts were affected, as were nine others: [[Hooghly district|Hooghly]], [[Howrah district|Howrah]], [[24&nbsp;Parganas]], [[Jessore district|Jessore]], [[Faridpur district|Faridpur]], [[Tippera]], [[Dhaka district|Dacca]], [[Noakhali district|Noakhali]], and [[Chittagong District|Chittagong]]. Hastily announced on 2&nbsp;April 1942, without any consultation with the provincial Government of Bengal, the policy was implemented on 1&nbsp;May after an initial registration period.{{sfnm|1a1=J. Mukherjee|1y=2015|1p=13|2a1=De|2y=2006|2p=13}} It authorised the Army to confiscate, relocate or destroy any boats large enough to carry more than ten persons; it also allowed them to requisition other means of transport such as bicycles, bullock carts, and elephants. Some tools and instruments were also seized.{{sfnm|4a1=Iqbal |4y=2011 |4p=274|3a1=Bayly |3a2=Harper |3y=2005 |3pp=284–285|1a1=Government of India|1y=1945 |1pp=26–27 |2a1=A. Sen |2y=1977 |2p=45|5a1=J. Mukherjee |5y=2015 |5p=66|6a1=De|6y=2006|6p=13}}


At one stage in 1943 the Government of Bengal limited relief to save money, though the money could have been obtained.{{sfn|Famine Inquiry Commission|1945a|pp=61, 99, 104, 105}}
The Army confiscated approximately 46,000 rural boats.{{sfn|J. Mukherjee |2015 |p=9}} The policy severely disrupted river-borne movement of labour, supplies and food; the livelihoods of boatmen and fishermen were compromised.{{sfnm|1a1=Ó Gráda |1y=2009 |1p= |2a1=Brennan |2y=1988|2p=542–43, ''note{{nbsp}}3''}} Transport was generally unavailable to carry seed and equipment to distant fields or rice to the market hubs, leaving farmers in great difficulty.{{sfnm|1a1=Iqbal|1y=2011|1p=272|2a1=S. Bose|2y=1990|2p=717}} Transport costs rose, and the sudden stoppage of commerce not only caused some local industries to collapse, but also struck local areas with a supply shock on rice and fish, Bengal's two staple foods. The Army took no steps to distribute food rations to make up for the interruption of supplies.{{sfn|Bayly|Harper|2005|pp=284–285}} Moreover, artisans and other groups who relied on boat transport to carry goods to market were offered no recompense whatsoever; neither were rice growers nor the network of migratory labourers.{{sfn|De|2006|=13}} The large-scale removal or destruction of rural boats, indispensable vehicles in the internal transport system of districts such as Khulna, 24&nbsp;Parganas, Bakargunj and Tipperah, caused a near-complete breakdown of the existing transport and administration infrastructure and market system for movement of rice paddy.{{sfnm|1a1=Greenough|1y=1982|1p=89, citing "Army Proposal of 23 April submitted to Chief Civil Defense Commissioner, Bengal" in {{harvtxt|Pinnell|1944| p= 5}}|2a1=J. Mukherjee |2y=2015 |2p=9}}


==Hoarding==
The policy also compounded inflationary pressures. The British administration released significant funds for cash purchases of boats; the threat of punitive force and the fear of reported [[Japanese war crimes]] against captives were also employed. Compensation was paid "lavishly" for the boats and boat crews: owners were paid "the market value of the craft [and] three months' average earnings when the boat had been used as sole means of livelihood", while "[crews] received a month's wages".{{sfn|Brennan|1988|p= 543, ''note{{nbsp}}3''}} Many boat owners initially responded enthusiastically; authorities were able to obtain 25,000 boats within the first few days after the introduction of the policy.{{sfn|Iqbal|2011|p=277 & 280}} Cash was disbursed in lump sums of one-[[rupee]] notes. These notes, however, were immediately spent on rice and cloth, both of which were already becoming scarce, since the paper they were printed on was frequently damaged by [[termite|white ant]]s.{{efn-ua|For a description of white ants' voracious consumption of household goods, see {{harvtxt|MacMillan|2007|p=96}}}} This sudden injection of cash into the local economy, and subsequent increase in demand for goods that were already becoming scarce due to war conditions, compounded the inflationary pressures.{{sfn|Iqbal|2011|p= 280, citing&nbsp;{{harv|Martin|1945}}}}


Until two thirds of the way through the famine year at least, the Government of Bengal acted on the premise that there was plenty of food available but hoarding, speculation and inflation meant that it was not put on the market for consumers to buy. The Government of India civil supplies officer in Bengal<ref>Braund (1944)</ref>, the Bengal civil supplies officer<ref>Pinnell, (1944)</ref> and Bengali district officers managing relief<ref>see Brennan, (1988)</ref> all report trying one government policy addressing it, then when it failed switching to another then switching back, each time finding that the hidden supplies did not materialize, if they existed.
Problems continued when many of the confiscated boats simply disintegrated in holding areas. No steps were taken to provide for their proper maintenance or repair.{{sfn|Iqbal|2011|p=276}} As a result, many fishermen were unable to return to their trade.{{sfn|De|2006|p=13}} The loss of transport was also a factor in later problems delivering relief aid to cyclone and famine victims in areas where roads were poor and other means of transport were lacking.{{sfn|Brennan|1988|p=548}} Finally, this array of harmful effects had important political ramifications as well, as the [[Indian National Congress]] and many other groups staged protests denouncing the denial policies for placing draconian burdens on the Bengali peasants; these were part of a nationalist sentiment and outpouring that later peaked in the "Quit India" movement.{{sfnm|1a1=J. Mukherjee|1y=2015|1pp=67–74|2a1=Bhattacharya|2y=2013|2pp=21–23}}


The Government of Bengal claimed initially that the food shortages evident from December 1942 were due to hoarding. Hoarding previous to the famine year provided valuable food security, but it was believed in Delhi that there was an increase in these hoards after the December 1942 crop.<ref>Mansergh Dec 1942. This distinction between accumulated food security stocks and extra stocks appears to have been lost in all later discussion. (Bowbrick 1986)</ref> No evidence on hoarding was ever produced nor was there discussion of how many people could afford to buy grain to store, or who had the space to store it. For hoarding to have created the amount of hunger and death recorded if there had, indeed, been adequate supplies, it would have been necessary that the richest 10% of Bengal's population, the only ones who could afford it, to lay in two years' rice supply for themselves, in addition to the stocks accumulated in the previous two years, and to keep it in stock until the end of the war, while their neighbours starved.<ref>(Bowbrick, A refutation of Professor Sen’s theory of famines,1986)</ref>
===Mid-1942: Inter-provincial trade barriers===
Many [[Presidencies and provinces of British India#Provinces of India (1858–1947)|Indian province]]s and [[princely state]]s imposed inter-provincial trade barriers beginning in mid-1942, preventing other provinces from buying domestic rice. One underlying cause was the anxiety and soaring prices that followed the fall of Burma,{{sfn|Knight|1954|p=270}} but a more direct impetus in some cases (for example, Bihar) was the trade imbalances directly caused by provincial price controls.{{sfn|Government of India|1945|p=24}} The power to restrict inter-provincial trade had been conferred on provincial governments in November 1941 as an item under the [[Defence of India Act, 1939]].{{efn-ua|"On 29 November 1941 the central government conferred, by notification, concurrent powers on the provincial governments under the Defence of India Rules (DIR) to restrict/prohibit the movement of food grains and also to requisition both food grains and any other commodity they considered necessary. With regard to food grains, the provincial governments had the power to restrict/stop, seize them and regulate their price, divert them from their usual channels of transportation and, as stated, their movement"&nbsp;&nbsp;{{harv|De|2006|p=8}}.}} Provincial governments began erecting trade barriers that prevented the flow of foodgrains (especially rice) and other goods between provinces. These barriers reflected a desire to see that local populations were well fed, thus also forestalling civil unrest.{{sfn| Government of India | 1945 |pp=16 & 19}}


This belief developed into the belief that Bengal had enough rice to feed everybody, if the hoarded stocks were released, which strongly influenced the policies advocated by politicians and public servants and the actions and failures to act of the Government of India and of provincial governments, including the Government of Bengal.<ref> Famine Inquiry Commission(1945), Braund(1944). The Viceroy believed that hoarding was serious, and that there was ‘Congress agitation in favour of hoarding’. (Mansergh III p326)</ref> There was a large propaganda campaign telling the public that Bengal had plenty of food and hoarding was unnecessary. In April and May there was a propaganda drive to convince the population that the high prices were not justified by the any shortages, the goal being that the propaganda would induce hoarders<ref>{{cite web|title=How Sens theory can cause famines |url=http://www.bowbrick.org.uk/Famine%20papers/APPEND2.HTM |publisher=Bowbrick.org.uk |date= |accessdate=2013-08-28}}</ref> to sell their stocks. When these propaganda drives failed, there was a drive to locate hoarded stocks. H.S.Suhawardy, Bengal’s Minister of Civil Supplies from April 24, 1943, announced that there was no shortage of rice in Bengal and introduced a policy of intimidating ‘hoarders’: this caused looting, extortion and corruption but did not increase the amount of food on the market.<ref>(Greenough, 1982, pp. 117, 122-126)</ref> When these drives continually failed to locate large stocks, the government realized that the scale of the loss in supply was larger than they had initially believed.<ref>Tauger, Indian Famine Crises p.183</ref>
In January 1942, [[Punjab Province (British India)|Punjab]] banned exports of wheat;{{sfnm|1a1=Knight|1y=1954|1p=279|2a1=Yong|2y=2005|2pp=291–94}}{{efn-ua|Note that this was ''not'' due to any shortage of wheat; on the contrary, the Punjab ran a huge surplus. A shortage of rice throughout India in 1941 caused foodgrain prices in general to rise. Agriculturalists in the Punjab wished to hold onto stocks to a small extent to cover their own rice deficit, but more importantly to profit from the price increases. To aid the rest of India in their domestic food purchases, the Government of India placed price controls on Punjabi wheat. The response was swift: so many wheat farmers held onto their stocks that wheat disappeared, and the Government of the Punjab began to assert that it now faced famine conditions {{harv|Yong|2005|pp=291–94}}.}} this increased the perception of [[food insecurity]] and led the enclave of wheat-eaters in Greater Calcutta to increase their demand for rice precisely when an impending rice shortage was feared.{{sfn|Government of India|1945|p=32}} The [[Central Provinces]] prohibited the export of foodgrains outside the province two months later.{{sfn|Government of India |1945 |pp= 23 & 193}} [[Madras Presidency|Madras]] banned rice exports in June,{{sfn|Knight|1954|p=280}} followed by export bans in Bengal and its neighboring provinces of [[Bihar Province|Bihar]] and [[Orissa Province|Orissa]] that July.{{sfnm|1a1= Government of India |1y= 1945 |1p=24|2a1=Knight|2y=1954|2pp= 48 & 280}}


==Speculation==
The Famine Inquiry Commission of 1945 characterised this "critical and potentially most dangerous stage" in the crisis as a key policy failure: "Every province, every district, every [administrative division] in the east of India had become a food republic unto itself. The trade machinery for the distribution of food [between provinces] throughout the east of India was slowly strangled, and by the spring of 1943 was dead."{{sfn|Government of India |1945|pp=16–17}} Bengal was thus unable to import domestic rice; this critical policy failure helped transform the combination of market failures plus some degree of food shortage into famine and widespread death.{{sfnm|1a1=A. Sen|1y=1977|1p=51|2a1=Brennan|2y=1988|2p=563}}
There was a widespread claim that there was no shortage really, that there was plenty of rice available but traders were stockpiling it to make speculative profits<ref>Famine Inquiry Commission (1945), Braund (1944) Pinell (1944)</ref>. There was no evidence for this: there were no statistics on public or private stocks of food, and evidence produced later contradicted the belief.<ref> Famine Inquiry Commission 1945a p77</ref>


Much of the policy of the Bengal Government and the Government of India was based on this belief: repeated attempts were made to ‘break the Calcutta market’ by releasing quantities of grain onto it, in the belief that this would either bring prices down, or frighten the speculators into releasing stocks.<ref> Famine Inquiry Commission 1945a; Braund 1944</ref> The quantities released at any time were substantial in that they were approximately a month to two month’s supply for Calcutta city, and these quantities were expected to have an immediate impact if, indeed, Bengal had plenty of grain. They had no impact even though 600,000 tons of grain were imported over the year.
===August 1942: Prioritised distribution===


New evidence emerged that the traders were not in fact stockpiling large quantities: The officials responsible for food used a wide range of other estimates, cross-checking them against observable facts.<ref>Braund, 1944; Pinnell, 1944: Famine Inquiry Commission 1945a</ref> They were able to make use of information obtained from mail censorship, police, reports from Special Branch, informers, other departments etc. They also used trade estimates. When they raided stores looking for speculative stocks, it was found that the stores contained significantly smaller amounts than they had in normal years. <ref>Braund, 1944; Pinnell, 1944: Famine Inquiry Commission 1945a</ref> This was confirmed when there was no release the one to two million of tons of surplus stocks claimed to exist when the famine ended. Only if speculators had stored more than usual, and not released it during the famine year, would they have increased the number of deaths: there is ample evidence that they did not.<ref>Bowbrick, 1986</ref>.
In the eyes of the government, strategic problems stemming from the loss of Burma served to further reinforce the importance of Calcutta, which produced "as much as 80% of the armament, textile and heavy machinery production used in the Asian theater."{{sfn|J. Mukherjee|2015|pp=47, 131}} The paramount goal became the support of this center of wartime mobilisation. To address this problem, they adopted a technique they had already been using since the outset of the war&nbsp;— prioritised distribution of goods and services.{{sfn|S. Bose |1990|p=717}} The Government of India made a conscious decision to divide socioeconomic groups into "priority" and "non-priority" classes according to the relative importance of their contributions to the war effort.{{sfn|Bhattacharya|Zachariah|1999|p=77}} Rather than being faced with starvation, workers in prioritised sectors{{snd}}private and government wartime industries, military and civilian construction, paper and textile mills, engineering firms, the [[Indian Railways]], [[coal]] mining, and government workers of various levels{{sfnm|1a1=Bhattacharya|1y=2002a|1p=39|2a1=J. Mukherjee|2y=2015|2p=42}}&nbsp;— were given significant advantages and benefits. In particular, rice was preferentially provided to the workers in Calcutta's vital industries.{{sfn|J. Mukherjee|2015|p=88}}{{efn-ua|The position of the Famine Inquiry Commission with respect to charges that prioritised distribution aggravated the famine is that the Government of Bengal's lack of control over supplies was the more serious matter (discussed in {{harvtxt|Government of India|1945|pp=100–102}}, with a rebuttal by a minority view).}} To a large extent, these priority classes were composed of ''[[bhadralok]]s'', who were [[upper-class]] or [[bourgeois]] [[middle-class]], socially mobile, educated, urban, and sympathetic to Western values and modernisation.{{sfn|Prayer|2001|pp=5–6;15–16}} Protecting their interests was a major concern of both private and public relief efforts.{{sfnm|1a1=Greenough|1y=1982|pp=133–36|2a1=Brennan|2y=1988|2pp=559–60}}


Such claims of speculation causing famine have been ridiculed by economists since Adam Smith.
Even from the outset of the war, medicine and medical care in particular had been directed to these priority groups{{snd}}particularly the military. Both public and private Indian doctors, assistant-surgeons, medical graduates, antimalaria officers, medical licentiates and other medical practitioners were transferred to military duty. The highest quality medical supplies were almost completely monopolised for the military and the prioritised classes of labourers.{{sfn|Bhattacharya|2002b|pp=101–102}} This directly reduced levels of medical care available to the general populace, and "milked the hospitals of India to the danger-point".{{sfn|Slim|2000|p=177}} These resources were later used to make dramatic improvements in public medical aid after the military assumed control of relief efforts in late 1943.{{sfn|Bhattacharya|2002b|pp=101–102}} For example, between 1942 and 1943, the number of vaccinations rose by 1% in rural Bengal and 55% in urban areas; in 1944, the increases were 53.2% and 287% respectively.{{sfn|Maharatna |1992|p=249}}


==Inflation==
Then, as food prices rose and the signs of famine became readily visible around July or August 1942,{{sfnm|1a1=A. Sen|1y=1977|1pp=36–38|2a1=Dyson|2a2=Maharatna|2y=1991|2p=287}} the Government of Bengal and the Bengal Chamber of Commerce devised a Foodstuffs Scheme that provided preferential distribution of a number of goods and services to workers in essential war industries, to prevent them from leaving their jobs, stating, "the maintenance of essential food supplies to the industrial area of Calcutta must be ranked on a very high priority among the government's wartime obligation."{{sfn|Government of India|1945|p=30, citing an August 1942 letter from the Government of Bengal to the Bengal Chamber of Commerce}} Rice was directed away from the starving rural districts to workers in industries considered vital to the military effort&nbsp;– particularly in the area around Greater Calcutta.{{sfn|Government of India|1945|p=101}}{{efn-ua| The Famine Commission report of {{harvtxt|Government of India|1945|p=101}} stated that "about two-thirds of the supplies of rice reaching Calcutta under the control of Government, much of which was secured from outside the province, was consumed in Greater Calcutta".}} By December of that year, the total number of individuals covered (workers and their families) was approximately a million;{{sfnm|1a1=Government of India|1y=1945|1p=30|2a1=Ó Gráda|2y=2015|2p=40}} during the brief crisis in the aftermath of the air raids on Calcutta, this high number forced the government to seize rice by force from mills and warehouses in Greater Calcutta.{{sfnm|1a1=Ó Gráda|1y= 2010 |1p =36 |2a1=Brennan |2a2=Heathcote |2a3=Lucas |2y=1984|2p=12|3a1=J. Mukherjee|3y=2015|3p=86}} Essential workers also benefited from ration cards, a network of "cheap shops" which provided essential supplies at discounted rates, and direct, preferential allocation of supplies such as water, medical care, and antimalarial supplies. They also received subsidised food, free transportation, access to superior housing, regular wages and even mobile cinema units for the workers' entertainment.{{sfn|Bhattacharya|2002a|p=39}} Their workers were also frequently paid in part in weekly allotments of rice sufficient to feed their immediate families, further protecting them from inflation.{{sfn|Greenough|1980|pp=211–12}}
It was widely claimed that wartime inflation caused the famine. The Working Class Cost of Living Index and the General Index of Wholesale Prices rising by an average of 17% per year from the outbreak of war to the end of 1945.<ref>Singh (1965)</ref> It was not explained why such a modest wartime inflation should cause famine when much higher rates in many other countries over the previous thirty years had not (not even the hyperinflations in Austria and Germany with inflation rates more than 80 times as high), nor was any economic model produced to show how printing money in Delhi could have had this effect on the rural population of certain districts of Bengal, and only on them.


Similarly, it was claimed, without evidence or calculation, that the 1% to 2% of the Bengal population whose purchasing power increased because of the wartime inflation and war expenditure <ref> Famine Inquiry Commission 1945a esp. pp 30, 31, 63</ref> ate so much more than usual that two thirds of the population went hungry – 10 % very hungry indeed, <ref>Department of Anthropology (1944); Mahalanobis, P.C., R.K. Mukkerjee and A. Ghosh 1946, pp 337 400. </ref> with half of this 10% dying of starvation and disease. A quick calculation would have shown that this explanation requires that on 1st November 1942 the small group with increased purchasing power started eating 12 to 46 times more than usual per head and that they reverted to normal consumption in December 1943.<ref> Bowbrick, 1986; Bowbrick, P., ‘Statistics you can use to check Amartya Sen’s calculations in “Poverty and Famines”’, http://bowbrick.org.uk/statistics_you_can_use_to_check.htm 2011</ref>
Any civilians who were not members of these groups (in particular, labourers in rural areas) received severely reduced access to food and medical care, and this limited access was principally available only to those who arrived at "cities and selected district towns".{{sfn|Bhattacharya|2002b|p=101}} Outside of these selected locations, "...vast areas of rural eastern India were denied any lasting state-sponsored distributive schemes" for food and medical aid,{{sfn|Bhattacharya|2002b|p=102}} placing the rural poor in direct competition for scarce supplies and basic needs with workers in public agencies, war-related industries, and in some cases even politically well-connected middle-class agriculturalists.{{sfn|Bhattacharya|2002a|p=103}} For this reason, the policy of prioritised distribution is sometimes discussed as one [[#Debate over primary cause(s)|cause of the famine]].{{sfn|S. Bose|1990|p=716–17}}


==Corruption==
The workers in prioritised industries in Calcutta were not living in luxury or even necessarily in comfort. Even with all their advantages, a great many urban poor were living near the subsistence level.{{sfn|J. Mukherjee |2015 |p=194}} They were, however, far more shielded from the dangers of starvation, disease, and death.
Many contemporary accounts by public servants, politicians and the public, people from different communities, refer to massive corruption by public servants, politicians and trading companies, particularly in Bengal. Most obvious was the fact that the Bengal Government had made the firm of a politician, M.M. Ispahani – a personal friend of H.S. Suhrawardy, the Minister for Civil Supplies, who was responsible for famine relief – the only permitted importer of grain. <ref>Stevenson, (2005) p124; Sen, Shila Sen, (1976); Razzaque, (2009)</ref> Abul Mansur Ahmed, a member of coalition governments with each of the First Ministers at different times, gave an insider’s view on this.<ref>(Razzaque, 2009) esp. pp 99-101</ref> It was widely believed in Bengal, as in the grain surplus provinces, that he imported at a below-market price, and sold on to other merchants at a price reflecting the black market price they expected to make.<ref>Greenough, (1982;) (Brennan, Government Famine Relief in Bengal, 1943, (1988); (Knight, (1954)</ref> B.R. Sen, later Director General of The Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations, was a district officer working in the countryside trying to get grain for relief in 1943 and blamed Suhrawardy for not controlling this corruption. In order to maximize revenue from this it was in the importer’s interest to restrict imports. Abul Mansur Ahmed also noted that ‘the rice dealers . . . and the local politicians became involved in profiteering during the famine . . . During relief work volunteers and village headmen kept a major share of relief goods for their own consumption or for sale in the blackmarket.’ <ref>Razzaque, (2009) esp. pp 99-101</ref>


Greenough’s social analysis of the famine concludes that ‘At the humbler levels of land-holding and household, the famine began for most Bengalis when resource-commanding and authoritative males abandoned their clients and dependents. . . In a social system largely constructed around bonds of obligation between superior providors and inferior claimants, abandonment was tantamount to social collapse.’ <ref>(Greenough, 1982, p.&nbsp;274) He (1982, pp.&nbsp;118, 138)</ref> shows that if it is assumed that Bengal had plenty of food it means that some cultivators and landlords ate far more than in normal years and increased personal security stocks (hoarding) with the result that far less rice was on the market than in 1941. People were willing to eat more than normal and keep rice off the market while their neighbours starved and many died because of the breakdown of traditional rural Bengali obligations of economic help, charity and patronage. He also sets out the evidence on corruption and political inaction. The famine 'was shaped by purposeful human conduct, and that the chief actors were - literally - Bengali men. . .'<ref>(Greenough, 1982, p.&nbsp;265)</ref>
===August 1942: Civil unrest===
{{main|Quit India Movement|Indian independence movement}}
[[File:Civil unrest India August 1942 Telegram.jpg|thumb|right|Secret Cipher Telegram from C. in C. India to the UK War Office, dated 17 August 1942, describing the civil unrest in wake of the Quit India Resolution, August 9, 1942]]
Social unrest, occasionally intense, had been an undercurrent in the political experience of Bengal since at least the 1870s.{{efn-ua|See for example {{harvtxt|Ray|1984}}}} Serious political dissension was unfolding immediately prior to the famine, peaking during the [[Quit India Movement]] of August 1942.{{efn-ua|[[Mohandas Karamchand Gandhi]] (Mahatma Gandhi) made a call to action in his [[Quit India speech]] on 8&nbsp;August. Nearly the entire leadership of the [[Indian National Congress]] was immediately imprisoned without trial.}} Discontent, resentment, and fear of the Raj among rural agriculturalists and business and industrial elements in Greater Calcutta had been simmering since the outset of the war.{{sfn|Bhattacharya|Zachariah|1999|p=99}} Rural discontent was especially deep in the [[Midnapore district]] in southwest Bengal,{{sfnm|1a1=Chakrabarty|1y=1992a|1p=791|2a1=Chatterjee|2y=1986|2pp=180–81}} where confrontations in [[Tamluk]] resulted in the deaths of 44, including [[Matangini Hazra]], an elderly woman who would later become a hero of the anti-colonial movement.{{sfnm|1a1=Mukerjee|1y=2011|1pp=154–55|2a1=J. Mukherjee|2y=2015|2p=78}} The government also attempted to address the concerns of Calcutta's "priority class" with [[#August 1942: Prioritised distribution|selective distribution]] of economic benefits, which altered their behaviour, but not their attitudes.{{sfn|Bhattacharya|Zachariah|1999|p=99}} The violence of the "Quit India" movement was condemned around the world and did much to harden British opinion in many sectors against India and Indians in general;{{sfn|Panigrahi|2004|p=239–40}} some sources speculate that this reduced the British War Cabinet's willingness to provide famine aid at a time when supplies were also needed for the war effort.{{sfn|Bayly|Harper|2005|p=286}} [[Madhusree Mukerjee]] further suggests that destruction of personal rice stores during police repression may have helped make the Tamluk district the second-hardest hit by the famine in all of Bengal in terms of percentage of excess mortality.{{sfn|Mukerjee|2011|p=97}} The disorder and distrust that were the effects and after-effects of rebellion and civil unrest placed political, logistical, and infrastructural constraints on the Government of India that contributed to later famine-driven woes.{{sfn|De|2006|pp=2, 5}}


===October 1942: Natural disasters===
{{see also|North Indian Ocean tropical cyclone}}
[[Image:Cochliobolus miyabeanus.jpg|thumb|upright=1.5|Brown spot disease: symptoms of ''[[Cochliobolus miyabeanus]]'' on rice]]
Later in the same year, five natural disasters struck: first, the winter rice crop was afflicted by a lengthy and virulent outbreak of fungal [[brown spot disease]] (caused by the fungus ''[[Cochliobolus miyabeanus]]''{{efn-ua|Formerly known as ''helminthosporium oryzae''.}}). During this outbreak, a [[cyclone]] and three [[storm surge]]s in October ravaged croplands, destroyed houses, and killed thousands. The cyclone also dispersed high levels of [[fungal spore]]s widely across the region, increasing the spread of the crop disease.


==The impact of the army==
The [[Rice#Ecotypes and cultivars|''aman'' rice]] seasonal cultivar (the main winter crop) of 1942 was ravaged, though the degree of damage is a matter of debate.{{sfn|Ó Gráda|2007|p=10}} Unusually warm, cloudy, and humid climatic conditions and above-average rainfall lasted two months later than average (through November), during critical stages of the rice crop's maturation. This weather pattern triggered "a massive release of disease spores at the exact time that rice plants were most susceptible to infection."{{sfn|Gianessi|Williams|2012|loc=p., citing {{harvtxt|Padmanabhan|1973}}}} The fungus reduced the yield even more than the cyclone.{{efn-ua|{{harvtxt|Braund|1944}} quotes the February 1943 evidence to the Second Food Conference on this. See also {{harvtxt|Government of India|1945|p=32}}}} According to {{harvtxt|Padmanabhan|1973}}, conditions were optimal for brown spot disease, and the resulting outbreak was so destructive that "nothing as devastating ... has been recorded in plant pathological literature."{{sfn|Padmanabhan|1973|pp=11 & 23; as cited in ({{harvnb|Tauger|2003}}, {{harvnb|Tauger|2009}}, and {{harvnb|Iqbal|2010}}}}{{efn-ua|The findings of {{harvtxt|Padmanabhan|1973}} are discussed at length in {{harvtxt|Tauger|2009|pp=176–79}}.}}


The army saw the famine as a very serious indeed - threatening civil disturbances, disaffection among soldiers whose families were starving, hampering industrial production, and threatening the army supply chain - and put strong pressure on the civil powers to take action. There were extreme submissions to the British War Cabinet by the Viceroy, Field Marshall Wavell, by Auchinleck, the Commander in Chief, India <ref>Mansergh IV p217</ref> Amery, the Secretary of State for India, <ref>War Cabinet Paper WP (43) 349 pf 31 July 1943 (Mansergh, IV p139)</ref> and the Chiefs of Imperial General Staff informed the British War Cabinet that ‘unless appropriate help was received, the Government of India could not be responsible for the continuing stability of India, nor for her capacity to serve as a base against Japan next year.’<ref>War Cabinet Paper W.P. (43) 407 R/30/1/4:ff 123-5.</ref>
The Bengal cyclone of 16 October 1942 came through the [[Bay of Bengal]] and made landfall on the coastal areas of Midnapore and 24&nbsp;Parganas,{{sfn|Brennan|1988|p=543}} reportedly causing around 40,000 fatalities and extensive damage, particularly in the area around [[Contai]].{{sfn|Longshore|2007|p=258}} The cyclone killed 14,500 people and 190,000 cattle; reserve rice paddy stocks in the hands of cultivators, consumers, and dealers were destroyed.{{sfn|Government of India|1945|pp=32, 65, 66, 236}} It also created local atmospheric conditions that contributed to an increased incidence of malaria.{{sfn|Brennan|1988|loc=p.{{nbsp}}552 ''note{{nbsp}}14''}} Then on October 16–17, three storm surges destroyed the seawalls of Midnapore and flooded large areas of Contai and [[Tamluk]].{{sfn|Brennan|1988|p=548}} Waves swept an area of {{convert|450|sqmi}}, floods affected {{convert|400|sqmi}}, and wind and torrential rain damaged {{convert|3200|sqmi}}. For nearly 2.5 million Bengalis, the accumulative damage of the cyclone and storm surges to homes, crops and livelihoods was severe:{{sfn|Greenough|1982|pp=93–96}}


In August the new Viceroy, Field Marshall Wavell, got permission from the Bengal Government to send in the army to distribute food to the rural areas, which had been ignored.
{{Quotation|Corpses lay scattered over several thousand square miles of devastated land. 7,400 villages were partly or wholly destroyed by the storm, and standing flood waters remained for weeks in at least 1,600 villages. Cholera, dysentery and other water-borne diseases flourished. 527,000 houses and 1,900 schools were lost. Over 1000 square miles of the most fertile paddy land in the province was entirely destroyed, and the standing crop over an additional 3000 square miles was damaged.{{sfn|J. Mukherjee|2015|pp=111–112}}}}


However, the presence of the military in Bengal was in itself one cause of the famine. Large numbers of troops were there as a Japanese invasion was believed to be imminent. Up to 200,000 tons of grain was imported to feed them. <ref>Famine Inquiry Commission 1945a p18, 43, 173.</ref> This would imply that the army bought little local grain, There were people, however, who thought that the army acted quite independently of the civil supply officers and bought large quantities of grain which they put in store, pushing up prices and reducing market supply.<ref>Stevenson, (2005); Braund, (1944)</ref> There is no hard evidence available. The military certainly bought lots of local fish, meat, eggs, milk and vegetables, which normally provided up to a third of calories for local populations.<ref>Greenough, (1982) p111 cites Major General Skinner Eastern command in Nanavati papers pp 930-44, Famine Inquiry Commission 1945a p18, 43, 173, Knight p228, 229, Braund p 25.</ref> In 1942 the army made compulsory purchases of food, and seized 40,000 tons of rice in areas likely to be the first to be invaded.
The cyclone, floods, plant disease, and warm, humid weather reinforced each other and combined to have a substantial impact on the ''aman'' rice crop of 1942.{{sfn|Tauger|2003|p=66}} Their impact was felt in other aspects as well, as in some districts the cyclone was responsible for an increased incidence of malaria, with deadly effect.{{sfn|Brennan|1988|loc=p.{{nbsp}}552, ''note{{nbsp}}12''}}


The army is believed to have requisitioned 175,000 acres, some for fresh vegetable production (which would, if anything, have increased food production in the province) but most for airstrips and camps, driving about 150,000 to 180000 farmers off their land. <ref>(Greenough, 1982) p90 cites Pinell p 211 as saying 175000 acres were requisitioned by the army.</ref> This may have reduced rice output by the equivalent of 30,000 to 50,000 tons. Compensation for the loss of land was inadequate<ref>Greenough, (1982), p. 90) citing (Bengal Legislative Assembly Proceedings) 63:1 Sept 1942 pp36-39)</ref>
===October 1942: Unreliable crop forecasts===
[[File:India and daily life in Bengal (1912) (14596006410).jpg|thumb|Boy herding cattle in Bengal in 1912]]
"Material relating to the economic life of the rural population was meagre," asserts {{harvtxt|Mahalanobis|Mukherjea|Ghosh|1946|p=338}}, "and reliable information relating to the famine was simply not available."{{efn-ua|See {{harvtxt|Dewey|1978}} for a comprehensive review of the administrative situation, and {{harvtxt|Mahalanobis|1944}} for a further discussion.}} As early as October 1942, crop forecasts for the coming year predicted a significant shortfall.{{sfnm|1a1=Mahalanobis|1y=1944|1p=71|2a1=Mansergh|2y=1971|2p=357}} Traders began to warn of an impending famine,{{sfn|Government of India|1945|p=33}} but the Bengal Government did not act on those predictions, apparently doubting their credibility.{{sfn|Mahalanobis|1944|p=71}} There were several reasons for this. First, administrators and statisticians had known for decades that India's agricultural production statistics were unreliable and incomplete{{sfnm|1a1=Dewey|1y=1978|1p=312|2a1=Mahalanobis|2y=1944|2pp=69–70}} and "not merely guesses, but frequently demonstrably absurd guesses".{{sfn|Great Britain. Royal Commission on Agriculture in India|1928|loc=VIII, p. 605}} The official statistics were riddled with "elements of negligence and incompetence, of subjectivity and conservatism, of corruption and absurdity ... indifference and genuine perplexity [at the complexity of the task]".{{sfn|Dewey|1978|p=313}} Second, there was little or no internal bureaucracy for creating and maintaining such reports, and the low-ranking police officers or village officials charged with gathering local statistics were often poorly supplied with maps and other necessary information, poorly educated, and poorly motivated to be accurate.{{sfn|Dewey|1978|pp=282, 312–13}} Moreover, the already haphazard rural administration went through an increasing process of collapse through 1941 and 1942; many of these local officials went unpaid for long periods of time.{{sfnm|1a1=Government of India|1y=1945|1p=109|2a1=Mukerjee|2y=2014|2p=73}} Third, these forecasts had predicted a shortfall several times in previous years, but no significant problems had occurred.{{sfn|Mahalanobis|1944|p=72}} Finally, given the general poverty of the area, there were many other pressing needs that demanded greater attention than the collection of statistics.{{sfn|Dewey|1978|p=313}}


In the middle of 1942 a [[scorched earth]] policy was hastily implemented in the [[Chittagong]] region, nearest the Burmese border, to prevent access to supplies by the Japanese in case of an invasion. In particular, the Army confiscated many boats, fearing that the Japanese would commandeer them to speed an advance into India. The boats had been used for fishing and to take goods to market so there was some loss of food in this area.<ref>Bayly and Harper (2004), pp.284-285</ref> Braund<ref>(Braund, 1944)</ref> argued that this was more serious: the bulk of trade within Bengal and from Bengal to the rest of India was by these river boats so the economy would come to a halt without them, and he fought successfully against the Army’s initial proposal for a much larger seizure of boats. Even the limited seizure damaged coastal trade and reduced fish supplies, and made relief very difficult in these areas though there was little food available for relief. However, it has been argued that the lack of boats made it impossible for landlords, moneylenders and traders to sell large quantities of the grain produced to feed the cities, and so saved these production areas from famine.<ref>(Stevenson, 2005)</ref>
===December 1942: Air raids on Calcutta===
The Famine Inquiry Commission's Report on Bengal (1945) discussed different potential causes and contributing factors for the famine, but singled out one event as its moment of inception: the first Japanese air raid on Calcutta on 20&nbsp;December 1942. The first raid involved scores of aircraft flying over the city in broad daylight, largely unchallenged by Allied defences. Raids continued throughout that week, triggering a panicked exodus of thousands from the city.{{sfnm|1a1=Government of India |1y=1945 |1p=34, 37|2a1=Ó Gráda |2y=2015 |2p=40}} As evacuees travelled to the countryside, foodgrain dealers in the city closed their shops. The Bengal government tried to ensure that workers in the prioritised industries in Calcutta would be fed. To meet this goal, they seized rice stocks from wholesale dealers. This shattered any trust the rice traders had in the government, making all later central actions considerably less effective.{{sfn|Brennan|Heathcote|Lucas|1984|p=12}} "From that moment," the 1945 report stated, "the ordinary trade machinery could not be relied upon to feed Calcutta. The [food security] crisis had begun."{{sfn|Government of India |1945 |p=34, 37}}


The compensation paid to the land owners and boat owners was inadequate and many of them died during the famine. Many of the male inhabitants into the Military Labour Corps, where at least they received rations, but the break-up of families left many children and dependents to beg or to starve.<ref>Bayly and Harper (2004) p.283</ref>
===1942–43: Shortfall and carryover===
Even from the time of the famine, it was debated whether the crisis was caused by a crop shortfall in the ''aman'' harvest of late 1942 or by a failure in distribution of a rice harvest which was nearly sufficient to feed the populace of Bengal.{{sfnm|1a1=Government of India|1y=1945|1pp=2–3|2a1=Ó Gráda |2y=2015 |2p=12 |3a1=Mahalanobis |3y=1944 |3p=71}} The most influential and widely accepted analysis belongs to [[Amartya Sen]],{{sfnm|1a1=Ó Gráda |1y=2008 |1p=21|2a1=Devereux |2y=2000 |2p=19 |3a1=Devereux |3y=2010}} who concluded: "The current [rice paddy] supply for 1943 was only about 5% lower than the average of the preceding five years. It was, in fact, 13% higher than in 1941, and there was, of course, no famine in 1941."{{sfnm|1a1=A. Sen|1y=1977|1p=39|2a1=A. Sen|2y=1981a|2p=58 }} The Famine Commission Report concluded that the overall deficit in rice in Bengal in 1943, taking into account an estimate of the amount of carryover of rice from the previous harvest,{{efn-ua|In this context, "carryover" is not the same as [[excess supply]] or "surplus". Rice stocks were typically aged for at least two or three months after harvest, since the grain became much more palatable after this period. This ongoing process of deferred consumption had been interrupted by a rice shortfall two years before the famine, and some speculate that supplies had not yet fully recovered. There is very considerable debate about the amount of carryover available for use at the onset of the famine. The debate began at the same time as did analyses of the crisis ({{harvnb|Government of India|1945|pp=15, 35–36; 179–87}} and has continued since&nbsp;({{harvnb|A. Sen|1977|pp= 47, 52}}; {{harvnb|De|2006|p=30}}; {{harvnb|Mukerjee|2014|p=73}}).}} was about three weeks supply. Even under normal circumstances, this would have been a significant shortfall requiring a considerable amount of food relief, but not a deficit large enough to create widespread deaths by starvation.{{sfn|Government of India|1945|p=15}} According to this view, the famine "was not a crisis of food availability, but of the [unequal] distribution of food and income."{{sfn|Rothermund|2002|p=119}}


Several contemporary experts cited evidence of a much larger shortfall, however.{{sfn|De|2006|p=34}} [[Wallace Aykroyd]], who had been a member of the Commission, wrote in 1975 that there had been a 25% shortfall in the harvest of the winter of 1942, exacerbated by increased exports, decreased imports, and a drain on the carryover of that year.{{sfn|Aykroyd|1975|p=73 & 113}} {{nowrap|L. G. Pinnell}}, director of the Department of Civil Supplies (DCS) of the Government of Bengal, was responsible for managing food supplies from August 1942 to April 1943. He estimated the crop loss at 20%, with crop disease accounting for more of the loss than the cyclone; other government sources privately admitted the shortfall was "2 million tons".{{sfn|Ó Gráda|2015|p= 50, citing {{harvtxt|Braund|1944}}}} [[Rutger's University]] economist George Blyn argues that the Midnapur cyclone and floods of October 1942 plus the loss of imports from Burma caused the famine; he asserts the Bengal rice harvest had been reduced by one-third.{{sfn|Blyn|1966|p= 253–54. As cited in {{harvtxt|Islam|2007a|pp=423–24}}; {{harvtxt|Tauger|2009|p=174}}}} These figures have been debated online by experts as recently as 2010.{{sfn|Padel|2012|p=27}}{{efn-ua| For details see {{harvtxt|Lelyveld|2010}},{{harvtxt|Chatterton|Mukerjee|Lelyveld|2011}}, {{harvtxt|Tauger|Sen|2011a}}, and {{harvtxt|Tauger|Sen|2011b}}.}}


===1942–43: Price shocks and policy failures===
In April 1942, a jump in local inflation started in the regions of south-eastern Bengal falling under the [[#Denial of boats|boat denial policy]].{{sfn|Iqbal|2010|p=278}} All throughout that month, British and Indian refugees continued [[#February–April 1942: Japanese invasion of Burma|pouring out of Burma]] (many through the same southeast region, near [[Chittagong]]), and provinces affected by the cessation of Burmese imports were bidding up rice prices across India. The steep inflation spread across the rest of Bengal, especially in May and June;{{sfn|Government of India|1945|p=29}} prices soon rose five to six times higher than they had been before April.{{sfn|Government of India|1945|p=104}} In June, the Government of Bengal decided to establish price controls, but by the time the order took effect on 1&nbsp;July, the fixed price was already considerably below market prices.{{sfn|Government of India|1945|pp=24 & 29}} The provincial government ordered a [[#Mid-1942: Inter-provincial trade barriers|ban on exports]] out of Bengal two weeks later, then raised the controlled price slightly one week after that.{{sfn|Knight|1954|p=280}}


==Supplies from other countries==
The principal result of the fixed low price was to make sellers reluctant to sell{{snd}}stocks disappeared, either into the black market or into storage. In the face of this obvious policy failure, the government let it be known that the price control law would not be enforced except in the most egregious cases of war profiteering.{{sfn|Government of India|1945|p=29}} This created about four months of relative price stability.{{sfn|Government of India|1945|p=33}}


Even though India had imported two million tons of grain in previous years, some people believed that India could have managed this food crisis without substantial imports either because there was plenty of food available, or because the famine could have been managed with careful management if the surplus provinces had supplied grain to the starving.<ref>Knight believed that it was barely possible; that there was a worse supply situation in India in 1946 but famine was avoided because, first, Bengal had by then set up a system of compulsory purchase and distribution by rationing similar to that operated in Bombay in 1943, and in 1946 the surplus provinces collaborated in supplying the deficit provinces.</ref> Others believed that India had millions of tons less grain than it needed. There are and were no meaningful statistics. However substantial imports in 1943 would at the least have made it much easier to handle the situation.
In mid-October southwest Bengal was struck by a series of [[#October 1942: Natural disasters|natural disasters]] that destabilised prices again.{{sfn|Government of India|1945|p=33}} The Famine Commission Report blamed the soaring inflation of that November and December on heavy [[Speculation|speculative]] buying.{{sfn|Government of India|1945|p=33}} There was another rushed scramble in the rice market{{snd}}this time, to smuggle grain out of provinces with trade barriers to the black market in Calcutta.{{sfn|Government of India |1945 |p=34}} Between December 1942 and March 1943, the government attempted three times to "break the Calcutta market" by bringing in rice supplies from various districts around the province.{{sfn|A. Sen |1977|pp=36 & 38}} These schemes essentially amounted to seizing rice, then repaying the "sellers" at the low, officially sanctioned price.{{efn-ua|See {{harvtxt|Government of India |1945|p=154}}, "...the producer is required by law to sell the whole, or a part of his surplus grain to government".}} All three schemes failed to significantly improve the situation.{{sfn|A. Sen |1977|pp=36 & 38}}


The main constraint was shipping. Any imports would have had to come from Australia, North America or South America. The Battle of the Atlantic was at its peak from mid 1942 to mid 1943, with submarine wolf packs sinking so many ships that shipping could not be spared for India. The main constraint was shipping. The [[Battle of the Atlantic]] was at its peak from mid-1942 to mid-1943, with [[Wolfpack (naval tactic)|submarine wolf pack]]s sinking so many ships that the Allies were on the verge of defeat, so shipping could not be spared for shipping from America to India.{{efn-ua|Winston Churchill was later to state: 'The Battle of the Atlantic was the dominating factor all through the war. Never for one moment could we forget that everything happening elsewhere, on land, at sea or in the air depended ultimately on its outcome.' {{sfn|Costello|Hughes|1977|p=210}} The supply situation in Britain was such there was talk of being unable to continue the war, with supplies of fuel being particularly low.{{sfn|Costello|Hughes|1977|p=155}}}} By June or July 1943 it was clear that the Allies had won the battle and more ships were being built than were being sunk.
On 11{{nbsp}}March 1943, the provincial government officially rescinded its order fixing price controls,{{sfn|Government of India |1945 |p=58}} permitting buyers to purchase rice at any price.{{sfn|A. Sen|1977|p=38}} The results were immediate and dramatic: very sharp rises in the price of rice, {{sfn|A. Sen|1977|p=38}} including a doubling within two weeks.{{sfn|J. Mukherjee|2015|p=103, citing {{harvtxt |Greenough |1982 |p=115, Table 8}}.}} The period of inflation between March and May 1943 was especially intense;{{sfn|A. Sen |1976 |p=1280}} May was the month of the first reports of death by starvation in Bengal.{{sfnm|1a1=Government of India |1y=1945 |1p=112 |2a1=Aykroyd |2y=1975|2p=74|3a1=Iqbal|3y=2011|3p=282}} Several neighbouring provinces promised food aid in March, but all backed out, except for [[Orissa Province|Orissa]].{{sfn|Government of India|1945|p=48}} Between April and May 1943, the provincial government attempted a propaganda drive to boost public confidence that there was enough rice in Bengal to feed all its people; it repeatedly asserted that the crisis was being caused almost solely by speculation and hoarding.{{sfn|Government of India|1945|pp=55 & 98}} The propaganda, which has been described as particularly inept,{{sfn|A. Sen|1977|p=50}} failed to dispel the widespread belief that there was a shortage of rice.{{efn-ua|See especially {{harvtxt|Ó Gráda|2015}}.}}


The Government of India asked for grain supplies in December 1942, but were told that shipping was not available – even the military were getting only enough for a third of their urgent requirements.<ref>War Cabinet minutes CAB 65_38_4 April (1943 )</ref> It was only after the most extreme representations of the incoming Viceroy, the Commander in Chief, India, the Secretary of State for India and the Chiefs of Imperial General Staff - stating that famine conditions existed, that industrial production was being hampered, that civil disturbances could break out distracting the army, and that there would be problems with the army if their families were starving<ref>(War Cabinet Paper WP (43) 349 pf 31 July 1943 (Mansergh, IV p139) Mansergh IV p217</ref>that in August 1943 the British War Cabinet agreed to supply India with 200,000 tons of grain, though India had imported two million tons a year in previous years when there was no obvious food crisis.<ref>(Tauger M. , 2003); (Tauger M. , The Indian Famine Crisis of World War II, 2009); (Tauger M., Entitlement, Shortage, and The 1943 Bengal Famine, (2006); (Famine Inquiry Commission, (1945)</ref>
Inter-provincial trade barriers were abolished on 18{{nbsp}}May. Free trade caused prices to drop temporarily in Calcutta, but they soared in the neighbouring provinces of Bihar and Orissa, as Bengali traders rushed to purchase stocks.{{sfn|J. Mukherjee|2015|p=111}} In the first week of June 1943 (during this free trade period), the government attempted a "food drive"{{snd}}an attempt to locate and seize any hoarded stocks{{snd}}everywhere in the province except Calcutta and Howrah. Then in the first week of July, a second food drive covered areas previously untouched. Both food drives failed to find significant hoarding.{{sfn|Government of India|1945|pp=55–58}} This failure directly contradicted strident propaganda that the crisis was solely caused by hoarding and further eroded public confidence in the government. This in turn strengthened the dread of a calamitous food shortage, far worse than previously imagined.{{sfn|Ó Gráda|2015|p=78, citing {{harvtxt |Mukerji |1965 |p=49}}}} Free trade was abandoned in late July and early August 1943 due to the rapid rise in prices in the neighbouring provinces.{{sfnm|1a1=Government of India|1y=1945|1p=52|2a1=A. Sen|2y=1977|2p=51}}


It is questionable whether substantial quantities of grain could have been delivered in time to prevent most deaths at this late stage: apart from the usual delays in assembling and shipping, and the long shipping route, submarines were causing serious losses. The railways were overstretched, with men and equipment sent to war zones, most of the capacity devoted to supplying the Burma front and US and Chinese forces,<ref>{{cite web |author=Lt. Col. Joseph B. Shupe |title=Transportation in the CBI Theater of World War II |year=2010 |url=http://cbi-theater-10.home.comcast.net/~cbi-theater-10/transportation/transportation.html |publisher=Cbi-theater-10.home.comcast.net}}</ref> sabotage by Congress, major flood damage to the main rail routes etc. And they were not geared to shipping large quantities of bulk goods. Distributing the food to the famine areas was extremely difficult and time consuming, especially during the monsoon, even with Army help.
Price controls were reinstated in August.{{sfn|Government of India |1945 |p=58}} Despite this, there were unofficial reports of rice being sold in late 1943 at roughly eight to ten times the prices of late 1942{{sfnm|1a1=A. Sen |1y=1977 |1p=36|2a1=S. Bose|2y=1990|2pp=716–17}}{{snd}}prices that had even then been many times higher than they were in 1941.{{efn-ua| [[Amartya Sen]] once again attributes most of this rise to heavy speculative buying ({{harvnb|A. Sen|1976|p= 1280 }}{{harvnb|A. Sen |1977|p= 50 }}, {{harvnb|A. Sen|1981a|p=76}}). However, {{harvtxt|Bowbrick|1985}} disagrees at length.}} Purchasing agents were sent out by the government to obtain rice, but their attempts largely failed. Prices remained high, and the black market was not brought under control.{{sfn|Government of India|1945|p=58}}


Some commentators have suggested that Churchill’s personal hostility to Indian politicians and to the idea of Indian independence was a key factor in the delay in releasing shipping to send food to India.{{sfnm|1a1=Herman|1y=2009|1p=513 |2a1=Ghose |2y=1993 |2p=111|Gopal|1993}} <ref>S Gopal, 'Churchill and the Indians' in ''Churchill: A Major New Assessment of His Life and Achievements'' by Wm. Roger Louis and Robert Blake (eds.)</ref> <ref>Mukkerjee (2011)</ref>
Finally, despite having a long-established and detailed [[Indian Famine Codes|Famine Code]] that would have triggered a sizable increase in aid, the provincial government never formally declared a state of famine. The official explanation was three-fold: first, the declaration would have directly contradicted the propaganda drive, undermining its wartime political goals. Second, even if a state of famine had been declared, the inter-provincial trade barriers would have prevented the provincial government from obtaining the amounts that the Famine Code's provisions dictated. Third, the government did provide various other types of [[#Relief efforts|relief efforts]].{{sfn|Government of India|1945|p=98}}


===1942–44: Refusal of imports===
From late 1942 through at least early 1944, several high-ranking government officials and military officers made repeated requests for food to be imported from outside India, but the War Cabinet persistently either rejected the requests outright or bargained them down to a fraction of the original amount.{{sfn|A. Sen|1981b|p=441}} [[Victor Hope, 2nd Marquess of Linlithgow|Viceroy Linlithgow]] began making appeals in mid-December 1942 for the Secretary of State for India, [[Leo Amery]], to request food imports. At first, the requests adopted a nearly apologetic tone, with assurances that the military would be given preference over civilians when imports were distributed.{{efn-ua|{{harvtxt|Mukerjee|2011 |p=139}} states: "At no recorded instance did either the governor [i.e., [[John Herbert (Conservative politician)|Governor Herbert]]] or the viceroy [at that time, [[Victor Hope, 2nd Marquess of Linlithgow|Viceroy Linlithgow]]] express concern for their subjects: their every request for grain would be phrased in terms of the war effort. Contemporaries attested that Herbert cared about the starvation in Bengal; so prioritising the war effort may reflect his and Linlithgow's estimation of which concerns might possibly have moved their superiors."}} In the first week of January, Amery sent the first of many requests to the UK for food aid in the form of direct imports. Rather than mentioning worsening conditions in the countryside, Amery stressed that Calcutta's industries must be fed or its workers would return to the countryside to help their families. Rather than meeting this request, the UK promised a relatively small amount of wheat that was specifically intended for western India (that is, not for Bengal) in exchange for an increase in rice exports from Bengal to Ceylon.{{sfn|J. Mukherjee|2015|pp= 92–93}}


==Revisionists==
The tone of Linlithgow's warnings to Amery grew increasingly serious over the coming months, as did Amery's requests to the War Cabinet; on 4{{nbsp}}August 1943{{efn-ua|{{harvtxt|Ó Gráda|2015|p=53}} incorrectly gives the date as 31{{nbsp}}July}}{{snd}}less than three weeks before ''[[The Statesman]]'s'' graphic photographs of starving famine victims in Calcutta would focus the world's attention on the severity of the crisis{{sfn|Ó Gráda |2015 |p=57}}{{snd}}Amery noted the spread of famine, and specifically stressed the effect upon Calcutta and the potential effect on the morale of European troops. The cabinet again offered only a relatively small amount, explicitly referring to it as a token shipment.{{sfnm|1a1=J. Mukherjee |1y=2015 |1pp= 122–123|2a1=Ó Gráda|2y=2015|2p=53}}


The orthodox explanation of the famine, from the Famine Inquiry Commission of 1945 on, was that the Indian provincial and national governments and the British government chose to believe, without evidence and in denial of the evidence, that Bengal had plenty of food available, and so they provided far less food, and far less relief in the form of rations, soup kitchens, food for work etc. than was needed, and many people died. [[Amartya Sen]] (1976) challenged this orthodoxy, reviving the claim that there was no shortage of food in Bengal and that the famine was caused by inflation, with those benefiting from inflation eating more and leaving less for the rest of the population. Sen claimed that there was in fact a greater supply in 1943 than in 1941, when there was no famine. This is in fact the explanation that that the Government of India, the Bengal Government and other governments had believed and acted on in most of 1943.<ref>e.g. Famine Inquiry Commission (1945); Braund (1944); Pinnell (1944); Bowbrick (1986, 1987, 2011)</ref>
A similar cycle of refusal continued through 1943 and into 1944.{{sfn|A. Sen |1977|p=53, citing {{harvnb|Mansergh|1973|loc=&nbsp;Documents 59, 71, 72, 74, 98, 139, 157, 207 & 219}}}} The explanation for these repeated refusals was invariably that the Allies had insufficient shipping,{{sfnm|1a1=Mansergh|1y=1973|1pp=133–41; 155–58|2a1=A. Sen |2y=1977 |2p=52 |3a1=J. Mukherjee|3y=2015|3pp=128, 142, 185–88}} particularly in light of their plans to [[Normandy landings|invade Normandy]]{{sfn|Collingham|2012|p=152}}{{snd}}but this rationale has been [[#Debate over primary cause(s)|debated]]. The Cabinet also refused offers of food shipments from several different nations.{{efn-ua|This topic is discussed at length in {{harvtxt|Mukerjee|2011|loc=Chapter Nine, "Run Rabbit Run", pp. 191–218}}.}} When such shipments did begin to increase modestly in late 1943, the transport and storage facilities were understaffed and inadequate.{{efn-ua|See for example {{harvtxt|Government of India|1945|pp=223–25}}, ''Annexures I and II to Appendix V''.}}
Some of the dispute is based on matters of fact. Bowbrick claims that Sen misrepresents the facts in his sources in more than thirty key instances<ref name="Bowbrick 1986, 1987, 2011">Bowbrick (1986, 1987, 2011)</ref> and Tauger makes similar claims on a different set of statements by Sen.<ref>Tauger (2009,2006)</ref> Nolan<ref>Nolan, (1993)</ref> Goswami<ref> Goswami (1990)</ref>and Dyson and Maharatna<ref>Dyson and Maharatna (1991)</ref> show misrepresentation too. Sen has not defended himself against these criticisms.


Sen bases his argument entirely on small differences in one of the series of crop forecasts over ten years. He claims these forecasts are extremely accurate, but contemporary civil servants and statisticians considered the forecasts meaningless even before they were ‘adjusted’ by civil servants and politicians.<ref>e.g. Famine Inquiry Commission (1945 pp 44, 45); Dewey (1978); Tauger (2009,2006) ;Report of the Royal Commission on Agriculture in India, Parliamentary Papers (1928) VIII, P.605.; Mahalanobis (1944) p.77; Bowley & Robertson (1934);Bengal Land Revenue Commission (1940) vol. I p76; Mahalanobis (1944) writing in 1943; Document no. 158 in Mansergh, (1973);Stuart (1919); Trevaskis, (1931) p.200; Government of India, (1915), Revenue Proceedings IR-Ag, March, 12-24; Panse (1954) p.26; Panse (1954) p.26; Dewey (1978) p305, citing Noyce (1920)</ref> .
==Famine, disease, and the death toll==
[[Image:Smallpox child.jpg|thumb|A child with [[smallpox]]: "Malaria, cholera, and with increasing virulence, smallpox [swept] through the hunger-stricken population unabated. Weakened bodies succumbed within hours of the onset of disease."{{sfn|J. Mukherjee |2015 |p=174}}|alt=Girl perhaps four or five years old sitting on cot, covered with sores.]]
It is not possible to assign a definitive starting date to the actual onset of the famine, particularly since different districts in Bengal were affected at different times and to considerably varying degrees. The Government of India dated the beginning of a food crisis to the consequences of the air raids on Calcutta in December 1942,{{sfn|Government of India |1945 |p=34, 37}} and the beginning of full-scale famine to May 1943 as the consequence of price decontrol two months earlier.{{sfn|Government of India|1945|pp=40–41}} In some districts, the food crisis began as early as mid-1942,{{sfn|Brennan|1988|p=555}} but the rural poor were able to draw upon various coping strategies{{efn-ua|"[W]hen crops begin to fail the cultivator [sells or barters]... his wife's jewelry, grain, cattle...[or reduces] his current food intake... Starving Indian peasants, once they fail in the market, forage in fields, ponds and jungles; they beg on a large scale; they migrate, often over long distances by travelling ticketless on the railways;... [and they] take shelter in the protection of a rural patron {{harv |Greenough |1980 |pp=205–07}} }} for a few months.{{sfn|Corbett|1988}} Some then felt the signs of incipient famine as early as December 1942, when reports from commissioners and district officers of various districts in Bengal began to cite a "sudden and alarming" inflation, nearly doubling the price of rice; this was followed in January by reports of distress over serious food supply problems.{{sfn|Government of India|1945|p=Appendix VI, Extracts of Reports from Commissioners and District Officers, pp.&nbsp;225–27}} In May 1943, six districts{{snd}}Rangpur, Mymensingh, Bakarganj, Chittagong, Noakhali and Tipperah{{snd}}were the first to report deaths by starvation. Chittagong and Noakhali, both "boat denial" districts in the [[Ganges Delta]] (or Sundarbans Delta) area, were the hardest hit.{{sfnm|1a1=Government of India |1y=1945 |1p=112 |2a1=Aykroyd |2y=1975|2p=74|3a1=Iqbal|3y=2011|3p=282}} {{harvtxt|Dyson|1991}} dates the beginning of the famine's excess mortality to the following month. Deaths began showing up later in other geographical areas; some districts of Bengal, however, were relatively less affected throughout the crisis.{{sfn|Maharatna |1993|p=4}} Although no demographic or geographic group was completely immune to increased rates of death by disease, only the rural poor died of starvation.{{sfn|Government of India|1945|p=2}}


There is also dispute based on what the theories explain. Sen does not explain why the wartime inflation and boom did not cause famine in other war years, or in other greater inflations and hyperinflations; nor why the famine lasted only between one poor harvest and the next good one; nor why the Bengal Government’s policy and the policy of other governments - which was based on the same diagnosis as his own - did not prevent the famine; nor how millions of tons of hidden grain vanished in thin air; nor does he address the claim that physically impossible for people to eat the quantity of food needed to cause a famine in the way Sen describes, eating two to four-week’s normal food supply each day.<ref name="Bowbrick 1986, 1987, 2011"/>. The Famine Inquiry Commission provides full explanations.
The famine saw two waves of excess mortality.{{sfn|Government of India |1945|p=116}} In the first wave, victims of starvation filled the emergency hospitals in Calcutta and accounted for more than half of deaths in various districts.{{sfn|Maharatna |1992|p=210}} Death by starvation occurred most notably through November 1943.{{sfn|S. Bose |1990 |p=701}}{{sfn|Government of India|1945|p= 116}} Disease began its sharp upward turn around October 1943 and overtook starvation as the most common cause of death around December.{{sfn|Government of India|1945|p=118}} The two trends overlapped briefly in the closing months of the year. Disease-related mortality then continued to take its toll through early-to-mid 1944.{{sfn|Maharatna |1992|p=210}}
News reports, literature, other media
The People's War, an organ of the Communist Party of India, published graphic photos of the famine by Sunil Janah.


Calcutta's two leading English-language newspapers were The Statesman (at that time a British-owned newspaper)[75][M] and Amrita Bazar Patrika. In the early months of the famine, government applied pressure on newspapers to "calm public fears about the food supply"[76] and follow the official stance that there was no rice shortage. This effort had some success; The Statesman, for example, initially published editorials asserting that the famine was due solely to speculation and hoarding, while "berating local traders and producers, and praising ministerial efforts."[76][N] News of the famine was also subject to strict war-time censorship – even use of the word "famine" was prohibited[77] – leading The Statesman later to remark that the UK government "seems virtually to have withheld from the British public knowledge that there was famine in Bengal at all"[78]
Malaria was the biggest killer.{{sfn|Government of India|1945|p= 1}} From July 1943 through June 1944, the monthly death toll from malaria stood at an average of 125% over rates from the previous five years; in December 1943, the excess mortality was 203% over average.{{sfn|Government of India|1945|p= 1}} Malaria parasites were found in nearly 40% of all blood samples examined at Calcutta hospitals in 1943 during the peak period, November and December, and in nearly 52% in the same period in 1944.{{sfnm|1a1=Government of India |1y=1945 |1p= 116 |2a1=J. Mukherjee|2y=2015 |2p=194}} Moreover, since its symptoms often resemble those of other fatal fevers (such as [[Visceral leishmaniasis|kala-azar]]){{sfn|Ghedin |Zhang|Charest|Sundar|1997|p=530}} and since only a small proportion of victims received medical care and were examined, statistics for malaria deaths are almost certainly underestimated.{{sfn|Government of India |1945 |p= 119}}


Beginning in mid-July 1943 and even more so that August, however, these two began to publish detailed and increasingly critical accounts of the depth and scope of the famine, its impact on society, and the nature of British, Hindu and Muslim political responses.[79] For example, a headline in Amrita Bazar Patrika that month warned "The Famine conditions of 1770 are already upon us,"[80] alluding to an earlier Bengal famine that caused the deaths of ten million. It also published an editorial cartoon showing starving peasants gazing at distant international food aid ships with the caption "A Mirage! A Mirage!"[81] The Statesman's reportage and commentary were similarly pointed, as for example when in late July it published accounts of individuals starving to death in the streets of Calcutta,[77] and in later months opined that the famine was "man-made".[82]
Dysentery and diarrhea result directly from famine, typically through consumption of poor-quality food or deterioration of the digestive system caused by malnutrition.{{sfnm|1a1=Government of India|1y=1945|1p=120|2a1=Ó Gráda|2y=2007|2p=21–22}} Cholera is a [[Waterborne diseases|waterborne disease]] associated with poor sanitation and contaminated water or [[Foodborne illness|food]];{{sfn|Harris|LaRocque|Qadri|Ryan|2012}} it is often considered a disease brought on more by social disruption than malnutrition.{{sfn|Maharatna|1992|p=268}} Cholera arose from different sources near the onset of the famine{{snd}}carried by escapees from Burma{{sfn|Tinker|1975|pp=2–3; 11–12}} and erupting in the wake of the October cyclone and flooding.{{sfn|J. Mukherjee|2015|pp=111–112}} Smallpox was an [[airborne disease]] often associated with crowded living arrangements. Statistics for smallpox and cholera are probably more reliable than those for malaria, since their symptoms are more easily recognisable.{{sfn|Maharatna|1992|p=42}}


A turning point in news coverage regarding the famine came on 22 August, 1943, when The Statesman published a series of graphic photographs of the starvation and suffering. These "gruesome" images greatly affected both domestic and international perceptions and sparked an international media frenzy.[84] Not only was the rest of the world unaware of the famine in Bengal before The Statesman's photos, many even in India itself had little idea of the scope of social destruction.[85] The photos of human suffering under British rule had a profound psychological effect, and marked "for many, the beginning of the end of colonial rule".[86] The decision by editor Ian Stephens to publish the photos and adopt a defiant editorial stance won accolades from many (the Famine Inquiry Commission)[87] has been described as "a singular act of journalistic courage and conscientiousness, without which many more lives would have surely been lost".[84] They also spurred Amrita Bazar Patrika and the Communist Party's organ The People's War to publish similar images; the latter would make photographer Sunil Janah famous.[88]
[[File:Map of Bengal districts 1943.png|thumb|Map of Bengal districts 1943]]
Mortality statistics for the famine are conspicuously unreliable, particularly for rural areas. They were generally collected by illiterate and underpaid village watchmen known as ''chowkidari'', whose methods were unreliable even in normal times. Moreover, many of these died or migrated during the famine and went unreplaced for weeks. There was also no system in place for counting the deaths of the thousands who died along roadsides or other areas while migrating away from rural villages.{{sfn|Government of India |1945 |pp=108–9}} Finally, data deficiencies and unequal accuracy may explain some differences between rural and urban mortality statistics.{{sfn|Maharatna|1992|pp=263}}


A contemporary sketch book of iconic scenes of famine victims, Hungry Bengal: a tour through Midnapur District in November, 1943 by Chittaprosad was immediately banned by the British and 5000 copies were seized and destroyed.[89] One copy was hidden by Chittaprosad's family and is now in the possession of the Delhi Art Gallery. The Delhi Art Gallery showcased Chittaprosad's Famine Series in an exhibition in September 2011.[90]
Although infants, young children, and the elderly might be expected to be more susceptible to the effects of starvation and disease, in fact adults and children aged 10–14 suffered the highest proportional mortality rises overall.{{sfn|Maharatna|1992|pp=263–64}} Female infant death rates were higher than for male infants, but males suffered higher rates overall and in every other age range.{{sfn|Dyson|1991|p=284}} The relatively protected status of females of child-bearing age may have resulted in part from fertility decreases brought on by malnutrition, which in turn reduced maternal deaths.{{sfn|Maharatna|1992|pp=260 & 263}} The higher death rates for female infants held true in both urban and rural areas, perhaps reflecting a discriminatory bias.{{sfn|Maharatna|1992|pp=270}} Other age- and sex-related statistics were inverted in urban Bengal, perhaps because the cities attracted large numbers of very young and very old migrants seeking food relief. However, there were no differences in the death rates for the sexes in urban areas.{{sfn|Maharatna|1992|pp=262–63}}


The novel has been dealt with in celebrated novels and films. Asani Sanket by Bibhutibhushan Bandyopadhyay is a fictional account of a young doctor and his wife in rural Bengal during the 1943 famine. The book was adapted into a film of the same name (English title: Distant Thunder) by celebrated director Satyajit Ray in 1973. The film features in "The New York Times Guide to the Best 1,000 Movies Ever Made".[91] Also well-known are So Many Hungers! (1947) by Bhabani Bhattacharya, and Aakaaler Sandhane by Amalendu Chakraborty, (cinematised in 1980 by Mrinal Sen).
Regional differences in mortality rates were influenced by several factors, including the effects of migration{{sfn|Maharatna |1992|p=279}} and of natural disasters immediately prior to the onset of the famine.{{sfn|Brennan|Heathcote |Lucas|1984|p=13}} In general, excess mortality was higher in the east, even though the relative shortfall in the rice crop was worst in the western districts of Bengal.{{sfn|Government of India|1945|p=87}} Eastern districts were relatively densely populated (and incidentally had higher Muslim populations),{{sfn|Ó Gráda |2015 |p=90}} were closest to the Burma war zone, and normally ran grain deficits in pre-famine times.{{sfnm|1a1=Ó Gráda |1y=2009 |1p=146 |2a1=S. Bose |2y=1990 |2p=711 }} These also were subject to the boat denial policy and had relatively high jute production.{{sfn|Brennan|Heathcote|Lucas|1984|p=13}} Workers in eastern districts were more likely to receive monetary wages than payment in kind with a portion of the harvest, unlike in the western districts. When prices rose sharply, their wages failed to follow suit; this drop in [[real wages]] left them less able to purchase food.{{sfn|Brennan|Heathcote |Lucas|1984|p=13}}


A Bengali play, with this famine as the main theme in it's plot, 'Nemesis' was written by Natyaguru Nurul Momen. Another Bengali play about the famine, Nabanna was written by Bijon Bhattacharya and staged by Indian People's Theatre Association (IPTA) in 1944 under the direction of Sombhu Mitra and later in 1948, by Bohurupee under the direction of Kumar Roy. IPTA also took the play to several parts of the country and collected funds for famine relief in rural Bengal.[92]
The following table, excerpted from {{harvtxt|Maharatna|1992|p=243}} shows trends in excess mortality for 1943–44 as compared to prior non-famine years. Death rates are with respect to the population in 1941. Percentages for 1943–44 are of ''excess deaths'' as compared to rates from 1937–41, while those for 1937–41 are with respect to the average annual deaths of that period.
==See also==
* [[Famine in India]]
* [[List of famines]]
* [[2008 global rice shortage]]
* {{Cite web|url=http://www.open2.net/thingsweforgot/bengalfamine_programme.html|title= BBC/OU: The things we forgot to remember - The Bengal famine}}


==Footnotes==
{| class="wikitable" style="font-size: 87%; width: 60%"
{{Reflist|group=note}}
|+ Cause-specific death rates and relative importance of different causes of death during pre-famine and famine periods: Bengal{{sfn|Maharatna|1992|p=243, Table 5.5}}
!rowspan="2" style="text-align: center;" | Cause of death
!colspan="2" style="text-align: center;" | Pre-famine<br>1937–41
!colspan="2" style="text-align: center;" | 1943
!colspan="2" style="text-align: center;" | 1944
|-
|style="text-align: center;" | Rate
|style="text-align: center;" | %
| style="text-align: center;" |Rate
|style="text-align: center;" | %
| style="text-align: center;" |Rate
|style="text-align: center;" | %
|-
| Cholera
|style="text-align: right;" |0.73
| style="text-align: right;" |3.72
| style="text-align: right;" |3.60
| style="text-align: right;" |23.88
| style="text-align: right;" |0.82
| style="text-align: right;" |0.99
|-
| Smallpox
| style="text-align: right;" |0.21
| style="text-align: right;" |1.06
| style="text-align: right;" |0.37
| style="text-align: right;" |1.30
| style="text-align: right;" |2.34
| style="text-align: right;" |23.69
|-
| Fever
| style="text-align: right;" |6.14
| style="text-align: right;" |31.08
| style="text-align: right;" |7.56
| style="text-align: right;" |11.83
| style="text-align: right;" |6.22
| style="text-align: right;" |0.91
|-
| Malaria
| style="text-align: right;" |6.29
| style="text-align: right;" |31.82
| style="text-align: right;" |11.46
| style="text-align: right;" |43.06
| style="text-align: right;" |12.71
| style="text-align: right;" |71.41
|-
| Dysentery/Diarrhea
| style="text-align: right;" |0.88
|style="text-align: right;" | 4.47
| style="text-align: right;" |1.58
| style="text-align: right;" |5.83
| style="text-align: right;" |1.08
| style="text-align: right;" |2.27
|-
| Respiratory
| style="text-align: right;" |1.52
| style="text-align: right;" |7.67
| style="text-align: right;" |1.30
| style="text-align: right;" |-1.82
| style="text-align: right;" |1.39
| style="text-align: right;" |-1.44
|-
| Injury
| style="text-align: right;" |0.37
| style="text-align: right;" |1.86
| style="text-align: right;" |0.33
| style="text-align: right;" |-0.33
| style="text-align: right;" |0.27
| style="text-align: right;" |-1.05
|-
| All other
| style="text-align: right;" |3.32
| style="text-align: right;" |18.32
| style="text-align: right;" |5.57
| style="text-align: right;" |16.26
| style="text-align: right;" |3.91
| style="text-align: right;" |3.23
|-
| All causes
| style="text-align: right;" |19.46
| style="text-align: right;" |100.00
| style="text-align: right;" |31.77
| style="text-align: right;" |100.00
| style="text-align: right;" |28.75
| style="text-align: right;" |100.00
|}


==Citations==
Overall, the table clearly shows the dominance of malaria as the cause of death throughout the famine. Though the excess mortality due to malarial deaths peaked in December 1943, rates remained high throughout the following year.{{sfn|Maharatna|1992|1p=268}} Scarce supplies of [[quinine]] (the most common malaria medication), delivered to rural areas under armed guard,{{sfn|Government of India|1945|p=137–38}} were very frequently diverted to the [[black market]].{{sfnm|1a1=Government of India|1y=1945|1p=137–38|2a1=J. Mukherjee|2y=2015|2pp=142 & 174}} Advanced anti-malarial drugs such as [[mepacrine]] (Atabrine) were distributed almost solely to the military and to "priority classes"; [[DDT]] (then relatively new and considered "miraculous") and [[pyrethrum]] were sprayed only around military installations. [[Paris Green]] was used as an insecticide in some other areas.{{sfn|Bhattacharya|2002a|p=102}} This unequal distribution of anti-malarial measures may explain a lower incidence of malarial deaths in population centres, where the greatest cause of death was "all other" (probably migrants dying from starvation).{{sfn|Maharatna|1992|pp=249 & 251}}
{{Reflist|2}}

Deaths from dysentery and diarrhea peaked in December 1943, the same month as for malaria.{{sfn|Maharatna|1992|p=268}} Cholera deaths peaked in October 1943 and receded dramatically in the following year, brought under control by a vaccination program overseen by military medical workers.{{sfnm|1a1=Maharatna|1y=1992|1p=268|2a1=Government of India|2y=1945|2p=136}} A similar smallpox vaccine campaign started later and was pursued less effectively;{{sfn|Government of India|1945|p=136–37}} smallpox deaths peaked in April 1944.{{sfn|Maharatna|1992|p=240}} "Starvation" was generally not listed as a cause of death at the time; many deaths by starvation may have been listed under the "all other" category.{{sfn|Maharatna|1992|p=41 & 251}} Here the death rates rather than percentages reveal the peak in 1943.

The two waves{{snd}}starvation and disease{{snd}}also interacted and amplified one another, increasing the excess mortality.{{sfn|Maharatna |1992|p=378}} Widespread starvation and malnutrition first compromised immune systems, and reduced resistance to disease led to death by opportunistic infections.{{sfnm|1a1=Mokyr|1a2=Ó Gráda|1y=2002 |1pp=340–14|2a1=J. Mukherjee|2y=2015|2pp=128–29}} Second, the social disruption and dismal conditions caused by a cascading breakdown of social systems brought mass migration, overcrowding, poor sanitation, poor water quality and waste disposal, increased vermin, and unburied dead. All of these factors are closely associated with the increased spread of infectious disease.{{sfnm|1a1=Greenough|1y=1982|1p=141, 163|2a1=Shears|2y=1991|2pp=245–246|3a1=Dirks|3y=1980|3p=24,''note{{nbsp}}9''|4a1=de Waal |4y= 1990|4p= 481|5a1=Watkins |5a2=Menken |5y=1985|5p=650}}

==Social disruption==
[[File:Destitute mother and child Bengal famine 1943.jpg|thumb|right|A destitute mother and child on the sidewalk in Calcutta during the Bengal famine of 1943]]

Despite the organised and sometimes violent civil unrest just prior to the famine, there was very little looting and no organised rioting when the famine took hold.{{sfn|Government of India|1945|p=68}} However, social disruption was deep and widespread: families disintegrated, with cases of wives and children being abandoned, child-selling, infanticide, and both voluntary and forced prostitution.{{sfnm|1a1=Greenough |1y=1980|1pp=225–33|2a1=Ó Gráda |2y=2009 |2pp=59–63 }} Lines of small children begging could stretch for miles outside of cities; at night, children could be heard "crying bitterly and coughing terribly ... in the pouring monsoon rain ... stark naked, homeless, motherless, fatherless and friendless. Their sole possession was an empty tin".{{sfn|Mukerjee|2011|p= 170; 186–87}} A schoolteacher in [[Mahisadal (Vidhan Sabha constituency)|Mahisadal]] witnessed "...children picking and eating undigested grains out of a beggar's diarrheal discharge".{{sfn|Mukerjee|2011|p= 248}} Author [[Freda Bedi]] wrote that it was "not just the problem of rice and the availability of rice. It was the problem of society in fragments."{{sfn| Bedi|1944|p=13}}

===Mass migration and family dissolution===
[[File:BelongingsSoldAwayBengalFamine1943.jpg|thumb|right|As the famine became more severe, belongings, such as farming tools, even roofs of houses, were sold away. Bengal famine of 1943]]
The famine fell hardest by far on the rural poor. As the distress continued, families progressed through a series of increasingly irreversible famine coping strategies.{{sfn|Corbett |1988}} First, they reduced their food intake and began to sell jewelry, ornaments, and smaller items of personal property. As the distress continued, expenses for food or burials became more urgent, and the items sold became larger and less replaceable{{snd}}livestock, farming tools, the roof or doors of the house. Finally, families disintegrated. Men sold their small farms and left home to look for work or to join the army, and women and children became homeless migrants, often travelling to Calcutta or another large city in search of organised relief:{{sfnm|1a1=Government of India|1y=1945|1p=67|2a1=Greenough |2y=1980 |2pp=227–28 |3a1=Iqbal|3y=2011 |3p=281}}
{{quote|Husbands deserted wives and wives husbands; elderly dependents were left behind in the villages; babies and young children were sometimes abandoned. According to a survey carried out in Calcutta during the latter half of 1943, some breaking up of the family had occurred in about half the destitute population which reached the city.{{sfn|Government of India|1945 |p=68}}}}
Although the majority of the rural poor remained in their villages, sometime near July 1943{{sfn|Brennan|1988|p=547}} hundreds of thousands began a "terrible wandering in search of food... with hordes of people moving in the general direction of Calcutta because of vague rumours that food was to be had there."{{sfn|Aykroyd|1975|p=74}} In Calcutta, evidence of the famine was "... mainly in the form of masses of rural destitutes trekking into the city and dying on the streets".{{sfnm|1a1=A. Sen |1y=1981b |1p=441 |2a1=Das |2y=1949}} Estimates of the number of the sick who flocked to Calcutta and wandered its streets ranged between 100,000 and 150,000.{{sfnm|1a1=Government of India|1y=1945|1p=2 |2a1=J. Mukherjee|2y=2015|2p=134, citing ''The Statesman'' "Policy of Repatriation of Destitutes," November 6, 1943 |3a1=Schofield |3y=2010 |3p=304}} The Famine Commission Report described these wandering Bengalis in detail:{{efn-ua|The term "destitute" was routinely used in contemporary accounts to describe those impoverished during the famine, and frequently referred specifically to displaced individuals (i.e., "wandering victims"), see for example {{harvtxt|Government of India|1945|loc=p.{{nbsp}}2 ''note{{nbsp}}1''}}}}
{{quote|Thousands flocked into towns and cities... The wandering famine victims readily fell a prey to disease and spread disease in their wanderings... moral sense [was] lost. In their distress they often sank to sub-human levels and became helpless and hopeless automata guided only by an instinctive craving for food.{{sfn|Government of India|1945|p=2}}}}
Once they left their rural villages in search of food, their outlook for survival was grim: "Many died by the roadside&nbsp;– witness the skulls and bones which were to be seen there in the months following the famine."{{sfn|Government of India|1945|p=109}}

===Increased vermin and undisposed dead===
[[File:BengalSpeaksJackalsVulturesEatingCorpsesBengalFamine1943a.jpg|thumb|right|Jackals and vultures scavenging on undisposed human remains during the Bengal famine of 1943]]
In the cities and especially the countryside, the disposal of corpses was a problem for the government and the public. The sheer numbers of corpses overwhelmed cremation houses, burial grounds, and the public and private groups charged with collecting and disposing of the dead: "We couldn't bury them or anything. No one had the strength to perform rites. People would tie a rope around the necks and drag them over to a ditch."{{sfn|Mukerjee|2011|p= 229–230}} Corpses were stacked along the streets of Calcutta, tossed by the tens of thousands into sources of drinking water such as rivers and canals, and left to rot and putrefy in nearly any open space. The bodies were then picked over by vultures and dragged away by jackals. Sometimes this happened even before the victims had fully expired.{{sfn|J. Mukherjee|2015|pp=239–40}} The sight of corpses beside canals, ravaged by dogs and jackals, was common; during a seven-mile boat ride in Midnapore in November 1943, a journalist counted at least five hundred such sets of skeletal remains along the banks of a canal.{{sfn|Mukerjee|2011|p= 236}} Jackals would also attack the small and weak among those still living, with disturbing results.{{sfn|Mukerjee|2011|pp= 157; 187}} The levels of putrefaction, contamination, and vermin infestation were so overwhelming by late 1943 that the weekly newspaper ''Biplabi'' stated:
{{quote|Bengal is a vast cremation ground, a meeting place for ghosts and evil spirits, a land so overrun by dogs, jackals and vultures that it makes one wonder whether the Bengalis are really alive or have become ghosts from some distant epoch.{{sfn|S. Bose|1990|loc=p. 699, citing ''Biplabi'', 7&nbsp November, 1943}}}}
By the summer of 1943, many districts of Bengal, especially in the countryside, had taken on the look of "a vast charnel house".{{sfn|J. Mukherjee|2015|pp=239–40}}

===Exploitation of women and children===
[[File:OrphansWhoSurvivedBengalFamine1943.jpg|thumb|right|Some orphans who survived the Bengal famine of 1943]]
One of the classic symptoms of famine is that it tends to intensify the exploitation of women; sales of women and girls, for example, tend to increase.{{sfnm|1a1=Ray|1y=2005|1p=397|2a1=Ó Gráda|2y=2015 |p=7}} Even before the famine, sexual exploitation of poor, rural, lower-caste and tribal women by the ''jotedars'' had at times been socially sanctioned,{{sfn|Cooper|1983|p=248}} and during the crisis, women turned to prostitution in great numbers:
{{quote| A section of the contractors has made a profession of selling girls to the military. There are places in Chittagong, Comilla and Noakhali where women sell themselves literally in hordes, and young boys act as pimps for the military.&nbsp;{{sfn|B. Sen|1945 |p=29 }}}} When taken up voluntarily, this survival strategy was not only for the women's own sakes but also, in many cases, for their children's survival,{{sfn|Das|1949|p=72}} and often with regular meals as the only payment.{{sfn|Greenough |1980|pp=229}} Added to this number were the women and girls pushed involuntarily into the sex trade. In late 1943, entire boatloads of girls for sale were reported in ports of East Bengal.{{sfn|Bedi|1944|p=87}} Families sent their young girls to wealthy landowners overnight in exchange for very small amounts of money or rice{{sfn|Collingham|2012|p=147–48}} or sold them outright into prostitution; girls were sometimes enticed with sweet treats and kidnapped by pimps. Very often, these girls lived in constant fear of injury or death, but the brothels were their sole means of survival.{{sfnm|1a1=Mukerjee|1y=2011|1p= 158; 183–86|2a1=Greenough|2y= 1982|loc=chapter 4}} Over the longer term, any woman who had chosen or been forced to become a prostitute could not expect any social acceptance or a return to her home or family. Such women became permanent {{Not a typo|outcastes}} in a society that valorised female chastity.{{sfn|Agarwal|2008|p=162}}

In addition to the tens of thousands of children who were orphaned,{{sfn|Government of India|1945|p=166}} many were victimised by their own mothers and fathers.<!-- pls don't shorten to "parents"; the assumption will be that males only or primarily were the culprits --> They were sold for trifling amounts of cash or for unhusked rice: as much as two ''[[maund]]s'', around {{convert|74|kg|lb}},{{sfn|Greenough |1980|p=210}} or as little as one ''seer'', {{convert|1|kg|lb}}.{{sfn|Greenough |1980|p=231}} Sometimes they were purchased as household servants, where they would "grow up as little better than domestic slaves".{{sfn|Greenough |1980|p=232}} They were also purchased by sexual predators. Children were abandoned by the roadsides or at orphanages, dropped down wells, thrown into rivers, or buried alive.{{sfnm|1a1=Greenough |1y=1980|1pp=230–33|2a1=Government of India|2y=1945 |2p=68}}

===Cloth famine===
[[File:MotherWithShredsOfClothingAndChildCalcutta1943.jpg|thumb|right|Mother with child on a Calcutta street. Bengal famine 1943]]
Another severe hardship of the crisis{{snd}}the "cloth famine"{{snd}}left nearly the entire population of the immiserated poor in Bengal naked or clothed in scraps through the winter.{{sfnm|Natarajan |1946|p=49|J. Mukherjee|2015|pp=133 & 221}} The military of Great Britain consumed nearly all the textiles produced in India by purchasing Indian-made boots, parachutes, uniforms, blankets, and other goods at steep discount rates. The relatively small proportion of materials left over for civilian use were purchased by speculators for sale to civilians, subject to similarly steep inflation.{{sfn|Mukerjee|2011|pp= 221–222}} With the supply of cloth crowded out by commitments to Great Britain and price levels held captive by profiteering, anyone who was not among the "[[#Prioritised distribution|priority classes]]" faced increasingly dire scarcity:
{{quote|sign=|source=|The robbing of graveyards for clothes, disrobing of men and women in out of way places for clothes ... and minor riotings here and there have been reported. Stray news has also come that women have committed suicide for want of cloth ... Thousands of men and women ... cannot go out to attend their usual work outside for want of a piece of cloth to wrap round their loins.{{sfn|Natarajan |1946|p=49}}}}
Many such women "took to staying inside a room all day long, emerging only when it was [their] turn to wear the single fragment of cloth shared with female relatives."{{sfn|Mukerjee|2011|p= 221}}

===Poor sanitation===
[[File:FatherSonCowRummagingFoodBengalFamine1943.jpg|thumb|right|A father, his young son, and a cow rummaging for scraps of food on the street during the Bengal famine 1943. The photo caption says, "destitute peasants lived on scrappings from drains. Bad food killed [[lakh]]s of people."]]
The famine lead to widespread unsanitary conditions, catastrophic hygiene standards, and the spread of disease.{{sfn|Government of India|1945|p=118}} The "cloth famine" saw a scarcity of clean clothing, or any clothing at all. Disposal of corpses in rivers and other water supplies contaminated drinking water. Large scale migration led to the abandonment of the utensils and facilities necessary for washing clothes, preparing food, and taking care of other necessities of life.{{sfn|Mokyr|Ó Gráda|2002|p=342}} Many of those who migrated to the cities simply drank contaminated rainwater from streets and open spaces where others had urinated or defecated.{{sfn|Das|1949|loc=&nbsp;as cited in Ó Gráda 2015 pp. 102–3}} Particularly in the early months of the crisis, conditions did not necessarily improve for those who were under medical care:
{{quote|sign=|source=|Conditions in certain famine hospitals at this time ... were indescribably bad ... Visitors were horrified by the state of the wards and patients, the ubiquitous filth, and the lack of adequate care and treatment ... [In hospitals all across Bengal, the] condition of patients was usually appalling, a large proportion suffering from acute emaciation, with 'famine diarrhoea' ... Sanitary conditions in nearly all temporary indoor institutions were very bad to start with ...{{sfn|Government of India|1945|p=138}}}}
The general disruption of many core elements of society brought an acute breakdown of sanitary conditions.

==Relief efforts==
Until the military assumed control of relief efforts in September 1943, government aid seldom provided much help to the rural poor, directing most of its cash and grain supplies instead to the relatively wealthy landowners and urban ''bhadraloks''.{{sfnm|1a1=Greenough|1y=1982|pp=133–36|2a1=Brennan|2y=1988|2pp=559–60}} After an initial spate of [[humanitarian aid]] for the cyclone-stricken areas around Midnapore in October 1942, the government response was slow, and relief efforts were very limited until April 1943.{{sfn|Brennan|1988|p=558}}{{efn-ua| For an analysis of government famine relief in Bengal in 1943, see {{harvtxt|Brennan|1988}}.}} The response was slowed both by a failure to grasp the nature and scope of the problem and by political factors brought on by a public propaganda campaign declaring "sufficiency" in Bengal's rice supply, denying that there had been any significant crop shortfall, and blaming rising prices on [[war profiteering]] and [[Hoarding (economics)|hoarding]].{{efn-ua|See {{harvtxt|Ó Gráda|2015}}.}} In April, more cash and grain began to flow to the outlying areas, but relief efforts were misdirected. Famine relief came in three major forms:{{sfn|Maharatna|1992|p=236}} agricultural loans (for the purchase of paddy seed, plough cattle, and maintenance expenses),{{sfn|Brennan|1988|pp=557–58}} gratuitous relief, and test works.{{efn-ua|Test works were essentially labour camps that offered food and perhaps a small amount of money in exchange for strenuous work; if enough people took the offer, then famine conditions were assumed. ({{harvnb|J. Mukherjee |2015 |p=29}}; {{harvnb|Guz| 1989|p=216}}). The types of labour at test works included "stone quarries, metal breaking units, [water] tank and road building schemes" {{harv |Bhattacharya |2002a |p=103}}.}} Agricultural loans offered no assistance to the large numbers of rural poor who had little or no land. Grain relief was divided between cheap grain shops and the open market, with far more going to the markets. Supplying grain to the markets was intended to lower grain prices, but did not accomplish that aim, instead putting rural poor in direct competition with wealthier Bengalis at greatly inflated prices. As the depth and scope of the famine became unmistakable, the government began setting up gruel kitchens in August 1943; the gruel, which often provided barely a survival-level caloric intake,{{sfn|Brennan|1988|p=552}} was sometimes unfit for consumption{{snd}}moldy or contaminated with dirt, sand, and gravel.{{sfnm |1a1=J. Mukherjee |1y=2015 |1p=29 & 174 |2a1=De |2y=2006 |2p=40 |3a1=Brennan |3y=1988 |3p=557 ''note{{nbsp}}18''}}

There was rampant corruption and nepotism in the distribution of government aid; often as much as half of the goods supplied would disappear into the [[black market]] or the hands of friends or relatives.{{sfnm|1a1=Brennan|1y=1988|1pp=552, 555 & 557|2a1=Greenough|2y=1982|2p=169|3a1= J. Mukherjee|3y=2015|3p=174–75}}

Despite having a long-established and detailed [[Indian Famine Codes|Famine Code]] that would have triggered a sizable increase in aid, and despite a statement privately circulated by the government in June 1943 that a state of famine might need to be formally declared,{{sfnm|Government of India|1945|p=69}} this never happened.{{sfnm |1a1=Government of India|1y=1945|1pp=98–99|2a1=A. Sen|2y=1977|2p=52}} Significant aid was not provided until the military took over crisis relief in October 1943, especially after November. In particular, grain was imported from [[the Punjab]], and medical resources were made far more available.{{sfnm|1a1=Government of India|1y=1945|1pp=62–63, 75 & 139–40| 2a1=Brennan |2y=1988 |2p=558}} However, effective relief from the food crisis came from a record rice harvest that December.{{sfn|Bowbrick|1986|pp=24–5}}

==Economic and political effects==
The famine's aftermath greatly accelerated pre-existing [[Socioeconomics|socioeconomic]] processes <!-- no comma here --> leading to poverty and [[income inequality]],{{sfn|Mahalanobis|Mukherjea|Ghosh|1946|p=342}} severely disrupted important elements of Bengal's economy and social fabric, and ruined millions of families.{{sfn|Greenough|1982}} The crisis overwhelmed and impoverished large segments of the economy. A key source of impoverishment was the widespread coping strategy of selling assets for food. As the famine wore on, unprecedented numbers of smallholders and dwarfholders tried to save themselves by selling or mortgaging their paddy lands in part or in full, thus falling from the status of peasant landholder agriculturalist to that of landless agricultural labourer. Nearly 1.6 million families, roughly one-quarter of those who had owned paddyland before the famine, sold or mortgaged some or all of their holdings during the crisis:{{sfnm|1a1=Mahalanobis |1a2=Mukherjea |1a3=Ghosh |1y=1946|1pp= 339 and 365 |2a1=Watkins |2a2=Menken |2y=1985|2p=667}}
{| class="wikitable" style="font-size: 87%; width: 60%"
|+ Land alienation in Bengal, 1940–41 to 1944–45<br>Number of sales of occupancy holdings{{sfn|S. Bose|1993|p=134, Table 8}}
!colspan="1" style="text-align: center;" | 1940–41
!colspan="1" style="text-align: center;" | 1941–42
!colspan="1" style="text-align: center;" | 1942–43
!colspan="1" style="text-align: center;" | 1943–44
!colspan="1" style="text-align: center;" | 1944–45
|-
|colspan="1" style="text-align: center;" | 141,000
|colspan="1" style="text-align: center;" | 711,000
|colspan="1" style="text-align: center;" |938,000
|colspan="1" style="text-align: center;" | 1,491,000
|colspan="1" style="text-align: center;" |1,230,000
|}

This crisis-driven drop into a lower income group happened in other occupations as well. In absolute numbers, the hardest hit by post-famine impoverishment were women and landless agricultural labourers. In relative terms, those engaged in rural trade,{{efn-ua|"[In] Bengal there were tens of thousands of petty traders who bought [rice] from cultivators, and...[these commercial] relationships were highly personal"&nbsp;{{harv|J. Mukherjee |2015|pp=86}}.}} fishing and transport (boatmen and bullock cart drivers) suffered the most.{{sfn|Mahalanobis|Mukherjea|Ghosh|1946|p=361 & 393}} In absolute numbers, agricultural labourers faced the highest rates of both destitution and mortality.{{sfn |Maharatna |1992 |p=212}}

The "panicky responses" undertaken by the UK government in the wake of the fall of Burma had profound political consequences. "It was soon obvious to the bureaucrats in New Delhi and the provinces, as well as the GHQ (India)," wrote {{harvtxt|Bhattacharya|2002b}}, "that the disruption caused by these short-term policies—and the political capital being made out of their effects—would necessarily lead to a situation where major constitutional concessions, leading to the dissolution of the Raj, would be unavoidable."{{sfn|Bhattacharya|2002b|p=102}} For example, nationwide opposition to the boat denial policy, as typified by [[Mahatma Gandhi]]'s vehement editorials, helped strengthen the [[Indian independence movement]], since the dispute "...galvanized both the Nationalist struggle in India and London's extreme response to the same, contributing significantly to the way that the 'Quit India' movement of 1942 played out."{{sfnm|1a1=J. Mukherjee|1y=2015|1pp=67–68|2a1=Ghosh|2y=1944}}

==Media coverage==
[[File:PeoplesWar Sept1943.jpeg|thumb|upright=1.2|The ''People's War'', an organ of the [[Communist Party of India]], published graphic photos of the famine by [[Sunil Janah]].]]
Calcutta's two leading English-language newspapers were ''[[The Statesman]]'' (at that time a British-owned newspaper){{sfnm|A. Sen|1977|p=52, ''fourth footnote''|Ó Gráda |2015|2p=42}}{{efn-ua|The Statesman was sold in 1962 to "a consortium of Indian industrialists"&nbsp;{{harv|Hirschmann|2004|p=155}}}} and ''[[Amrita Bazar Patrika]]''. In the early months of the famine, the government applied pressure on newspapers to "calm public fears about the food supply"{{sfn|Ó Gráda |2015|p=4}} and follow the official stance that there was no rice shortage. This effort had some success; ''The Statesman'', for example, initially published editorials asserting that the famine was due solely to speculation and hoarding, while "berating local traders and producers, and praising ministerial efforts."{{sfn|Ó Gráda |2015|p=4}}{{efn-ua|Note also that ''The Statesman'' was the only major newspaper that had acquiesced to (or been persuaded by) government pressure to present the Quit India movement in a negative light&nbsp;({{harvnb|Greenough|1983|p=355, ''note{{nbsp}}7''}};&nbsp;{{harvnb|Greenough|1999|p= 43, ''note{{nbsp}}7''}}).}} News of the famine was also subject to strict war-time censorship&nbsp;– even use of the word "famine" was prohibited{{sfn|J. Mukherjee|2015|p=125}}&nbsp;– leading ''The Statesman'' later to remark that the UK government "seems virtually to have withheld from the British public knowledge that there was famine in Bengal at all".{{sfn|Ó Gráda |2015|loc= p. 57, citing "Consequences of Untruth," ''Statesman'', 12 October 1943}}

Beginning in mid-July 1943 and more so in August, however, these two newspapers began publishing detailed and increasingly critical accounts of the depth and scope of the famine, its impact on society, and the nature of British, Hindu, and Muslim political responses.{{sfn|Ó Gráda |2015|p=43}} For example, a headline in ''Amrita Bazar Patrika'' that month warned "The Famine conditions of 1770 are already upon us,"{{sfn|Ó Gráda |2015|pp=9}} alluding to an [[Great Bengal famine of 1770|earlier Bengal famine]] that caused the deaths of one third of Bengal's population.{{sfn|Dutt|2013|p=5}} It also published an [[editorial cartoon]] showing starving peasants gazing at distant international food aid ships with the caption "A Mirage! A Mirage!"{{sfn|Ó Gráda |2015|pp=5}} ''The Statesman''{{'}}s reportage and commentary were similarly pointed, as for example when it opined that the famine was "man-made".{{sfn|Islam|2007a|p=422, citing ''The Statesman'', "Reflections on Disaster," 23&nbsp;September 1943}}

A turning point in news coverage regarding the famine came on 22&nbsp;August 1943, when ''The Statesman'' published a series of graphic photographs of the starvation and suffering. These "gruesome" images greatly affected both domestic and international perceptions and sparked an international media frenzy.{{sfn|J. Mukherjee|2015|p=125}} Not only was the rest of the world unaware of the famine in Bengal before the photographs were published, many even in India itself had little idea of the scope of the social destruction.{{sfn|Mukerjee|2011|p=175}} The photos of human suffering under British rule had a profound psychological effect and marked "for many, the beginning of the end of colonial rule".{{sfn|Vernon|2009|p=148}} The decision by editor Ian Stephens to publish the photographs and adopt a defiant editorial stance won accolades from many (including the Famine Inquiry Commission){{sfnm|1a1=A. Sen|1y=1977|1p= |2a1=Ó Gráda|2y=2015|2p=42}} and has been described as "a singular act of journalistic courage and conscientiousness, without which many more lives would have surely been lost".{{sfn|J. Mukherjee|2015|p=125}} The photographs also spurred ''Amrita Bazar Patrika'' and the Communist Party's organ ''The People's War'' to publish similar images; the latter would make photographer [[Sunil Janah]] famous.{{sfn|Ó Gráda |2015|loc=&nbsp;p. 42, ''note{{nbsp}}13''; p.{{nbsp}}77, ''note{{nbsp}}132''}}

==Depictions==
[[File:Chittaprosad-Hungry-Bengal-sketch1.jpg|thumb|upright=1.2|Image of [[Midnapore district|Midnapore]] famine victim from [[Chittaprosad]]'s ''Hungry Bengal'', five thousand copies of which were [[Book burning|burned]] by Indian police. The caption read "His name was Kshetramohan Naik."]]
The famine has been dealt with in celebrated novels, films and art. The novel ''Ashani Sanket'' by [[Bibhutibhushan Bandyopadhyay]] is a fictional account of a young doctor and his wife in rural Bengal during the famine. It was adapted into a film of the same name (English title: ''[[Distant Thunder (1973 film)|Distant Thunder]]'') by celebrated director [[Satyajit Ray]] in 1973. The film is listed in ''The New York Times Guide to the Best 1,000 Movies Ever Made''.{{sfn|New York Times|2003}} Also well-known are the novel ''So Many Hungers!'' (1947) by [[Bhabani Bhattacharya]] and the 1980 film ''[[Akaler Shandhaney]]'' by [[Mrinal Sen]].

A Bengali play about the famine, ''[[Nabanna (drama)|Nabanna]]'', was written by [[Bijon Bhattacharya]] and staged by the [[Indian People's Theatre Association]] (IPTA) in 1944 under the direction of [[Sombhu Mitra]] and later in 1948, by [[Bohurupee]] under the direction of [[Kumar Roy]]. IPTA also staged the play in several parts of the country and collected funds for famine relief in rural Bengal.{{sfnm|1a1=Lowe|1a2=Lloyd|1y=1997|1p=438|3a1=Dharwadker|3y=2005|3p=407}}

A contemporary sketch book of iconic scenes of famine victims, ''Hungry Bengal: a tour through Midnapur District in November, 1943'' by [[Chittaprosad Bhattacharya|Chittaprosad]], was immediately banned by the British and 5000 copies were seized and destroyed.{{sfnm|1a1=J. Mukherjee |1y=2015 |1p=139 |2a1=Dhillon |2y=2014|2p= 54}} One copy was hidden by Chittaprosad's family and is now in the possession of the Delhi Art Gallery.{{sfn|Chittaprosad's Bengal Famine|19 July 2011}} Another artist famed for his sketches of the famine was [[Zainul Abedin]].{{sfn|Dhillon |2014|p= 54}}

==Debate over primary cause(s)==
[[File:Churchill V sign HU 55521.jpg|thumb|200px|British Prime Minister [[Winston Churchill]] in 1943]]
Debate over the specific cause or causes of the Bengali famine hinges on a series of interlinked questions: when the nature and scope of the disaster were recognized, whether enough food was available at the provincial or national level (or via international [[aid|food aid]] arranged by [[Great Britain]]) to feed the population of Bengal, and whether the failure of the colonial rulers to alleviate the crisis was due to incompetence or insensitivity to Bengal's needs. The relative impact of each of these factors as a cause or contributing factor to the levels of death and economic devastation is still a matter of controversy. In addition to the complexity of the issues and the questionable accuracy of much of the statistical data that could resolve the debates, a potentially complicating factor is that the conclusions are highly politicised, which may tend to predispose the content and tone of the conclusions reached.{{efn-ua |Implicit in the attempt to distinguish between potential causes of any particular famine{{snd}}natural disaster, economic crisis, or political pathology{{snd}}is a further attempt to assign culpability, whether to natural forces, market failures, failure or malfeasance by governmental institutions, war profiteering or other unscrupulous acts by private business, or the victims themselves. These debates are both political and politicised.&nbsp;{{harv|Devereux|2000|pp=21–26}} See also {{harvtxt|Devereux|2010|p=256}} and {{harvtxt|Tauger|2009|p=174}}}}

The question of when the famine was or should have been recognised is relevant to a discussion of the [[#October 1942: Unreliable crop forecasts|unreliable crop statistics]]. The 1942–43 Annual Report of the {{harvtxt|Indian Statistical Institute|1945|p=107}} asserts that the lack of reliable crop output statistics left the government effectively uninformed about the state of agricultural output, precluding any timely response. Others, however, have expressed doubts that the government was naive or "caught napping" when it rejected those statistics out of hand.{{sfn|Mukherji|1986|pp=PE22, PE25}}

The issue of the degree of crop shortfall in late 1942 and its impact in 1943 has come to dominate the [[historiography]] of the Bengal famine.{{sfn|Ó Gráda|2015|p=12}}{{efn-ua|See for example {{harvtxt|A. Sen|1977}}, {{harvtxt|A. Sen|1981a}}, {{harvtxt|A. Sen|1981b}}, {{harvtxt|Bowbrick|1986}}, {{harvtxt|Goswami|1990}}, {{harvtxt|Tauger|2003}}, {{harvtxt|Islam|2007a}} and {{harvtxt|Devereux|2010}}.}} The issue lies at the heart of a larger debate over the relative importance of food availability decline&nbsp;(FAD) versus the failure of exchange entitlements&nbsp;(FEE) as causes of famine.{{efn-ua|The FAD explanation blames famine on crop failures brought on principally by crises such as drought, flood, or man-made devastation from war. The FEE account, as formulated by {{harvtxt|A. Sen|1977}} and {{harvtxt|A. Sen|1981a}}, agrees that such external factors are often important, but holds that famine is primarily the interaction between pre-existing poverty (as a "structural vulnerability") with some shock event (such as war or political interference in markets) acting as a trigger {{harv|Devereux|2000|pp=24–26}}. When these interact, some groups within society are unable to purchase or acquire food even when it is available. Current academic consensus adopts the FEE view for most modern famines {{harv|Indra|Buchignani|1997|p=6}}.}} Both the FAD and FEE lines of thought would agree that Bengal experienced at least some level of grain shortage in 1943 due to the loss of imports from Burma, damage from the cyclone, and brown spot infestation. Crucially, however, FEE analyses do not consider it the main factor,{{sfn|Islam|2007a|p=424}} while FAD-oriented analyses of scholars such as {{harvtxt|Bowbrick|1986}}, {{harvtxt|Alamgir|1980}}, {{harvtxt|Goswami|1990}} and {{harvtxt|Collingham|2012}} hold that a sharp drop in the food supply was the pivotal determining factor. {{harvtxt|Tauger|2003}} and {{harvtxt|Padmanabhan|1973}} in particular argue that the impact of brown spot disease was vastly underestimated, both during the famine and in later analyses. The signs of crop fungal infestation by ''Cochliobolus miyabeanus'' are subtle; given the social and administrative conditions at the time, local officials would very likely have overlooked them.{{sfn|Tauger |2009|p=178–79}}

Those adhering to FEE would argue that market failure{{snd}}essentially inflation and the disruption of the grain market{{snd}}converted a local shortage into a horrific famine. Scholars such as [[Cormac Ó Gráda]], while asserting that there was indeed a significant food shortage (FAD), emphasise wartime priorities that drove the UK government and the provincial government of Bengal to make fateful decisions: the "denial policies", the use of heavy shipping for war supplies rather than food, the refusal to officially declare a state of famine, and the [[Balkanization|Balkanisation]] of grain markets through inter-provincial trade barriers.{{sfn|Ó Gráda |2008|pp=20 & 33}} Others insist that the decline in workers' [[real wage]]s through inflation was the key cause,{{sfn|Aykroyd|1975|p=74}} exacerbated by a host of largely political factors, including prioritised distribution and abortive attempts at price control.{{sfnm|1a1=Greenough|1y=1982|1pp=127–38|2a1=A. Sen|2y=1977}} [[Amartya Sen]] in particular attributes the most devastating periods of inflation to heavy speculative buying.{{sfnm|1a1=A. Sen|1y=1976|1p= 1280|2a1=A. Sen |2y=1977|2p= 50 |3a1= A. Sen|3y=1981a|3p=76}} The FAD-oriented analysis of {{harvtxt|Bowbrick|1985}}, however, disagrees at length.

Some FEE-based analyses suggest that the famine was a result of policy failure or bungling.{{sfnm|1a1=Natarajan|1y=1946|1p=25|2a1=A. Sen |2y=1977 |2p=52|3a1=Dyson|3y=1991|p=279}} Others assert that prioritised distribution and the denial policies reflected the War Cabinet's callous willingness to "supply the Army's needs and let the Indian people starve if necessary"{{sfn|Wavell|1973|pp= 68 & 122}} when weighing how to allocate wartime resources.{{sfn|S. Bose|1990|p=716–17}} In this view, economic policies were designed to serve externally oriented British military goals at the expense of internally oriented Indian interests,{{sfn|Ó Gráda|2009|pp=190–91}} and so the UK government bears moral responsibility for the rural deaths.{{sfn|S. Bose|1990|p=716}}{{efn-ua|This imputed callousness was far from universal among the British in India; other British officials sharply criticised their own government, and were "keen to make amends" {{harv|Bhattacharya|Zachariah|1999|p=89}}}} The policies may have met their intended goals, but only at the cost of harrowing, large-scale dislocations in the domestic economy. Far from being accidental, this argument maintains, these dislocations were fully recognised beforehand as fatal for identifiable Indian groups whose economic activities did not directly, actively, or adequately advance military goals.{{sfn|J. Mukherjee|2015|pp=251–52}} The analysts split into two broad camps: those who think the government unwittingly caused or was unable to respond to the crisis,{{sfn|Brennan|Heathcote|Lucas|1984|p=18}} and those who think it willfully ignored the plight of starving Indians. The former see the problem as a series of avoidable war-time policy failures and "panicky responses"{{sfn|Bhattacharya|2002b|p=102}} from a government that was spectacularly inept,{{sfnm|1a1=A. Sen |1y=1977|1p=50|2a1=S. Bose|2y=1990|2p=717}} overwhelmed{{sfn|Government of India|1945|p=195}} and in disarray, the latter as a conscious miscarriage of justice by the "ruling colonial elite"{{sfn|Ó Gráda |2015|p=91}} who abandoned the poor of Bengal.{{sfn|Ó Gráda|2009|p=10}}

A third line of argument, present since the days of the famine{{efn-ua|See {{harvtxt|Greenough|1983}} for contemporary incendiary rhetoric to this effect from the Nationalist paper ''Biplabi''. As Greenough opines, "''Biplabi'' hammered away at the argument that the British had deliberately fostered the famine... The fact that the famine originated in large part because of the government's disruption of the paddy market, and also because of the niggardliness of official relief, was terribly obvious to the inhabitants of Midnapur" (p. 375).}} but expressed at length by {{harvtxt|Mukerjee|2011}}, accuses key figures in the UK government (particularly [[Prime Minister of the United Kingdom|Prime Minister]] [[Winston Churchill]]){{efn-ua|For a discussion of sources that either blame Churchill and the Raj or elide Churchill's role entirely (see {{harvtxt|Hickman|2008}}).}} of genuine antipathy toward Indians and [[Winston Churchill#Indian independence|Indian independence]]{{snd}} an antipathy arising mainly from a desire to protect [[imperialism|imperialist]] privilege, but tinged also with [[racism|racist]] undertones.{{sfn||Mukerjee|2011|pp=274–75}} This is attributed to British anger over widespread Bengali nationalist sentiments and the perceived treachery of the violent Quit India uprising.{{sfnm|1a1=Mukerjee|1y=2011|1p=273|2a1=Bayly|2a2=Harper|2y=2005|2p=286|3a1=Collingham|3y=2012|3pp=144–45}} An example of the disagreement over this issue can be found in differing explanations of the War Cabinet's refusal to free shipping for the transport of grain to Bengal. For example,
{{harvtxt|Collingham|2012|p=153}} opines that although the massive global dislocations of supplies caused by World War{{nbsp}}II virtually guaranteed that hunger would occur somewhere in the world, Churchill's animosity and even racism toward Indians decided the exact location where famine would fall. {{harvtxt|Mukerjee|2011|pp=112–14; 273}} makes a stark accusation:
{{quote|The War Cabinet's shipping assignments made in August 1943, shortly after Amery had pleaded for famine relief, show Australian wheat flour traveling to Ceylon, the Middle east, and Southern Africa{{snd}}everywhere in the Indian Ocean but to India. Those assignments show a will to punish.}}
In contrast, {{harvtxt|Tauger|2009|p=193}} strikes a far more supportive stance:
{{quote|In the Indian Ocean alone from January 1942 to May 1943, the Axis powers sank 230 British and Allied merchant ships totaling 873,000 tons, in other words, a substantial boat every other day. British hesitation to allocate shipping concerned not only potential diversion of shipping from other war-related needs but also the prospect of losing the shipping to attacks without actually [bringing help to] India at all.}}
For their part, the Famine Commission Report absolved the imperial government from all major blame.{{sfnm|1a1=Ó Gráda |1y=2008 |1p=24, ''note 78''}} It laid some responsibility at the feet of unavoidable fate, but reserved its most forceful finger-pointing for local politicians in the [[Prime Minister of Bengal|Government of Bengal]]:{{sfnm|1a1=Ó Gráda |1y=2015 |1pp=39}}
{{quote|But after considering all the circumstances, we cannot avoid the conclusion that it lay in the power of the Government of Bengal, by bold, resolute and well-conceived measures at the right time to have largely prevented the tragedy of the famine as it actually took place.{{sfn|Government of India|1945|p=105}}}} The attempt to exonerate itself and shift blame to Indian officials began as early as 1943, as an editorial in ''The Statesman'' on 5&nbsp;October noted disapprovingly.{{sfn |Ó Gráda |2015 |p=57}} Some sources allege that the Famine Commission deliberately declined to blame the UK or was even designed to do so;{{sfnm|1a1=Ó Gráda|1y=2008|1p=39|2a1=Rangasami|2y=1985|2ps=.&nbsp;Cited approvingly in {{harv|Osmani|1993}} and {{harv|Mukerjee |2014|p=71}}.}} however, {{harvtxt|Bowbrick|1985|p=57}} forcefully defends the report's accuracy.

A final line of blame-laying holds that major industrialists either caused or at least significantly exacerbated the famine through speculation, war profiteering, hoarding, and corruption {{snd}}"unscrupulous, heartless grain traders forcing up prices based on false rumors".{{sfn|Tauger|2009|p=185}}{{efn-ua|See for example {{harvtxt|J. Mukherjee|2015|pp=2–6}}.}} Working from an assumption that the Bengal famine claimed 1.5 million lives, the Famine Inquiry Commission made a "gruesome calculation" that "nearly a thousand rupees [£88 in 1944; equivalent to £{{formatnum:{{Inflation|UK|88|1944|r=0}}}}{{Inflation-fn|UK}} or ${{formatnum:{{Inflation|US|88|1944|r=0}}}}{{Inflation-fn|US}} in {{Inflation-year|UK}}] of profits were accrued per death".{{sfnm|1a1=Government of India|1y=1945|1p= 83; details in ''note{{nbsp}}1'' |2a1=Aykroyd|2y=1975|2p=79}} As the Famine Inquiry Commission put it: "a large part of the community lived in plenty while others starved ... corruption was widespread throughout the province and in many classes of society."{{sfn|Government of India|1945|p=107}} British [[Field marshal (United Kingdom)|Field Marshal]] [[William Slim, 1st Viscount Slim|Viscount William Slim]] observed that "the horrible thing about Calcutta was the contrast of the blatant wealth of some of its citizens with the squalid misery, beyond mere poverty, at their very doors."{{sfn|Slim|2000|p=132}}

At the most basic level, all sides of the argument could be seen as framing the famine either as a misfortune or an injustice.{{sfn|Watkins|Menken|1985|p=665}}


==See also==
==See also==
{{commons category|Bengal famine 1943}}
* [[2008 global rice crisis]]
* [[2008 global rice crisis]]
* [[Bihar famine of 1873–74]]
* [[Bihar famine of 1873–74]]
* [[Famine in India]]
* [[Famine in India]]
* [[List of famines]]
* [[List of famines]]
* [[Ruzagayura famine]] in Rwanda, 1943-4
* [[Theories of famines]]
* [[Famine#Causes]]


==Footnotes==
==Footnotes==
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===Notes===
===Notes===
{{Reflist|25em}}
{{Reflist|30em}}


===Works cited===
===Bibliography===
{{Refbegin |60em}}
{{Refbegin|60em}}
* {{cite book |last1=Aykroyd |first1=W|last2=R |first2=Tim |date=1974 |title=The Conquest of Famine |location=London |publisher=Chatto and Windus | |}}
* {{cite journal | title= The Peasant Economy in Transition : The Rise of the Rich Peasant in Permanently Settled Bengal | first=Abu Ahmed |last= Abdullah |journal= The Bangladesh Development Studies |volume= 8 |number= 4 | year = Autumn 1980 |pages= 1–20 |jstor=40794299 |ref=harv}}
* {{cite book |last1=Bayly |first1=Christopher |last2=Harper |first2=Tim |date=2004 |title=Forgotten Armies: Britain's Asian Empire & the War with Japan |location=London |publisher=Penguin Books |isbn=0-14-029331-0|ref=harv}}
* {{cite web|url=http://1940census.archives.gov/about/ |title= About the 1940 Census|website = Official 1940 Census Website of the U.S. National Archives|publisher=The U.S. National Archives and Records Administration |ref=CITEREF1940 Census}}
* {{cite book |last=Bengal Administration |date=1913 |title=Bengal Famine Code |edition=Revised Edition 1913 |location=Calcutta|ref=harv}}
* {{cite book|ref=harv|last=Agarwal|first=Bina|editor-last1=Basu|editor-first1=Kaushik|editor-last2=Kanbur|editor-first2=Ravi|title=Arguments for a Better World: Essays in Honor of Amartya Sen: Volume II: Society, Institutions, and Development|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=I5DWFq3XWXAC&pg=PA162|chapter = Engaging Sen on gender relations: Cooperative conflicts, false perceptions and relative capabilities|year=2008|publisher=OUP Oxford|isbn=978-0-19-155371-4}}
* {{cite book |last=Bengal Government |title=Bengal Legislative Assembly Proceedings | date=1943 |location=Calcutta|ref=harv}}
* {{cite book |last=Alamgir |first=Mohiuddin |title=Famine in South Asia: political economy of mass starvation |url=http://books.google.com/books?id=y1i6AAAAIAAJ |year=1980 |publisher=Oelgeschlager, Gunn & Hain |isbn=978-0-89946-042-0 |ref=harv}}
* {{cite book |last=Bengal Government |title=Famine Manual | date=1941 ||publisher=Revenue Department of India|location=Alipore|ref=harv}}
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* {{cite web|url=http://www.bowbrick.org.uk/Famine%20papers/APPEND2.HTM |title=Appendix Two: Action by the Government |author=Bowbrick |date= |accessdate=28 August 2013|ref=harv}}
* {{cite book|ref=harv|last=Aykroyd|first=Wallace Ruddell|title=The Conquest of Famine|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=3FiyAAAAIAAJ |year=1975 |publisher=Reader's Digest Press, Distributed by E.P. Dutton |isbn=978-0-88349-054-9 }}
* {{cite book |last1=Bayly |first1=Christopher |last2=Harper |first2=Tim |title=Forgotten Armies: Britain's Asian Empire and the War with Japan |url=http://books.google.com/books?id=NWURxfct6SgC&pg=PA1929 |date= 2005 |publisher=Penguin Books Limited |isbn=978-0-14-192719-0 |ref=harv}}
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* {{cite web |url=http://bowbrick.org.uk/SenScans/how_sen1.htm |title=How Sen's theory causes famines |last=Bowbrick |first=Peter |publisher=Bowbrick.org.uk |accessdate=14 April 2011|ref=harv}}
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* {{wikicite|ref={{harvid|Braund|1944}}|reference=Braund, H. B. L. (1944). ''Famine in Bengal'', Typescript. British Library Doc D792}}
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* {{cite journal |last= Bhattacharya |first=Sanjoy |title=Tackling hunger, disease and 'internal security': Official medical administration in colonial eastern India during the Second World War (Part II) |journal=The National Medical Journal of India |volume=15 |number=2 |year=2002b |url=http://nmji.in/archives/Volume-15/issue-2/medicine-and-history.pdf |accessdate=8 February 2016 |pages=101–40 |ref=harv}}
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* {{cite book |last=Stephens |first=Ian Melville |date=1966 |title=Monsoon morning |location=London |publisher=Ernest Benn|ref=harv}}
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* {{cite journal |last=Tauger |first=Mark B. |date=2003 |title=Entitlement, Shortage and the 1943 Bengal Famine: Another Look |url=http://www.as.wvu.edu/history/Faculty/Tauger/Bengal%20enlarged.pdf |journal=Journal of Peasant Studies |publisher=Routledge |volume=31 |issue=1 |pages=45–72 |doi=10.1080/0306615031000169125|ref=harv}}
* {{cite journal |last=Tauger |first=Mark B. |date=March 2009 |title=The Indian Famine Crises of World War II |url=http://www.euppublishing.com/doi/pdfplus/10.3366/brs.2009.0004 |journal=British Scholar |publisher=Edinburgh University Press |volume=1 |issue=2 |pages=166–196 |doi=10.3366/brs.2009.0004|ref=harv}}
* {{cite journal |title= Political Mobilization and the Underground Literature of the Quit India Movement, 1942–44| first = Paul R. | last= Greenough |journal= Modern Asian Studies |volume= 17|number= 3 | year=1983 |pages= 353–386 | jstor= 312297 | ref=harv}} Reprinted as {{cite journal | title= Political Mobilization and the Underground Literature of the Quit India Movement, 1942–44 |first= Paul R. |last= Greenough |journal= Social Scientist |volume= 27 |number= 7/8 |year= 1999 |pages= 11–47 |jstor=3518012 |ref=harv }}
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* {{cite book|last = Guz |first= Deborah |chapter=Population dynamics of famine in nineteenth century Punjab, 1896–97 and 1899–1900 |editor-first=Tim|editor-last= Dyson |title= India's Historical Demography: Studies in Famine, Disease and Society |pages= 197–221 |year = 1989|ref=harv}}
* {{cite book|last1=Trevaskis|first1=H. K.|year=1932|title=The Punjab Today: An Economic Survey of the Punjab in Recent Years (1890-1925)|location=Lahore|publisher =The Civil and Military gazette Press|volume=2|ref=harv}}
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* {{cite book |last1=Wavell |first1=Archibald Percival |authorlink1=Archibald Wavell, 1st Earl Wavell |editor-last=Moon |editor-first=Penderel |date=1973 |title=Wavell: The Viceroy's journal |publisher=Oxford University Press|ref=harv}}
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* {{cite journal |author=Indian Statistical Institute |title=Twelfth Annual Report: 1943-44 | journal=Sankhyā: The Indian Journal of Statistics (1933–1960) |volume=7 |number=1 |date =August 1945 |pages=107–120 |jstor= 25047830 | ref=harv}}
* {{cite journal |last1= Indra |first1= D. M. |last2= Buchignani |first2= N. |date=1997 |title= Rural landlessness, extended entitlements and inter-household relations in south Asia: A Bangladesh case |journal= The Journal of Peasant Studies |volume=24 |number=3 |pages= 25–64 |ref=harv |doi=10.1080/03066159708438642 |url=http://www.informaworld.com/openurl?genre=article&issn=0306%2d6150&volume=24&issue=3&spage=25}}
* {{cite book |last=Iqbal |first=Iftekhar |title=The Bengal Delta: Ecology, State and Social Change, 1840–1943 |url=http://books.google.com/books?id=gYslngEACAAJ |year=2010 |publisher=Palgrave Macmillan UK |isbn=978-0-230-23183-2 |ref=harv |doi=10.1057/9780230289819}}
* {{cite journal |last=Iqbal |first=Iftekhar |title= The Boat Denial Policy and the Great Bengal Famine |journal=Journal of the Asiatic Society of Bangladesh (Hum.) |volume=56 |issue=1–2 |pages=271–282 |year=2011 |ref=harv}}
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* {{cite journal|last=Klein |first=Ira |title=Death in India, 1871–1921|journal= The Journal of Asian Studies |volume=32 |number= 04 |date= 1973 |pages= 639–659|ref=harv}}
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* {{cite journal |last= Learmonth |first= A. T. A. |title= Some contrasts in the regional geography of malaria in India and Pakistan |journal= Transactions and Papers (Institute of British Geographers) |volume = 23 |year= 1957 |pages= 37–59 |ref=harv}}
* {{cite web|last= Lelyveld|first= Joseph | title= Did Churchill Let Them Starve? [Review of ''Churchill's Secret War: The British Empire and the Ravaging of India During World War II'']|date=23 December 2010|url=http://www.nybooks.com/articles/2010/12/23/did-churchill-let-them-starve/|website=[[The New York Review of Books]]|ref=harv}}
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* {{cite book|ref=harv |last=Lyons |first=Michael J.|title=World War II: A Short History |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=44mTDAAAQBAJ&pg=PT384|date= 2016|publisher=Taylor & Francis |isbn=978-1-315-50943-3}}
* {{cite book|ref=harv|last=MacMillan|first=Margaret|title=Women of the Raj: The Mothers, Wives, and Daughters of the British Empire in India|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=5Xh4m4Ljrn4C|year=2007|publisher=Random House Trade Paperbacks|isbn=978-0-8129-7639-7}}
* {{cite journal |last=Mahalanobis |first=P. C. |year=1944 |title =Organisation of Statistics in the Post-War Period |journal= Proceedings of the National Institute of Sciences of India, x P.71 |url=http://www.insa.nic.in/writereaddata/UpLoadedFiles/PINSA/Vol10_1944_1_Art18.pdf |format=PDF |ref=harv}}
* {{cite journal |last=Mahalanobis |first=P. C. |title=Recent Experiments in Statistical Sampling in the Indian Statistical Institute |journal=Journal of the Royal Statistical Society |volume=109 |number=4, Proceedings of a Meeting of the Royal Statistical Society held on July 16th, 1946 |pages=325–378 |authorlink=Prasanta Chandra Mahalanobis |year=1946 |ref=harv |jstor=2981330 }}
*{{cite journal |last1=Mahalanobis |first1=P. C. |last2=Mukherjea |first2=R.K. |last3=Ghosh |first3=A |title=A sample survey of after effects of Bengal famine of 1943 |journal= Sankhya |volume=7 |issue=4 |pp=337–400 |year=1946 |ref=harv}}
* {{cite thesis |type=Ph.D. |last=Maharatna |first=Arup |date=1992 |title=The demography of Indian famines: A historical perspective |publisher=London School of Economics and Political Science (United Kingdom) |url=http://etheses.lse.ac.uk/1279/|ref=harv}} Reprinted as {{cite book |last=Maharatna |first=Arup |title=The demography of famines: an Indian historical perspective |url=http://books.google.com/books?id=8dnsAAAAMAAJ |year=1996 |publisher=Oxford University Press |isbn=978-0-19-563711-3}}
* {{cite journal |last=Maharatna |first=Arup |date=1993 |title=Malaria Ecology, Relief Provision and Regional Variation in Mortality During the Bengal Famine of 1943–44.|journal =South Asia Research | volume= 13|number= 1|pages=1–26|ref=harv}}
* {{cite book |editor-last=Mansergh |editor-first=Nicholas |date=1971 |title=The Transfer of Power 1942-7 |volume=III, Reassertion of authority, Gandhi's fast and the succession to the Viceroyalty, 21&nbsp;September 1942–12&nbsp;June 1943 |publisher=H.M.S.O. |ref=harv|url=http://www.dli.ernet.in/bitstream/handle/2015/461499/Constitutional-Relations.pdf?sequence=2&isAllowed=y}}
* {{cite book |editor-last=Mansergh |editor-first=Nicholas |date=1973 |title=The Transfer of Power 1942-7 |volume=Volume IV: The Bengal Famine and the New Viceroyalty, 15&nbsp;June 1943–31&nbsp;August 1944 |publisher=H.M.S.O. |ref=harv}}
* {{cite book |last=Martin |first=O.M. |date=1945 |title=Memoirs of O.M. Martin |publisher=Centre of South Asian Studies |location=University of Cambridge |ref=harv}}
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* {{cite book |last=Mukerjee |first=Madhusree |authorlink=Madhusree Mukerjee |title=Churchill's Secret War: The British Empire and the Ravaging of India During World War II |url=http://books.google.com/books?id=gkbRA6NLpc8C |date= 2011 |publisher=ReadHowYouWant.com |isbn=978-1-4596-1363-8 |ref=harv}}
* {{cite journal | title=Bengal Famine of 1943: An Appraisal of the Famine Inquiry Commission | first=Madhusree |last=Mukerjee | journal=Economic and Political Weekly |date=2014 | volume=49 | number=11 |ref=harv|pages=71–5}}
* {{cite book | last=Mukerji|first=Karunamoy|title=Agriculture, famine and rehabilitation in South Asia: a regional approach|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=QNrsAAAAMAAJ| year=1965|location= Santiniketan | publisher=Visva-Bharati|ref=harv }}
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* {{cite book|ref=CITEREFS. N. Mukherjee1987|last=Mukherjee |first=S. N.|title=Sir William Jones: A Study in Eighteenth-century British Attitudes to India |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=Bhd-_1RE04MC&pg=PA29|date=January 1987|publisher=Cambridge University Press |isbn=978-0-86131-581-9}}
* {{cite journal |last=Mukherji |first=Saugata |date=1986 |title=Agrarian Class Formation in Modern Bengal, 1931–51 |journal= Economic and Political Weekly |pages=PE11-PE21+PE24-PE27 |jstor=4375249 |ref=harv}}
* {{cite book |last=Natarajan |first= M. S. |date=1946 |title= Some Aspects of the Indian War Economy |publisher= Padmaja Publications |ref=harv | url= http://staging.ilo.org/public/libdoc/historical/1901-2000/41540.pdf }}
* {{cite web |url=http://www.nytimes.com/ref/movies/1000best.html#D|title=The Best 1,000 Movies Ever Made | author= New York Times |publisher=The New York Times Company |date=April 29, 2003 |website= The New York Times |access-date=18 December 2016 |ref=harv}}
* {{cite journal |last1=Ó Gráda |first1=Cormac |title=Making Famine History |journal=Journal of Economic Literature |volume=45 |issue=1 |year=2007 |pages=5–38 |issn=0022-0515 |doi=10.1257/jel.45.1.5 |jstor=27646746 |ref=harv |authorlink=Cormac Ó Gráda}}{{Subscription required |via=[[JSTOR]]}}
* {{cite journal|last=Ó Gráda|first= Cormac |title=The ripple that drowns? Twentieth‐century famines in China and India as economic history |url=https://www.researchgate.net/profile/Cormac_Grada/publication/227680801_The_ripple_that_drowns_Twentiethcentury_famines_in_China_and_India_as_economic_history1/links/0f31752e12682301e2000000.pdf |journal= Economic History Review |volume=61 |number=S1 |date=2008 |pages= 5–37 |ref=harv}}
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* {{cite journal |last=Ó Gráda |first=Cormac |title= Revisiting the Bengal Famine of 1943–44 |journal=History Ireland |volume=18 |number=4, ''The Elephant and Partition: Ireland and India'' |year= 2010 |pages=36–39 |jstor=27823027 |ref=harv |authorlink=Cormac Ó Gráda}}
* {{ cite book |last=Ó Gráda |first=Cormac |title=Eating People Is Wrong, and Other Essays on Famine, Its Past, and Its Future |publisher=Princeton University Press |chapter='Sufficiency and Sufficiency and Sufficiency': Revisiting the Great Bengal Famine of 1943–44 <!--there are quotation marks in the title --> |via=[[De Gruyter]] |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=FICSBQAAQBAJ&pg=PA39|postscript=. An earlier and somewhat different version is available in a conference paper available at [http://www.ucd.ie/t4cms/wp10_21.pdf UCD Centrefor Economic Research (Working Paper Series)]. Accessed 9 February 2016 |isbn=9781400865819 |year=2015 |ref=harv}}.
* {{cite paper|last=Osmani |first= S R |year=1993 |title= The Entitlement Approach to Famine: An Assessment |publisher= UNU World Institute for Development Economics Research (UNU/WIDER) |location= Helsinki|url= https://www.wider.unu.edu/sites/default/files/WP107.pdf |ref=harv}}
* {{cite journal | last=Padel|first=Felix| title=Structural Violence and the Bengal Famine of 1943 |date= November 3, 2012 |volume= XLVII |number= 44 |journal = [[Economic & Political Weekly]] |ref=harv}}
* {{cite journal |last=Padmanabhan |first=S. Y. |date=1973 |title=The Great Bengal Famine |url= |journal=Annual Review of Phytopathology |publisher=Annual Reviews |volume=11 |issue= |pages=11–24 |doi=10.1146/annurev.py.11.090173.000303 |ref=harv}}
* {{cite book|ref=harv|last=Panigrahi |first=Devendra |title=India's Partition: The Story of Imperialism in Retreat |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=JJGRAgAAQBAJ&pg=PT419|date=19 August 2004 |publisher=Routledge |isbn=1-135-76812-9}}
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* {{wikicite |ref={{harvid |Pinnell |1944}} |reference= Pinnell, L. G., ''The Pinnell Archive on the Bengal Famine: Evidence to the Famine Inquiry Commission 1944''. British Library doc EUR Doc 911.}}
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* {{cite journal|last=Rangasami|first= Amrita |year=1985 |title=Failure of Exchange Entitlements Theory of Famine| journal= Economic & Political Weekly |volume= 20 |number= 42 |ref=harv}}
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* {{cite magazine|ref=harv|last=Rodger|first=George|title=75,000 Miles|magazine=[[Life (magazine)|Life]]|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=sk4EAAAAMBAJ&pg=PA67|date=10 August 1942|publisher=Time Inc|ISSN=0024-3019|pages=61–7}}
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* {{cite journal| last = Sen | first = Amartya |title= Famines as Failures of Exchange Entitlements | journal=Economic and Political Weekly |volume=11 |number=31/33, Special Number: Population and Poverty |date= 1976|pages= 1273+1275+1277+1279–1280 |jstor= 4364836 | ref= CITEREFA. Sen1976 }}
* {{cite journal |last= Sen |first=Amartya |date=1977 |title= Starvation and exchange entitlements: a general approach and its application to the Great Bengal Famine |journal=Cambridge Journal of Economics |volume=1 |issue = 1 |pages= 33–59 |ref=CITEREFA. Sen1977|authorlink=Amartya Sen}}
* {{cite book |last= Sen |first=Amartya |editor=Eric J. Hobsbawm |title=Peasants in history: essays in honour of Daniel Thorner | url=http://books.google.com/books?id=XscsAAAAMAAJ | year=1980 |publisher=Published for Sameeksha Trust by Oxford University Press |chapter=Famine Mortality: A Study of the Bengal Famine of 1943 |ref=CITEREFA. Sen1980}}
* {{cite book |last= Sen |first=Amartya |authorlink=Amartya Sen |title=Poverty and Famines: An Essay on Entitlement and Deprivation |url=http://books.google.com/books?id=FVC9eqGkMr8C |year=1981a |publisher=OUP Oxford |isbn=978-0-19-828463-5 |ref=CITEREFA. Sen1981a}}
* {{cite journal |last= Sen |first=Amartya |year=1981b |title=Ingredients of Famine Analysis: Availability and Entitlements |journal=The Quarterly Journal of Economics |volume=96 |issue=3 |pages=433–464 |jstor=1882681 |ref=CITEREFA. Sen1981b |pmid=11615084}} {{Subscription required |via=[[JSTOR]]}}
* {{cite book | first=Bhowani |last= Sen |title= Rural Bengal in Ruins |translator= N. Chakravarty |location = Bombay |publisher= People's Publishing House |year=1945 |ref=CITEREFB. Sen1945}}
* {{cite journal |last=Shears |first=P |date=1991 |title=Epidemiology and infection in famine and disasters |journal=Epidemiology and infection |volume= 107 |issue=2 |pages=241–251 |ref=harv |pmid=1936150 |pmc=2272069 |jstor=3864016}}
* {{cite book|ref=harv|last=Slim|first=Field-Marshal Viscount William|title=Defeat Into Victory: Battling Japan in Burma and India, 1942–1945|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=VXHtDAAAQBAJ&pg=PA132|date=9 February 2000|publisher=Cooper Square Press|isbn=978-1-4616-6093-4}}
* {{cite web|url=http://www.census.gov/geo/reference/state-area.html|title=State Area Measurements and Internal Point Coordinates|work=[[2010 United States Census]]|publisher=[[United States Census Bureau]]|date=February 11, 2011|accessdate=April 24, 2014|ref=CITEREFState Area2010}}
* {{cite book|ref=harv |last=Stevenson |first=Richard |title=Bengal Tiger and British Lion: An Account of the Bengal Famine of 1943|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=OC3FjTWOS28C&pg=PA118 |year=2005|publisher=iUniverse |isbn=978-0-595-36209-7}}
* {{cite journal |last=Tauger |first=Mark B. |date=2003 |title=Entitlement, Shortage and the 1943 Bengal Famine: Another Look |url=http://www.as.wvu.edu/history/Faculty/Tauger/Bengal%20enlarged.pdf |journal=Journal of Peasant Studies |publisher=Routledge |volume=31 |issue=1 |pages=45–72 |doi=10.1080/0306615031000169125 |ref=harv}}
* {{cite journal |last=Tauger |first=Mark B. |date=March 2009 |title=The Indian Famine Crises of World War II |url=http://www.euppublishing.com/doi/pdfplus/10.3366/brs.2009.0004 |journal=British Scholar |publisher=Edinburgh University Press |volume=1 |issue=2 |pages=166–196 |doi=10.3366/brs.2009.0004 |ref=harv}}
* {{cite web|last1= Tauger|first1= Mark B.|last2= Sen|first2= Amartya | title= The Truth About the Bengal Famine|date=24 March 2011|url=http://www.nybooks.com/articles/2011/03/24/truth-about-bengal-famine/|website=[[The New York Review of Books]]|ref=CITEREFTaugerSen2011a}}
* {{cite web|last1= Tauger|first1= Mark B.|last2= Sen|first2= Amartya | title= The Bengal Famine|date=12 May 2011|url=http://www.nybooks.com/articles/2011/05/12/bengal-famine/|website=[[The New York Review of Books]]|ref=CITEREFTaugerSen2011b}}
* {{cite journal | last = Tinker |first= Hugh |title= A forgotten long march: the Indian exodus from Burma, 1942| journal= Journal of Southeast Asian Studies|volume= 6 |number=01 |year=1975 | pages = 1–15 | doi=10.1017/S0022463400017069 |ref=harv}}
* {{cite book|ref=harv |last=Vernon |first=Jame s|title=Hunger: A Modern History|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=ZPtV4cGU4LIC|date=2009 |publisher=Harvard University Press |isbn=978-0-674-04467-8}}
*{{cite journal |title=Law, State and Agrarian Society in Colonial India |first=D. A. |last=Washbrook |journal=Modern Asian Studies |volume=15 |issue=3 |year=1981 |pages=649–721 |doi=10.1017/s0026749x00008714 |ref=harv}}
* {{cite journal |last1=Watkins |first1=Susan Cotts |last2=Menken |first2=Jane |title=Famines in Historical Perspective |journal=Population and Development Review |volume=11 |issue=4 |year=1985 |pages=647–675 |issn=0098-7921 |doi=10.2307/1973458 |ref=harv}}
* {{cite book |last1=Wavell |first1=Archibald Percival |authorlink1=Archibald Wavell, 1st Earl Wavell |editor-last=Moon |editor-first=Penderel |date=1973 |title=Wavell: The Viceroy's Journal |publisher=Oxford University Press |url=https://archive.org/stream/99999990080835WavellTheViceroysJournal/99999990080835%20-%20Wavell%20The%20Viceroys%20Journal_djvu.txt| ref=harv }}
* {{cite journal|last=Weigold |first= Auriol |title=Famine management: The Bengal famine (1942–1944) revisited |journal= South Asia: Journal of South Asian Studies |volume= 22 |number= 1 |date=1999 |pages= 63–77 |ref=harv |doi= 10.1080/00856409908723360}}
* {{cite book|ref=harv|last=Yong|first=Tan Tai|title=The Garrison State: Military, Government and Society in Colonial Punjab, 1849–1947|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=y_iHAwAAQBAJ|date=7 April 2005|publisher=SAGE Publications|isbn=978-81-321-0347-9}}
{{Refend}}
{{Refend}}

==Further reading==
===Further reading===
{{Refbegin |60em}}
{{Refbegin|60em}}
*{{citation|author=Arun Agrawal|editor=Christopher B. Barret (ed)|title=Food Security and Sociopolitical Stability|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=-nZoAgAAQBAJ|year=2013|publisher=Oxford University Press|location=Oxford|isbn=978-0-19-166870-8|pages=406–427|chapter=Food Security and Sociopolitical Stability in South Asia}}
* {{cite book |last=Aykroyd |first=Wallace Ruddell |date=1974 |title=The Conquest of Famine |location=London |publisher=Chatto and Windus}}
*{{Citation|last=Appadurai|first=Arjun|title=How Moral Is South Asia's Economy?—A Review of ''Rural Society in Southeast India''. by Kathleen Gough; ''Prosperity and Misery in Modern Bengal: The Famine of 1943–1944''. by Paul R. Greenough; ''Subject to Famine: Food Crises and Economic Change in Western India, 1860–1920''. by Michelle B. McAlpin; ''Why They Did Not Starve: Biocultural Adaptation in a South Indian Village''. by Morgan D. Maclachlan; ''Poverty and Famines: An Essay on Entitlement and Deprivation''. by Amartya Sen|journal=The Journal of Asian Studies|volume=43|issue=3|year= 1984|pages= 481–497|url=http://www.arjunappadurai.org/articles/Appadurai_How_Moral_Is_South_Asia_s_Economy.pdf}}
* {{cite book |last=Bedi |first=Freda |authorlink=Freda Bedi |date=1944 |title=Bengal Lamenting |location=Lahore |publisher=Lion Press}}
* {{Citation | last = Bhatia | first = B. M. | title = Famines in India: A Study in Some Aspects of the Economic History of India With Special Reference to Food Problem, 1860–1990 | year = 1991 | publisher = Stosius Inc/Advent Books Division. Pp. 383 | isbn = 81-220-0211-0}}
* {{cite book |last=Bhatia |first=B. M. |date=1991 |title=Famines in India: A Study in Some Aspects of the Economic History of India with Special Reference to Food Problem, 1860-1990 |location=Delhi |publisher=Konark Publishers |isbn=978-81-220-0211-9}}
* {{citation|last=Fay|first=Peter Ward|authorlink=Peter W. Fay|title=The Forgotten Army: India's Armed Struggle for Independence 1942–1945|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=ysA8RNT224oC|accessdate=10 November 2013|year=1995|publisher=University of Michigan Press|isbn=978-0-472-08342-8}}
* {{Citation | last = Ghose | first = Ajit Kumar | title = Food Supply and Starvation: A Study of Famines with Reference to the Indian Subcontinent | year = 1982 | journal = Oxford Economic Papers, New Series | volume = 34 | issue = 2 | pages = 368–389}}
* {{cite journal |last=Dyson |first=Tim |date=1991 |title=On the Demography of South Asian Famines, Part II |url= |journal=Population Studies |publisher=Routledge |volume=45 |issue=2 |pages=279–297 |doi=10.1080/0032472031000145446}}
* {{cite journal |last=Goswami |first=Omkar |authorlink=Omkar Goswami |date=December 1990 |title=The Bengal Famine of 1943: Re-examining the Data |url= |journal=The Indian Economic and Social History Review |publisher=SAGE |volume=27 |issue=4 |pages=445–463 |doi=10.1177/001946469002700403}}
* {{citation|last=McLynn|first=Frank|title=The Burma Campaign: Disaster Into Triumph, 1942–45|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=rNL8i2LU0hMC|accessdate=6 November 2013|year=2011|publisher=Yale University Press|location=New Haven|isbn=978-0-300-17162-4}}
* {{citation|last=Moreman|first=Tim|title=The Jungle, Japanese and the British Commonwealth Armies at War, 1941–45: Fighting Methods, Doctrine and Training for Jungle Warfare|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=bsoy_-Ep_0EC|accessdate=7 November 2013|year=2013|publisher=Routledge|isbn=978-1-135-76456-2}}
* {{cite book |last1=Iqbal |first1=Farrukh |last2=You |first2=Jong-Il |date=2001 |chapter=Ideas of Justice |title=Democracy, Market Economics, and Development: An Asian Perspective |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=8xETSA_BYXIC |location=Washington, D.C. |publisher=World Bank |pages=9–24 |isbn=978-0-8213-4862-8}}
* {{cite book |last=Keay |first=John |authorlink=John Keay |date=2000 |title=India: A History |publisher=Grove Press |isbn=978-0-8021-3797-5}}
* {{Citation | last = O Grada | first = Cormac| title = Markets and famines: A simple test with Indian data | journal = Economic Letters | volume = 57 | year = 1997 | pages = 241–244 | doi=10.1016/S0165-1765(97)00228-0}}
* {{cite journal |last=Mahalanobis|first=P. C.|title=Recent experiments in statistical sampling in the Indian Statistical Institute|journal= Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society, Part iv|pages=326–378|year= 1946}}
*{{citation|last=Roy|first=Tirthankar|title=Economic History of India, 1857–1947|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=3UncF_ZLMn0C|year=2011|publisher=Oxford University Press|isbn=978-0-19-807417-5}}
* {{cite journal |last=Mahalanobis|first=P. C.|title=Sample Surveys of Crop Yields in India|journal=Sankhya|volume=7|date=1946|postscript= . (1945-46)}}
*{{citation|last1=Chaudhary|first1=Latika|last2=Gupta|first2=Bishnupriya|last3=Roy|first3=Tirthankar|last4=Swamy|first4=Anand V.|editor=L. Chaudhary, B. Gupta, T. Roy, and A. Swamy (eds)|title=A New Economic History of Colonial India|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=IcpmCgAAQBAJ&pg=PA100|year=2015|publisher=Routledge|isbn=978-1-317-67433-7|pages=100–116|chapter=Agriculture in Colonial India}}
* {{cite book |last=Masefield |first=Geoffrey Bussell |date=1963 |title=Famine: Its Prevention and Relief |publisher=Oxford University Press}}
*{{citation|last=Roy|first=Tirthankar|title=Were Indian Famines 'Natural' OR 'Manmade'?|journal=LSE Working Papers|issue=243/2016|publisher = London School of Economics|year=2016}}
* {{cite book |last=Mukerjee |first=Madhusree |date=2010 |title=Churchill's Secret War: The British Empire and the Ravaging of India During World War II |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=Mir6v_OhJRUC |publisher=Basic Books |isbn=978-0-465-02260-1}}
* {{cite journal |last=Ó Gráda |first=Cormac |authorlink=Cormac Ó Gráda |date=March 2007 |title=Making Famine History |url= |journal=Journal of Economic Literature |publisher=American Economic Association |volume=45 |issue=1 |pages=5–38 |doi= |jstor=27646746}}
* {{cite book |last=Palekar |first=Shreekant A. |date=1962 |title=Real wages in India, 1939-1950 |location=Bombay |publisher=International Book House}}
{{Refend}}
{{Refend}}


==External links==
==External links==
{{commons category|Bengal famine 1943}}
* [http://www.saadigitalarchive.org/theme/remittances-relief Bengal Famine materials in the South Asian American Digital Archive (SAADA)]
* [http://www.saadigitalarchive.org/theme/remittances-relief Bengal Famine materials in the South Asian American Digital Archive (SAADA)]
* [http://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/handle/2027.42/86383/jsmuk_1.pdf Hungry Bengal&nbsp;– War, Famine, Riots, and the End of Empire 1939–1946]
* [http://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/handle/2027.42/86383/jsmuk_1.pdf Hungry Bengal - War, Famine, Riots, and the End of Empire 1939-1946]
* {{Cite web|url=http://www.open2.net/thingsweforgot/bengalfamine_programme.html|title= BBC/OU: The things we forgot to remember&nbsp;– The Bengal famine}}

{{Natural disasters in India}}
{{Natural disasters in India}}
{{World War II}}
{{World War II}}


{{Use British English|date=August 2010}}
{{Use British English|date=August 2010}}

{{DEFAULTSORT:Bengal Famine of 1943}}
[[:Category:Famines in India]]
[[:Category:History of Bengal]]
[[:Category:1943 in India]]
[[:Category:20th-century health disasters]]
[[:Category:Famines in Asia]]
[[:Category:1940s health disasters]]
[[:Category:British Empire in World War II]]


{{World War II}}
{{Use dmy dates|date=August 2010}}
{{Use dmy dates|date=August 2010}}
{{Use British English|date=August 2010}}


{{DEFAULTSORT:Bengal Famine of 1943}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:Bengal Famine Of 1943}}
[[Category:Famines in India]]
[[:Category:Famines in India]]
[[Category:History of Bengal]]
[[:Category:History of Bengal]]
[[Category:1943 in India]]
[[:Category:1943 in India]]

[[Category:20th-century health disasters]]
[[Category:Famines in Asia]]
[[cy:Newyn Bengal 1943]]
[[es:Hambruna de 1943 en Bengala]]
[[Category:1940s health disasters]]
[[fr:Famine au Bengale de 1943]]
[[Category:British Empire in World War II]]
[[id:Kelaparan di Benggala 1943]]
[[is:Hungursneyðin í Bengal 1943]]
[[ml:1943-ലെ ബംഗാൾ ക്ഷാമം]]
[[no:Hungersnøden i Bengal (1943)]]
[[nn:Hungersnauda i Bengal i 1943]]
[[pt:Fome de 1943 em Bengala]]
[[ru:Голод в Бенгалии (1943)]]
[[fi:Bengalin nälänhätä (1943)]]
[[sv:Den bengaliska svälten 1943]]
[[vi:Nạn đói Bengal năm 1943]]
[[zh:1943年孟加拉饥荒]]

Revision as of 17:37, 1 May 2017

Bengal famine of 1943
File:Statesman j.jpg
Image from the photo spread in The Statesman on 22 August, 1943 showing famine conditions in Calcutta. These photos altered world opinion.
CountryBritish India
LocationBengal
Period1942-1944
Total deathsInitial est.: 1.5 to 4 million

The Bengal famine of 1943 (Bengali: পঞ্চাশের মন্বন্তর) struck the Bengal Province of pre-partition India. Estimates are that between 1.5 and 4 million people died of starvation, malnutrition and disease, out of Bengal’s 60.3 million population, half of them dying from disease after food became available in December 1943[1] As in previous Bengal famines, [2] the highest mortality was not in previously very poor groups, but among artisans and small traders whose income vanished when people spent all they had on food and did not employ cobblers, carpenters, etc.[3] The food crisis increased from the beginning of 1943, becoming a serious famine from mid-1943. This ended with the harvesting of the December 1943 rice crop, though continuing famine relief was needed for the next few months.


Background

India, and Bengal in particular, had food shortages by the beginning of 1943 for the following reasons.

The food situation in India was tight from the beginning of the Second World War with a series of crop failures and localized famines which were dealt with successfully under the Indian Famine Codes.[4] In Bengal in 1940-41 there was a small scale famine although quick action by the authorities prevented widespread loss of life.[5] India as a whole faced a food shortage in 1943. After the Japanese occupation of Burma in March 1942, Bengal and the other parts of India and Ceylon which were normally supplied by Burma had to find food elsewhere. However, there were poor crops and famine situations in Cochin, Trivandrum and Bombay on the West coast and Madras, Orissa and Bengal in the East. It fell on the few surplus Provinces, mainly the Punjab, to supply the rest of India and Ceylon.[6] India as a whole had a deficit, but exported small quantities to meet the urgent needs of the Indian Army abroad, and those of Ceylon. India had imported 2 million tons of grain a year in previous years but there were only small net imports in 1943..

Bengal’s winter 1942 ‘aman’ rice crop, the most important one, was well below average.

In addition, Bengal was hit by a cyclone and three tidal waves on October 16, 1942. An area of 450 square miles were swept by tidal waves, 400 square miles affected by floods and 3200 square miles damaged by wind and torrential rain, destroying food crops. This killed 14,000[7] people. Reserve stocks in the hands of cultivators, consumers and dealers were destroyed.‘The homes, livelihood and property of nearly 2.5 million Bengalis were ruined or damaged.’[8] The districts affected were normally an important supplier of food to Greater Calcutta.[9]

The crop was then hit by a fungus infection, Helminthosporium oryzae, triggered by exceptional weather conditions: this hit the main December 1942 crop and caused serious falls in yield, as much as 50% to 90% in some varieties.[10]. This was believed to have had more serious effects on supply than the cyclone [11]. The only evidence by an expert in the subject concludes, 'The only other instance [of disease damage]that bears comparison in loss sustained by a food crop and the human calamity that followed in its wake is the Irish potato famine of 1845.'[12].

Bengal had been a food importer for the previous decade. Calcutta was normally supplied by Burma. The Allies had suffered a disastrous defeat at Singapore in 1942 against the Japanese military, which then occupied Burma. Burma was the world's largest exporter of rice in the inter-war period.[13] By 1940 15% of India's rice came from Burma.[14] From January 1942 until the end of the war, no Burmese rice reached India.

Carry-over stocks of grain, the stocks over and above the new crop, usually a protection against food shortages, were well below the normal two months' supply [15], because the 1941 crop was below average, because of the lack of imports from Burma, because of exports from Bengal to provinces with shortages, and because of compulsory purchases by government for military and civil service use in 1942.[16] Normally the carry-over would give extra supplies, cushioning the effect of a bad crop.

Bengal’s food needs rose at the same time from the influx of refugees from Burma: the number is not known but guesses from 100,000 to 500,000 were made. In addition, a substantial body of troops were stationed in Bengal to defend it against the expected invasion.

Some politicians, officials, and traders stated from late 1942 that these factors alone made a serious famine in 1943 inevitable. Other politicians and officials stated that in spite of these factors, Bengal had plenty of food available to feed its population, and even to export, and they acted as though this was certainly the case. It is not known what they really believed. The Famine Inquiry Commission showed in detail that the people who stated that Bengal had plenty of food dominated the political and administrative decision-making up to mid 1943 at least, losing influence as the evidence accumulated that their assumptions were contradicted by observations on the ground, as their policies proved ineffectual, and as it became clear that a major famine was in progress. It was not until the new Viceroy, Archibald Wavell, who was a successful general, took office in August 1943, that substantial quantities of grain started to move to Bengal: half a million tons of grain were eventually shipped there, but there was never enough food available to provide the minimum relief specified in the Famine Code.[17].[18]

The Famine Inquiry Commission was damning about the policies, actions and failures to act of the Government of India, of the Bengal Government, of other provincial governments and of the rice trade. It also called attention to the general corruption. Few governments have ever published such critical reports on their actions: the Government of India printed very few copies of the extremely embarassing report and suppressed the evidence that the report was based on. By 1945 it was generally agreed that governments, politicians, officials, firms and individuals were all, to some extent, responsible for the failure to deal with the famine, and were to some extent responsible for the fact that there was a famine at all.

Lack of Meaningful Statistics

Indian statisticians at the time considered that grossly unreliable statistics and gaps in the statistics were an important cause of the failure to recognize and tackle the famine.[19]. They launched a major programme to identify the weaknesses, and to remedy them. The consensus of this research programme was that the statistics available in 1942 and 1943 were meaningless and there was no possible statistical support for the view that Bengal had plenty of food, and no reason to reject or accept estimates that the rice crop was half to two thirds of the average. There was no statistical support for the view that India needed imports, let alone statistics of the imports required.

It was known by administrators and statisticians [20] well before the famine that India’s agricultural production statistics were ‘not merely guesses, “but frequently demonstrably absurd guesses”',[21] ‘entirely untrustworthy’,[22] ‘useless for any purpose’[23] [24] and that there were ‘no meaningful production statistics’.[25][26] [27] Senior officers then changed the guessed or calculated statistics according to their whim: about half the estimates were adjusted and adjustments of 30-40 per cent were common; changes of 60-70 per cent were not unknown.[28] It was suggested that 1942 estimates were adjusted for political reasons. [29] Bengal’s agricultural statistics were particularly bad.[30]

There were no crop estimates, just crop forecasts, which are necessarily less accurate and less reliable. In 1942, a revenue officer would guess at the area planted and the probable yield for a 750,000 acre (310,000 ha) area to give a crop forecast for that area. These forecasts were aggregated and "adjusted" by successive levels of officials.[31] There were no measures of actual yields or area. Nobody had any experience of this type of fungus outbreak, so they had no idea of how much of the crop was affected, nor of the loss in yield. Enumerators were instructed to ignore areas that were damaged by flood, disease, wind, etc, and only record undamaged crops when estimating average yield[32] creating a particularly serious overestimate for the December 1942 crop when disease, flood and wind were critical.

The official Third Crop Forecast was for a crop 1.2m tons lower than the ten year average of 6.2m tons.[33] Others believed that these crop forecasts were wrong. The Director of Agriculture had believed even before the cyclone and the fungus outbreak that the official forecast overstated actual expected production by a quarter[33], which implies a crop a third below the average, ignoring the effect of the cyclone and the fungus. Traders acted on their belief that there was a serious shortage and made a lot of money. They warned the Bengal Government of a famine situation.[34] These estimates all indicated that a famine was imminent.

Subsequent research done by the Indian Statistical Institute using statistically valid samples and crop cutting rather than eye estimate of yield showed large errors in the official crop forecasts, with survey estimates being between 47% and 153% of the official estimate. The discrepancies also varied from year to year, with the sample estimate of the jute crop being 2.6% above the official estimate in 1941 and 52.6% above it in 1946.[35] This rules out analysis based on the level of the production forecast and, in particular, on year to year differences in production forecasts.

The production forecasts did not cover any foods apart from rice, though these amounted to a third of calories consumed in normal years.

There were no figures for food going into and out of Bengal. There are some figures on deliveries of rice and wheat to Calcutta by rail and by steamer, but none on exports and imports by Bengal as a whole – most trade being informal, by country boat.

It was not known how many people had to be fed. Censuses of populations in poor countries at the time were known to be to be unreliable at best, and the 1941 Indian Census was particularly bad.[36] There were no statistics on the number of refugees from Burma, nor the refugees from Bengal to other parts of India, escaping the threat of invasion, bombing and famine.


Why India did not act

India had suffered frequent famine situations because of the impact of a variable climate, the many different ecological zones, and the agricultural systems of the time. For the previous sixty years provincial governments had handled these efficiently and routinely using the Indian Famine Codes[37], first ensuring that there was adequate food available in the affected areas, then making it available to those who could not afford to buy it, by food for work and by giving rations to the poor. Neither of these policies was carried out in Bengal in 1943 though they were used effectively in the Bombay Presidency and Travanacore for instance: ‘For the first time in the long history of famine administration in India since 1860, an attempt was made by the Government to meet the Bengal crisis in 1943 by control of prices and regulation of trade in foodgrains.[38]

The Government of India had the task of ensuring that India as a whole had enough food, and then coordinating the action of the different provinces and princely states so that those with deficits got enough food. The responsibility for famine relief lay firmly with the democratically elected government of Bengal, and, under the Government of India Act, the Government of India could not give orders on this.

It was widely believed by politicians, the Government of India, the Government of Bengal, other provincial governments, some administrators, some public servants and some of the general public that Bengal had plenty of food available and food shortages were due to hoarding, speculation and inflation and so should be dealt with administratively, not by providing starving people in Bengal with food.[39] ‘And at the Third Food Conference in Delhi on the 5th to the 8th July, … the suggestion that “the only reason why people are starving in Bengal is that there is hoarding” was greeted at the Conference by the other Provinces with applause.’ [40] Similarly, some officials in the Government of India refused to accept the evidence on the ground, preferring their own idiosyncratic interpretations of the market. The Viceroy wrote to Governor of Bengal in June 1943, when the famine was well underway, ‘I understand that Christie. (ICS; Deputy Secretary, Food Department, Government of India), has been in Calcutta recently and that he came away with a feeling of very cautious optimism.[41] ‘ . . . as late as November 1943, ‘The Government of India would admit no intrinsic shortage in Bengal in the Spring of 1943 and, even in November, at the height of the famine, the Director-General of Food in the Council of State said that “the major trouble in Bengal has been not so much an intrinsic shortage of essential foodgrains as a breakdown of public confidence.’ [42] On 19 October 1943, when the famine was serious, the new Viceroy, Wavell, noted in his journal “On the food situation Linlithgow [The outgoing Viceroy] says chief factor morale.”[43]

In provinces with grain surpluses there was a belief among many politicians, public servants, district officials and the public that Bengal had enough food. Possibly more important was the general belief that farmers were being asked to sell their grain below the market price, so that it could be sent to Bengal where it would be sold cheaply to merchants who would make fantastic black market profits from it.[44] Both sets of beliefs made it politically difficult for an elected Provincial government to export. The surplus provinces had committed themselves to send ‘an agreed total of nearly 370,000 tons of rice to Bengal over a period to be reckoned from December 1942. Actually, in the 7 months December 1942 to June 1943 only a little over 44,000 tons reached Bengal’, a little over a tenth of the agreed amount.[45]

In 1942, with the permission of the central government, trade barriers between provinces were introduced by the democratically elected Provincial governments. The politicians and civil servants of surplus provinces like the Punjab introduced regulations to prevent grain leaving their provinces for the famine areas of Bengal, Madras and Cochin. There was the desire to see that, first, local populations and, second, the populations of neighbouring provinces were well fed, partly to prevent civil unrest. Politicians and officials got power and patronage, and the ability to extract bribes for shipping permits. Marketing and transaction costs rose sharply. Traders could not get grain to Bengal, however profitable it might be.

In December 1942 Calcutta,’s grain supplies were very small and a major but unsuccessful campaign was launched to obtain grain from Bengal.[46] ‘There is no doubt that the stocks in Calcutta at the beginning of the year [1943] were being consumed far more rapidly than they were being replaced. By the beginning of March, stocks were down to such a low level that ilooked as if the city must starve within a fortnight unless large supplies arrived quickly.’ .[47] That is to say 2 to 4 million urban people in the second biggest city in the Empire, faced imminent famine. The provinces with grain surpluses were prevailed upon to supply enough grain to feed Calcutta throughout the famine year, though not the rest of Bengal.[48]

The Government of India realized a mistake had been made and decreed a return to free trade. The surplus Provinces refused. “The Punjab representative at the Fourth Food Conference emphasized that some 50 per cent of the combatant ranks of the Indian Army at that time were drawn from the farming classes of the Punjab and that ‘grave administrative and political repercussions; would follow if rationing, statutory price control and requisition of food grains were put into force.”[49]

The Government of India Act 1935 had removed most of the Government of India’s authority over the Provinces, so even when the Government of India decreed that there should be free trade in grain, politicians, civil servants, local government officers and police obstructed the movement of grain to famine areas.[50] ‘But men like Bhai Permanand say that though many traders want to export food [to Bengal] the Punjab Government would not give them permits. He testified to large quantities of undisposed-of rice being in the Punjab’[51]

In some cases Provinces seized grain in transit from other Provinces to Bengal.[52]

Most contemporary commentators thought the Hindu-Muslim conflict an important factor, both within Bengal and in India generally.[53] It was even claimed by a leading politician that ‘Bengal had been deliberately starved out by other provinces’ which refused to permit the export of grain.[54]

What the Bengal Government did and did not do

It was generally agreed that in 1943 the Bengal Government failed completely in its remit of famine relief. It did not declare a famine or institute relief in the areas hit by the cyclone and tidal waves, though the Bengal Famine Code[55] stated that relief should commence instantly. Indeed, it did not declare an official famine situation even after the much wider scale of the famine became apparent, initially because of a belief that it was unnecessary, later on the grounds that there was not enough food available to give the rations laid down in the Bengal Famine Code. Only in August, nine months after the cyclone, was a committee set up to tackle the famine on orthodox lines and action started on setting up famine relief systems.[56] The Bengal Government failed to implement the rationing programme recommended by the Government of India in 1942 until 1944 though it had proved very successful in Bombay. The supporters of the two democratically elected Bengal Governments involved, that of A. K. Fazlul Huq (December 1941 to March 1943) and of Khawaja Nazimuddin's Muslim League (April 1943 to March 1945) each held the other government responsible for the catastrophe, because of its inaction and corruption.[57] Both of these clashed with the Governor of Bengal, John Herbert, who, it has been claimed, bore as much of the responsibility.[58]

At one stage in 1943 the Government of Bengal limited relief to save money, though the money could have been obtained.[59]

Hoarding

Until two thirds of the way through the famine year at least, the Government of Bengal acted on the premise that there was plenty of food available but hoarding, speculation and inflation meant that it was not put on the market for consumers to buy. The Government of India civil supplies officer in Bengal[60], the Bengal civil supplies officer[61] and Bengali district officers managing relief[62] all report trying one government policy addressing it, then when it failed switching to another then switching back, each time finding that the hidden supplies did not materialize, if they existed.

The Government of Bengal claimed initially that the food shortages evident from December 1942 were due to hoarding. Hoarding previous to the famine year provided valuable food security, but it was believed in Delhi that there was an increase in these hoards after the December 1942 crop.[63] No evidence on hoarding was ever produced nor was there discussion of how many people could afford to buy grain to store, or who had the space to store it. For hoarding to have created the amount of hunger and death recorded if there had, indeed, been adequate supplies, it would have been necessary that the richest 10% of Bengal's population, the only ones who could afford it, to lay in two years' rice supply for themselves, in addition to the stocks accumulated in the previous two years, and to keep it in stock until the end of the war, while their neighbours starved.[64]

This belief developed into the belief that Bengal had enough rice to feed everybody, if the hoarded stocks were released, which strongly influenced the policies advocated by politicians and public servants and the actions and failures to act of the Government of India and of provincial governments, including the Government of Bengal.[65] There was a large propaganda campaign telling the public that Bengal had plenty of food and hoarding was unnecessary. In April and May there was a propaganda drive to convince the population that the high prices were not justified by the any shortages, the goal being that the propaganda would induce hoarders[66] to sell their stocks. When these propaganda drives failed, there was a drive to locate hoarded stocks. H.S.Suhawardy, Bengal’s Minister of Civil Supplies from April 24, 1943, announced that there was no shortage of rice in Bengal and introduced a policy of intimidating ‘hoarders’: this caused looting, extortion and corruption but did not increase the amount of food on the market.[67] When these drives continually failed to locate large stocks, the government realized that the scale of the loss in supply was larger than they had initially believed.[68]


Speculation

There was a widespread claim that there was no shortage really, that there was plenty of rice available but traders were stockpiling it to make speculative profits[69]. There was no evidence for this: there were no statistics on public or private stocks of food, and evidence produced later contradicted the belief.[70]

Much of the policy of the Bengal Government and the Government of India was based on this belief: repeated attempts were made to ‘break the Calcutta market’ by releasing quantities of grain onto it, in the belief that this would either bring prices down, or frighten the speculators into releasing stocks.[71] The quantities released at any time were substantial in that they were approximately a month to two month’s supply for Calcutta city, and these quantities were expected to have an immediate impact if, indeed, Bengal had plenty of grain. They had no impact even though 600,000 tons of grain were imported over the year.

New evidence emerged that the traders were not in fact stockpiling large quantities: The officials responsible for food used a wide range of other estimates, cross-checking them against observable facts.[72] They were able to make use of information obtained from mail censorship, police, reports from Special Branch, informers, other departments etc. They also used trade estimates. When they raided stores looking for speculative stocks, it was found that the stores contained significantly smaller amounts than they had in normal years. [73] This was confirmed when there was no release the one to two million of tons of surplus stocks claimed to exist when the famine ended. Only if speculators had stored more than usual, and not released it during the famine year, would they have increased the number of deaths: there is ample evidence that they did not.[74].

Such claims of speculation causing famine have been ridiculed by economists since Adam Smith.

Inflation

It was widely claimed that wartime inflation caused the famine. The Working Class Cost of Living Index and the General Index of Wholesale Prices rising by an average of 17% per year from the outbreak of war to the end of 1945.[75] It was not explained why such a modest wartime inflation should cause famine when much higher rates in many other countries over the previous thirty years had not (not even the hyperinflations in Austria and Germany with inflation rates more than 80 times as high), nor was any economic model produced to show how printing money in Delhi could have had this effect on the rural population of certain districts of Bengal, and only on them.

Similarly, it was claimed, without evidence or calculation, that the 1% to 2% of the Bengal population whose purchasing power increased because of the wartime inflation and war expenditure [76] ate so much more than usual that two thirds of the population went hungry – 10 % very hungry indeed, [77] with half of this 10% dying of starvation and disease. A quick calculation would have shown that this explanation requires that on 1st November 1942 the small group with increased purchasing power started eating 12 to 46 times more than usual per head and that they reverted to normal consumption in December 1943.[78]

Corruption

Many contemporary accounts by public servants, politicians and the public, people from different communities, refer to massive corruption by public servants, politicians and trading companies, particularly in Bengal. Most obvious was the fact that the Bengal Government had made the firm of a politician, M.M. Ispahani – a personal friend of H.S. Suhrawardy, the Minister for Civil Supplies, who was responsible for famine relief – the only permitted importer of grain. [79] Abul Mansur Ahmed, a member of coalition governments with each of the First Ministers at different times, gave an insider’s view on this.[80] It was widely believed in Bengal, as in the grain surplus provinces, that he imported at a below-market price, and sold on to other merchants at a price reflecting the black market price they expected to make.[81] B.R. Sen, later Director General of The Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations, was a district officer working in the countryside trying to get grain for relief in 1943 and blamed Suhrawardy for not controlling this corruption. In order to maximize revenue from this it was in the importer’s interest to restrict imports. Abul Mansur Ahmed also noted that ‘the rice dealers . . . and the local politicians became involved in profiteering during the famine . . . During relief work volunteers and village headmen kept a major share of relief goods for their own consumption or for sale in the blackmarket.’ [82]

Greenough’s social analysis of the famine concludes that ‘At the humbler levels of land-holding and household, the famine began for most Bengalis when resource-commanding and authoritative males abandoned their clients and dependents. . . In a social system largely constructed around bonds of obligation between superior providors and inferior claimants, abandonment was tantamount to social collapse.’ [83] shows that if it is assumed that Bengal had plenty of food it means that some cultivators and landlords ate far more than in normal years and increased personal security stocks (hoarding) with the result that far less rice was on the market than in 1941. People were willing to eat more than normal and keep rice off the market while their neighbours starved and many died because of the breakdown of traditional rural Bengali obligations of economic help, charity and patronage. He also sets out the evidence on corruption and political inaction. The famine 'was shaped by purposeful human conduct, and that the chief actors were - literally - Bengali men. . .'[84]


The impact of the army

The army saw the famine as a very serious indeed - threatening civil disturbances, disaffection among soldiers whose families were starving, hampering industrial production, and threatening the army supply chain - and put strong pressure on the civil powers to take action. There were extreme submissions to the British War Cabinet by the Viceroy, Field Marshall Wavell, by Auchinleck, the Commander in Chief, India [85] Amery, the Secretary of State for India, [86] and the Chiefs of Imperial General Staff informed the British War Cabinet that ‘unless appropriate help was received, the Government of India could not be responsible for the continuing stability of India, nor for her capacity to serve as a base against Japan next year.’[87]

In August the new Viceroy, Field Marshall Wavell, got permission from the Bengal Government to send in the army to distribute food to the rural areas, which had been ignored.

However, the presence of the military in Bengal was in itself one cause of the famine. Large numbers of troops were there as a Japanese invasion was believed to be imminent. Up to 200,000 tons of grain was imported to feed them. [88] This would imply that the army bought little local grain, There were people, however, who thought that the army acted quite independently of the civil supply officers and bought large quantities of grain which they put in store, pushing up prices and reducing market supply.[89] There is no hard evidence available. The military certainly bought lots of local fish, meat, eggs, milk and vegetables, which normally provided up to a third of calories for local populations.[90] In 1942 the army made compulsory purchases of food, and seized 40,000 tons of rice in areas likely to be the first to be invaded.

The army is believed to have requisitioned 175,000 acres, some for fresh vegetable production (which would, if anything, have increased food production in the province) but most for airstrips and camps, driving about 150,000 to 180000 farmers off their land. [91] This may have reduced rice output by the equivalent of 30,000 to 50,000 tons. Compensation for the loss of land was inadequate[92]

In the middle of 1942 a scorched earth policy was hastily implemented in the Chittagong region, nearest the Burmese border, to prevent access to supplies by the Japanese in case of an invasion. In particular, the Army confiscated many boats, fearing that the Japanese would commandeer them to speed an advance into India. The boats had been used for fishing and to take goods to market so there was some loss of food in this area.[93] Braund[94] argued that this was more serious: the bulk of trade within Bengal and from Bengal to the rest of India was by these river boats so the economy would come to a halt without them, and he fought successfully against the Army’s initial proposal for a much larger seizure of boats. Even the limited seizure damaged coastal trade and reduced fish supplies, and made relief very difficult in these areas though there was little food available for relief. However, it has been argued that the lack of boats made it impossible for landlords, moneylenders and traders to sell large quantities of the grain produced to feed the cities, and so saved these production areas from famine.[95]

The compensation paid to the land owners and boat owners was inadequate and many of them died during the famine. Many of the male inhabitants into the Military Labour Corps, where at least they received rations, but the break-up of families left many children and dependents to beg or to starve.[96]


Supplies from other countries

Even though India had imported two million tons of grain in previous years, some people believed that India could have managed this food crisis without substantial imports either because there was plenty of food available, or because the famine could have been managed with careful management if the surplus provinces had supplied grain to the starving.[97] Others believed that India had millions of tons less grain than it needed. There are and were no meaningful statistics. However substantial imports in 1943 would at the least have made it much easier to handle the situation.

The main constraint was shipping. Any imports would have had to come from Australia, North America or South America. The Battle of the Atlantic was at its peak from mid 1942 to mid 1943, with submarine wolf packs sinking so many ships that shipping could not be spared for India. The main constraint was shipping. The Battle of the Atlantic was at its peak from mid-1942 to mid-1943, with submarine wolf packs sinking so many ships that the Allies were on the verge of defeat, so shipping could not be spared for shipping from America to India.[A] By June or July 1943 it was clear that the Allies had won the battle and more ships were being built than were being sunk.

The Government of India asked for grain supplies in December 1942, but were told that shipping was not available – even the military were getting only enough for a third of their urgent requirements.[100] It was only after the most extreme representations of the incoming Viceroy, the Commander in Chief, India, the Secretary of State for India and the Chiefs of Imperial General Staff - stating that famine conditions existed, that industrial production was being hampered, that civil disturbances could break out distracting the army, and that there would be problems with the army if their families were starving[101]that in August 1943 the British War Cabinet agreed to supply India with 200,000 tons of grain, though India had imported two million tons a year in previous years when there was no obvious food crisis.[102]

It is questionable whether substantial quantities of grain could have been delivered in time to prevent most deaths at this late stage: apart from the usual delays in assembling and shipping, and the long shipping route, submarines were causing serious losses. The railways were overstretched, with men and equipment sent to war zones, most of the capacity devoted to supplying the Burma front and US and Chinese forces,[103] sabotage by Congress, major flood damage to the main rail routes etc. And they were not geared to shipping large quantities of bulk goods. Distributing the food to the famine areas was extremely difficult and time consuming, especially during the monsoon, even with Army help.

Some commentators have suggested that Churchill’s personal hostility to Indian politicians and to the idea of Indian independence was a key factor in the delay in releasing shipping to send food to India.[104] [105] [106]


Revisionists

The orthodox explanation of the famine, from the Famine Inquiry Commission of 1945 on, was that the Indian provincial and national governments and the British government chose to believe, without evidence and in denial of the evidence, that Bengal had plenty of food available, and so they provided far less food, and far less relief in the form of rations, soup kitchens, food for work etc. than was needed, and many people died. Amartya Sen (1976) challenged this orthodoxy, reviving the claim that there was no shortage of food in Bengal and that the famine was caused by inflation, with those benefiting from inflation eating more and leaving less for the rest of the population. Sen claimed that there was in fact a greater supply in 1943 than in 1941, when there was no famine. This is in fact the explanation that that the Government of India, the Bengal Government and other governments had believed and acted on in most of 1943.[107]

Some of the dispute is based on matters of fact. Bowbrick claims that Sen misrepresents the facts in his sources in more than thirty key instances[108] and Tauger makes similar claims on a different set of statements by Sen.[109] Nolan[110] Goswami[111]and Dyson and Maharatna[112] show misrepresentation too. Sen has not defended himself against these criticisms.

Sen bases his argument entirely on small differences in one of the series of crop forecasts over ten years. He claims these forecasts are extremely accurate, but contemporary civil servants and statisticians considered the forecasts meaningless even before they were ‘adjusted’ by civil servants and politicians.[113] .

There is also dispute based on what the theories explain. Sen does not explain why the wartime inflation and boom did not cause famine in other war years, or in other greater inflations and hyperinflations; nor why the famine lasted only between one poor harvest and the next good one; nor why the Bengal Government’s policy and the policy of other governments - which was based on the same diagnosis as his own - did not prevent the famine; nor how millions of tons of hidden grain vanished in thin air; nor does he address the claim that physically impossible for people to eat the quantity of food needed to cause a famine in the way Sen describes, eating two to four-week’s normal food supply each day.[108]. The Famine Inquiry Commission provides full explanations.

News reports, literature, other media The People's War, an organ of the Communist Party of India, published graphic photos of the famine by Sunil Janah.

Calcutta's two leading English-language newspapers were The Statesman (at that time a British-owned newspaper)[75][M] and Amrita Bazar Patrika. In the early months of the famine, government applied pressure on newspapers to "calm public fears about the food supply"[76] and follow the official stance that there was no rice shortage. This effort had some success; The Statesman, for example, initially published editorials asserting that the famine was due solely to speculation and hoarding, while "berating local traders and producers, and praising ministerial efforts."[76][N] News of the famine was also subject to strict war-time censorship – even use of the word "famine" was prohibited[77] – leading The Statesman later to remark that the UK government "seems virtually to have withheld from the British public knowledge that there was famine in Bengal at all"[78]

Beginning in mid-July 1943 and even more so that August, however, these two began to publish detailed and increasingly critical accounts of the depth and scope of the famine, its impact on society, and the nature of British, Hindu and Muslim political responses.[79] For example, a headline in Amrita Bazar Patrika that month warned "The Famine conditions of 1770 are already upon us,"[80] alluding to an earlier Bengal famine that caused the deaths of ten million. It also published an editorial cartoon showing starving peasants gazing at distant international food aid ships with the caption "A Mirage! A Mirage!"[81] The Statesman's reportage and commentary were similarly pointed, as for example when in late July it published accounts of individuals starving to death in the streets of Calcutta,[77] and in later months opined that the famine was "man-made".[82]

A turning point in news coverage regarding the famine came on 22 August, 1943, when The Statesman published a series of graphic photographs of the starvation and suffering. These "gruesome" images greatly affected both domestic and international perceptions and sparked an international media frenzy.[84] Not only was the rest of the world unaware of the famine in Bengal before The Statesman's photos, many even in India itself had little idea of the scope of social destruction.[85] The photos of human suffering under British rule had a profound psychological effect, and marked "for many, the beginning of the end of colonial rule".[86] The decision by editor Ian Stephens to publish the photos and adopt a defiant editorial stance won accolades from many (the Famine Inquiry Commission)[87] has been described as "a singular act of journalistic courage and conscientiousness, without which many more lives would have surely been lost".[84] They also spurred Amrita Bazar Patrika and the Communist Party's organ The People's War to publish similar images; the latter would make photographer Sunil Janah famous.[88]

A contemporary sketch book of iconic scenes of famine victims, Hungry Bengal: a tour through Midnapur District in November, 1943 by Chittaprosad was immediately banned by the British and 5000 copies were seized and destroyed.[89] One copy was hidden by Chittaprosad's family and is now in the possession of the Delhi Art Gallery. The Delhi Art Gallery showcased Chittaprosad's Famine Series in an exhibition in September 2011.[90]

The novel has been dealt with in celebrated novels and films. Asani Sanket by Bibhutibhushan Bandyopadhyay is a fictional account of a young doctor and his wife in rural Bengal during the 1943 famine. The book was adapted into a film of the same name (English title: Distant Thunder) by celebrated director Satyajit Ray in 1973. The film features in "The New York Times Guide to the Best 1,000 Movies Ever Made".[91] Also well-known are So Many Hungers! (1947) by Bhabani Bhattacharya, and Aakaaler Sandhane by Amalendu Chakraborty, (cinematised in 1980 by Mrinal Sen).

A Bengali play, with this famine as the main theme in it's plot, 'Nemesis' was written by Natyaguru Nurul Momen. Another Bengali play about the famine, Nabanna was written by Bijon Bhattacharya and staged by Indian People's Theatre Association (IPTA) in 1944 under the direction of Sombhu Mitra and later in 1948, by Bohurupee under the direction of Kumar Roy. IPTA also took the play to several parts of the country and collected funds for famine relief in rural Bengal.[92]

See also

  • Famine in India
  • List of famines
  • 2008 global rice shortage
  • "BBC/OU: The things we forgot to remember - The Bengal famine".

Footnotes

Citations

  1. ^ See Dyson and Maharatna (1991) for a review of the data and the various estimates made.
  2. ^ Frere (1874); Hunter (1873); Bengal Administration (1897).
  3. ^ Mahalanobis,Mukkerjee, and Ghosh, (1946).
  4. ^ Knight, 1954; Tauger, 2009, p.186
  5. ^ Tauger, 2009, p.187
  6. ^ Famine Inquiry Commission (1945a), (1945b). Knight (1954) gives a contemporary account of the Indian situation. Tauger (2006,(2009) covers both India and the region.
  7. ^ Mansergh 1971, p. 357; Famine Inquiry Commission 1945a, pp. 32, 65, 66, 236.
  8. ^ Greenough 1982, pp. 93–96.
  9. ^ (Greenough,(1982, Famine Inquiry Commission(1945), Braund(1944)
  10. ^ Padmanabhan (1973), pp. 11-26.; Tauger 2006; Tauger 2009.
  11. ^ Braund 1944, quotes the February 1943 evidence to the Second Food Conference on this. See also Famine Inquiry Commission 1945a p32.
  12. ^ Padmanabhan (1973), p11.
  13. ^ Nicholas Tarling (Ed.) The Cambridge History of SouthEast Asia Vol.II Part 1 pp139-40
  14. ^ Bayly and Harper (2004), p.284
  15. ^ Greenough, (1982,) Government of India, (1942)
  16. ^ Famine Inquiry Commission 1945a esp. pp 179-200
  17. ^ Famine Inquiry Commission 1945a.
  18. ^ Famine Inquiry Commission 1945a, pp. 198–199.
  19. ^ (Mahalanobis (1944), (Panse,(1954)
  20. ^ See Dewey (1978) for a review.
  21. ^ Report of the Royal Commission on Agriculture in India, Parliamentary Papers (1928) VIII, P.605.
  22. ^ Mahalanobis (1944) p.77
  23. ^ Bowley & Robertson (1934) P.35; Bengal Land Revenue Commission (1940) vol I p76
  24. ^ Mahalanobis (1944) writing in 1943.
  25. ^ Document no. 158 in Mansergh, 1973)’
  26. ^ Stuart (1919)
  27. ^ e.g. Trevaskis, (1931) p.200; Government of India, (1915), Revenue Proceedings IR-Ag, March, 12-24; Panse (1954) p.26.
  28. ^ Panse (1954) p.26; Dewey (1978) p305, citing Noyce (1920)
  29. ^ Mahalanobis (1944) writing in 1943.
  30. ^ Bengal did not need accurate figures for its land tax, as the Permanent Settlement fixed land tax, while in other provinces tax was based on planted area and yield, which revenue officers had to calculate each year. See Dewey (1978)
  31. ^ Famine Inquiry Commission (1945), pp. 44, 45
  32. ^ Department of Agriculture, Bengal, (1922)
  33. ^ a b Mahalanobis (1944) p71
  34. ^ Famine Inquiry Commission 1945a p33; Bhatia (1967) p35
  35. ^ Desai (1953 p8), Dewey (1978 p311) quoting the Imperial Council of Agricultural Research (1950). Panse (1954 p27) points out that experience shows that 'eye estimation makes for a general tonng down of fluctuations' which would help explain why the degree of shortfall was not appreciated.
  36. ^ Mahalanobis (1944) p69; Dyson and Maharatna. (1991)
  37. ^ Brennan, (1984); Bengal Government (1913, 1941)
  38. ^ (Bhatia, 1967) p 324
  39. ^ (Famine Inquiry Commission(1945)
  40. ^ Braund, (1944) p31, Knight, (1954)
  41. ^ June 16 1943, Mansergh 102 IV p8
  42. ^ Braund, 1944 p31, 18
  43. ^ Moon, 1973 p34
  44. ^ Knight, (1954)
  45. ^ Mansergh, (1973) p43; Famine Inquiry Commission p51
  46. ^ Famine Inquiry Commission, 1945a pp36-39.
  47. ^ Famine Inquiry Commission, 1945a p 35.
  48. ^ Famine Inquiry Commission, 1945a.
  49. ^ Knight p 158
  50. ^ Famine Inquiry Commission 1945a p57, 93
  51. ^ Chandra, Mahesh, (August 1943) quoted in Stephens (1966) p181.
  52. ^ Braund p12 (citing Government of India letter to all Provinces dated the 13th February, 1943.)
  53. ^ Dutt, 1944; Ghosh, 1944; NSR Rajan 1944; Mansergh vol III 1971; Mansergh vol IV, 1973 p 358; Famine Inquiry Commission 1945a p84
  54. ^ Moon (1973) p 239)
  55. ^ Bengal Government (1913, 1941)
  56. ^ Stevenson, (2005
  57. ^ Sen, Shila 1976, pp. 174, 175.
  58. ^ Stevenson, (2005) p110.
  59. ^ Famine Inquiry Commission 1945a, pp. 61, 99, 104, 105.
  60. ^ Braund (1944)
  61. ^ Pinnell, (1944)
  62. ^ see Brennan, (1988)
  63. ^ Mansergh Dec 1942. This distinction between accumulated food security stocks and extra stocks appears to have been lost in all later discussion. (Bowbrick 1986)
  64. ^ (Bowbrick, A refutation of Professor Sen’s theory of famines,1986)
  65. ^ Famine Inquiry Commission(1945), Braund(1944). The Viceroy believed that hoarding was serious, and that there was ‘Congress agitation in favour of hoarding’. (Mansergh III p326)
  66. ^ "How Sens theory can cause famines". Bowbrick.org.uk. Retrieved 28 August 2013.
  67. ^ (Greenough, 1982, pp. 117, 122-126)
  68. ^ Tauger, Indian Famine Crises p.183
  69. ^ Famine Inquiry Commission (1945), Braund (1944) Pinell (1944)
  70. ^ Famine Inquiry Commission 1945a p77
  71. ^ Famine Inquiry Commission 1945a; Braund 1944
  72. ^ Braund, 1944; Pinnell, 1944: Famine Inquiry Commission 1945a
  73. ^ Braund, 1944; Pinnell, 1944: Famine Inquiry Commission 1945a
  74. ^ Bowbrick, 1986
  75. ^ Singh (1965)
  76. ^ Famine Inquiry Commission 1945a esp. pp 30, 31, 63
  77. ^ Department of Anthropology (1944); Mahalanobis, P.C., R.K. Mukkerjee and A. Ghosh 1946, pp 337 400.
  78. ^ Bowbrick, 1986; Bowbrick, P., ‘Statistics you can use to check Amartya Sen’s calculations in “Poverty and Famines”’, http://bowbrick.org.uk/statistics_you_can_use_to_check.htm 2011
  79. ^ Stevenson, (2005) p124; Sen, Shila Sen, (1976); Razzaque, (2009)
  80. ^ (Razzaque, 2009) esp. pp 99-101
  81. ^ Greenough, (1982;) (Brennan, Government Famine Relief in Bengal, 1943, (1988); (Knight, (1954)
  82. ^ Razzaque, (2009) esp. pp 99-101
  83. ^ (Greenough, 1982, p. 274) He (1982, pp. 118, 138)
  84. ^ (Greenough, 1982, p. 265)
  85. ^ Mansergh IV p217
  86. ^ War Cabinet Paper WP (43) 349 pf 31 July 1943 (Mansergh, IV p139)
  87. ^ War Cabinet Paper W.P. (43) 407 R/30/1/4:ff 123-5.
  88. ^ Famine Inquiry Commission 1945a p18, 43, 173.
  89. ^ Stevenson, (2005); Braund, (1944)
  90. ^ Greenough, (1982) p111 cites Major General Skinner Eastern command in Nanavati papers pp 930-44, Famine Inquiry Commission 1945a p18, 43, 173, Knight p228, 229, Braund p 25.
  91. ^ (Greenough, 1982) p90 cites Pinell p 211 as saying 175000 acres were requisitioned by the army.
  92. ^ Greenough, (1982), p. 90) citing (Bengal Legislative Assembly Proceedings) 63:1 Sept 1942 pp36-39)
  93. ^ Bayly and Harper (2004), pp.284-285
  94. ^ (Braund, 1944)
  95. ^ (Stevenson, 2005)
  96. ^ Bayly and Harper (2004) p.283
  97. ^ Knight believed that it was barely possible; that there was a worse supply situation in India in 1946 but famine was avoided because, first, Bengal had by then set up a system of compulsory purchase and distribution by rationing similar to that operated in Bombay in 1943, and in 1946 the surplus provinces collaborated in supplying the deficit provinces.
  98. ^ Costello & Hughes 1977, p. 210.
  99. ^ Costello & Hughes 1977, p. 155.
  100. ^ War Cabinet minutes CAB 65_38_4 April (1943 )
  101. ^ (War Cabinet Paper WP (43) 349 pf 31 July 1943 (Mansergh, IV p139) Mansergh IV p217
  102. ^ (Tauger M. , 2003); (Tauger M. , The Indian Famine Crisis of World War II, 2009); (Tauger M., Entitlement, Shortage, and The 1943 Bengal Famine, (2006); (Famine Inquiry Commission, (1945)
  103. ^ Lt. Col. Joseph B. Shupe (2010). "Transportation in the CBI Theater of World War II". Cbi-theater-10.home.comcast.net.
  104. ^ Herman 2009, p. 513; Ghose 1993, p. 111; Gopal 1993.
  105. ^ S Gopal, 'Churchill and the Indians' in Churchill: A Major New Assessment of His Life and Achievements by Wm. Roger Louis and Robert Blake (eds.)
  106. ^ Mukkerjee (2011)
  107. ^ e.g. Famine Inquiry Commission (1945); Braund (1944); Pinnell (1944); Bowbrick (1986, 1987, 2011)
  108. ^ a b Bowbrick (1986, 1987, 2011)
  109. ^ Tauger (2009,2006)
  110. ^ Nolan, (1993)
  111. ^ Goswami (1990)
  112. ^ Dyson and Maharatna (1991)
  113. ^ e.g. Famine Inquiry Commission (1945 pp 44, 45); Dewey (1978); Tauger (2009,2006) ;Report of the Royal Commission on Agriculture in India, Parliamentary Papers (1928) VIII, P.605.; Mahalanobis (1944) p.77; Bowley & Robertson (1934);Bengal Land Revenue Commission (1940) vol. I p76; Mahalanobis (1944) writing in 1943; Document no. 158 in Mansergh, (1973);Stuart (1919); Trevaskis, (1931) p.200; Government of India, (1915), Revenue Proceedings IR-Ag, March, 12-24; Panse (1954) p.26; Panse (1954) p.26; Dewey (1978) p305, citing Noyce (1920)

See also

Footnotes

  1. ^ Winston Churchill was later to state: 'The Battle of the Atlantic was the dominating factor all through the war. Never for one moment could we forget that everything happening elsewhere, on land, at sea or in the air depended ultimately on its outcome.' [98] The supply situation in Britain was such there was talk of being unable to continue the war, with supplies of fuel being particularly low.[99]

References

Notes

Bibliography

  • Aykroyd, W; R, Tim (1974). The Conquest of Famine. London: Chatto and Windus. {{cite book}}: Cite has empty unknown parameters: |1= and |2= (help)
  • Bayly, Christopher; Harper, Tim (2004). Forgotten Armies: Britain's Asian Empire & the War with Japan. London: Penguin Books. ISBN 0-14-029331-0. {{cite book}}: Invalid |ref=harv (help)
  • Bengal Administration (1913). Bengal Famine Code (Revised Edition 1913 ed.). Calcutta. {{cite book}}: Invalid |ref=harv (help)CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
  • Bengal Government (1943). Bengal Legislative Assembly Proceedings. Calcutta. {{cite book}}: Invalid |ref=harv (help)CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
  • Bengal Government (1941). Famine Manual. Alipore: Revenue Department of India. {{cite book}}: Cite has empty unknown parameter: |1= (help); Invalid |ref=harv (help)
  • Bengal Land Revenue Commission (1940) Report cited in Mahalanobis (1944)
  • Bhatia, B. M. (1967). Famines in India. Bombay: Asia Publishing House. {{cite book}}: Invalid |ref=harv (help)
  • Bowbrick. "Appendix Two: Action by the Government". Retrieved 28 August 2013. {{cite web}}: Invalid |ref=harv (help)
  • Bowbrick, Peter (1986). "The causes of famine: A refutation of Professor Sen's theory" (PDF). Food Policy. 11 (2). Elsevier: 105–124. doi:10.1016/0306-9192(86)90059-X. Retrieved 1 September 2011. {{cite journal}}: Invalid |ref=harv (help)
  • Bowbrick, Peter. "How Sen's theory causes famines". Bowbrick.org.uk. Retrieved 14 April 2011. {{cite web}}: Invalid |ref=harv (help)
  • Bowbrick, Peter (February 1987). "Rejoinder: An untenable hypothesis on the causes of famine" (PDF). Food Policy. 12 (1). Elsevier: 5–9. doi:10.1016/0306-9192(87)90042-X. Retrieved 1 September 2011. {{cite journal}}: Invalid |ref=harv (help)
  • Bowley, A. L.; Robertson, D. H. (1934). A Scheme for an Economic Census of India. Cited in Dewey, C., (1978) ‘Patwari and Chaukidar: subordinate officials and the reliability of India's agricultural statistics.’ pp 280–314, Cited in Mahalanobis (1944): Dewey, C. and Hopkins, A. G. (1978), The Imperial Impact: Studies in the Economic History of Africa and India, Athlone Press. bowbrick.org.uk {{cite book}}: External link in |postscript= (help); Invalid |ref=harv (help)CS1 maint: postscript (link)
  • Braund, H. B. L. (1944). Famine in Bengal, Typescript. British Library Doc D792
  • Brennan, Lance (August 1988). "Government Famine Relief in Bengal, 1943". The Journal of Asian Studies. 47 (3). Cambridge: 541–566. doi:10.2307/2056974. JSTOR 2056974. {{cite journal}}: Invalid |ref=harv (help)
  • Brennan, Lance. "Development of the Indian Famine Codes: Personalities, Politics and Policies.date=1978". In Currey, B.; Hugo, G. (eds.). Famine as a geographical phenomenon. Springer ISBN 90-277-1762-1. {{cite book}}: Invalid |ref=harv (help)
  • Report to Calcutta Statesman Report cited in cited in Stephens (1966).)
  • Costello, John; Hughes, Terry (1977). The Battle of the Atlantic. London: Collins. OCLC 464381083. {{cite book}}: Invalid |ref=harv (help)
  • Das, T (1943). S Bengal Famine (1943): as revealed in a survey of the destitutes of Calcutta. Calcutta: Calcutta University. {{cite book}}: Invalid |ref=harv (help)
  • Department of Agriculture, Bengal. (1922). Manual of Rules for the Preparation of Crop Reports and Agricultural Statistics. Calcutta: Bengal Secretariat Book Depot. {{cite book}}: Invalid |ref=harv (help)
  • Desai, Rajanikant Chhaganlal (1953). Standard of living in India and Pakistan, 1931-32 to 1940-41. Bombay: Popular Book Depot. {{cite book}}: Invalid |ref=harv (help)
  • Dewey, Clive (1978). "Patwari and Chaukidar: Subordinate Officials and the Reliability of India's Agricultural Statistics" (PDF). In Dewey, Clive; Hopkins, Anthony G. (eds.). The Imperial Impact: Studies in the Economic History of Africa and India. Athlone Press for the Institute of Commonwealth Studies. {{cite book}}: Invalid |ref=harv (help)
  • Dharwadker, A. B. (1 November 2005). Theatres of Independence: Drama, Theory, and Urban Performance in India since 1947. University of Iowa Press. ISBN 978-0-87745-961-3. Retrieved 23 August 2012. {{cite book}}: Invalid |ref=harv (help)
  • Dutt, T. K. (1944). Hungry Bengal. Lahore: Indian printing works. {{cite book}}: Invalid |ref=harv (help)
  • Dyson, Tim; Maharatna, Arup (September 1991). "Excess mortality during the Great Bengal Famine: A Re-evaluation". The Indian Economic and Social History Review. 28 (3). SAGE: 281–297. doi:10.1177/001946469102800303. {{cite journal}}: Invalid |ref=harv (help)
  • Dyson, Tim (July 1991). "On the Demography of South Asian Famines, Part II". Population Studies. 48 (2). {{cite journal}}: Cite has empty unknown parameters: |1= and |2= (help); Invalid |ref=harv (help)
  • Dyson, Tim (1996). T Population and Food: global trends and future prospects. London: Routledge. {{cite book}}: Cite has empty unknown parameter: |1= (help); Invalid |ref=harv (help)
  • Famine Inquiry Commission (1945a). Report on Bengal. New Delhi: Government of India. Retrieved 20 April 2011. {{cite book}}: Invalid |ref=harv (help)
  • Famine Inquiry Commission (1945b). Final Report. Madras: Government of India. {{cite book}}: Invalid |ref=harv (help)
  • Frere, Henry Bartle (1874). On the Impending Bengal Famine: How it Will be Met and how to Prevent Future Famines in India. London: John Murray. {{cite book}}: Invalid |ref=harv (help)
  • Ghose, Sankar (1993). Jawaharlal Nehru, a biography. Allied Publishers. ISBN 978-81-7023-369-5. Retrieved 20 December 2010. {{cite book}}: Invalid |ref=harv (help)
  • Ghosh, K. C. Famines in Bengal, 1170–1943 Calcutta: Indian Associated Publishing, 1944.
  • Ghosh, Tushar Kanti (1944). The Bengal Tragedy. Lahore: Hero Publications. {{cite book}}: Invalid |ref=harv (help)
  • Gopal, S. (1993). "Churchill and the Indians". In Louis, Wm. Roger; Blake, Robert (eds.). Churchill: A Major New Assessment of His Life and Achievements. {{cite book}}: Invalid |ref=harv (help)
  • Goswami, Omkar (December 1990). "The Bengal Famine of 1943: Re-examining the Data". The Indian Economic and Social History Review. 27 (4). SAGE: 445–463. doi:10.1177/001946469002700403.
  • Government of India, (1915), Revenue Proceedings IR-Ag, March, 12–24.
  • Government of India, Report on the marketing of rice in India and Burma, Government of India Press, Calcutta. 1942.
  • Great Britain. Royal Commission on Agriculture in India (1928). Report of the Royal Commission on Agriculture in India, Parliamentary Papers. Vol. VIII. OCLC 801829. {{cite book}}: Invalid |ref=harv (help)
  • Greenough, Paul Robert (1982). Prosperity and Misery in Modern Bengal: The Famine of 1943-1944. Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0-19-503082-2. {{cite book}}: Invalid |ref=harv (help)
  • Herman, Arthur (2009). Gandhi & Churchill: The Epic Rivalry that Destroyed an Empire and Forged Our Age. {{cite book}}: Invalid |ref=harv (help)
  • Hunter, William Wilson (1873). Famine Aspects of Bengal Districts. Simla. {{cite book}}: Invalid |ref=harv (help)CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
  • Imperial Council of Agricultural Research (1950). Sample Surveys for the Estimation of Yield of Foodcrops, 1944-49. Cited in Dewey, C., (1978) ‘Patwari and Chaukidar: subordinate officials and the reliability of India's agricultural statistics.’ pp 280–314, In Dewey, C. and Hopkins, A.G. (1978), The Imperial Impact: Studies in the Economic History of Africa and India, Athlone Press. bowbrick.org.uk {{cite book}}: External link in |postscript= (help); Invalid |ref=harv (help)CS1 maint: postscript (link)
  • Knight, Henry (1954). Food Administration in India, 1939-47. Palo Alto: Stanford University Press. ISBN 978-0-8047-0447-2. {{cite book}}: Invalid |ref=harv (help)
  • Longshore, David (2007). Encyclopedia of Hurricanes, Typhoons, and Cyclones. New York: Infobase Publishing. ISBN 978-0816062959. {{cite book}}: Invalid |ref=harv (help)
  • Lowe, Lisa; Lloyd, David (27 October 1997). The Politics of Culture in the Shadow of Capital. Duke University Press. ISBN 978-0-8223-2046-3. Retrieved 23 August 2012. {{cite book}}: Invalid |ref=harv (help)
  • Mahalanobis, P. C. (1944). "Proceedings of the National Institute of Sciences of India, x P.71" (PDF). Organisation of Statistics in the Post-War Period. {{cite web}}: Invalid |ref=harv (help)
  • Mahalanobis, P. C.; Mukherjea, R.K.; Ghosh, A (1946). "A sample survey of after effects of Bengal famine of 1943". Sankhya. 7 (4): 337–400. {{cite journal}}: Invalid |ref=harv (help)
  • Mahalanobis, P. C. (1946). ". Recent experiments in statistical sampling in the Indian Statistical Institute". Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society. IV: 326–378. {{cite journal}}: Invalid |ref=harv (help)
  • Mansergh, Nicholas, ed. (1971). The Transfer of Power 1942-7. Vol. III. H.M.S.O. {{cite book}}: Invalid |ref=harv (help)
  • Mansergh, Nicholas, ed. (1973). The Transfer of Power 1942-7. Vol. IV. H.M.S.O. {{cite book}}: Invalid |ref=harv (help)
  • Mukerjee, Madhusree (2014). "Bengal Famine of 1943". Economic and Political Weekly. 49. {{cite journal}}: Invalid |ref=harv (help)
  • Nolan, P. (1993). "The causation and prevention of famines: a critique of A.K. Sen". . Journal of Peasant Studies. 21: 1–28. {{cite journal}}: Invalid |ref=harv (help)
  • Padmanabhan, S. Y. (1973). "The Great Bengal Famine". Annual Review of Phytopathology. 11. Annual Reviews: 11–24. doi:10.1146/annurev.py.11.090173.000303. {{cite journal}}: Invalid |ref=harv (help)
  • Panse, V. G. (1954). "Report on the Scheme for the Improvement of the Agricultural Statistics 1954 Delhi" (PDF). Delhi. {{cite web}}: Invalid |ref=harv (help)
  • Pinnell, L. G., The Pinnell Archive on the Bengal Famine: Evidence to the Famine Inquiry Commission 1944. British Library doc EUR Doc 911.
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  • Sen, Amartya (August 1976a). "Famines as failures of exchange entitlements". Economic and Political Weekly. Special Number. {{cite journal}}: Invalid |ref=harv (help)
  • Sen, Amartya (1981). Poverty and Famines: An Essay on Entitlement and Deprivation. OUP Oxford. ISBN 978-0-19-828463-5. {{cite book}}: Invalid |ref=harv (help)
  • Sen, Shila (1976b). Muslim Politics in Bengal, 1937-1947. New Delhi: Impex India. {{cite book}}: Invalid |ref=harv (help)
  • Singh, Ayodhya (1965). Sectional Price Movements in India. Banaras Hindu University. {{cite book}}: Invalid |ref=harv (help)
  • Slim, William (1956). Defeat Into Victory (2nd ed.). Cassell & Company. ISBN 978-0-330-50997-8. {{cite book}}: Invalid |ref=harv (help)
  • Stephens, Ian Melville (1966). Monsoon morning. London: Ernest Benn. {{cite book}}: Invalid |ref=harv (help)
  • *Stevenson, R. (2005). Bengal Tiger and British Lion: an account of the Bengal Famine of 1943. New York: iUniverse. {{cite book}}: Invalid |ref=harv (help)
  • Tarling, Nicholas, ed. (1993). The Cambridge History of South East Asia. Vol. II. ISBN 9780521355063. {{cite book}}: Invalid |ref=harv (help)
  • Tauger, Mark B. (2003). "Entitlement, Shortage and the 1943 Bengal Famine: Another Look" (PDF). Journal of Peasant Studies. 31 (1). Routledge: 45–72. doi:10.1080/0306615031000169125. {{cite journal}}: Invalid |ref=harv (help)
  • Tauger, Mark B. (March 2009). "The Indian Famine Crises of World War II". British Scholar. 1 (2). Edinburgh University Press: 166–196. doi:10.3366/brs.2009.0004. {{cite journal}}: Invalid |ref=harv (help)
  • Tharoor, Shashi (2003). Nehru: the invention of India. Arcade Publishing. ISBN 978-1-55970-697-1. Retrieved 20 December 2010. {{cite book}}: Invalid |ref=harv (help)
  • Trevaskis, H. K. (1931). The Punjab Today: An Economic Survey of the Punjab in Recent Years (1890-1925). Vol. 1. Lahore: The Civil and Military gazette Press. {{cite book}}: Invalid |ref=harv (help)
  • Trevaskis, H. K. (1932). The Punjab Today: An Economic Survey of the Punjab in Recent Years (1890-1925). Vol. 2. Lahore: The Civil and Military gazette Press. {{cite book}}: Invalid |ref=harv (help)
  • Wavell, Archibald Percival (1973). Moon, Penderel (ed.). Wavell: The Viceroy's journal. Oxford University Press. {{cite book}}: Invalid |ref=harv (help)

Further reading

External links


Category:Famines in India Category:History of Bengal Category:1943 in India Category:20th-century health disasters Category:Famines in Asia Category:1940s health disasters Category:British Empire in World War II


Warning: Default sort key "Bengal Famine Of 1943" overrides earlier default sort key "Bengal Famine of 1943". Category:Famines in India Category:History of Bengal Category:1943 in India