An Indian historian on the Great Famine in China:
She wrote in an essay that “[t]he figure of 30 million has passed into popular folklore … The fact that 19 million of them never existed because they were never born in the first place is not conveyed by the formulation.” She criticized the equating of China’s “missing millions” with famine deaths, rather than people who were never born due to declining birth rates. Also she claimed that “Because the internal political developments in China after 1978 were in the direction of attacking Maoist egalitarianism and the commune system, no repudiation from Chinese sources of the US estimates are to be seen”. Patnaik concluded that the figures were ideologically derived in attempts to discredit communism, while similar excessive deaths in 1990s Russia, following the collapse of the USSR, were routinely ignored.
An Indian historian on the Great Famine in China: She wrote in an essay that “[t]he figure of 30 million has passed into popular folklore … The fact that 19 million of them never existed because they were never born in the first place is not conveyed by the formulation.” She criticized the equating of China’s “missing millions” with famine deaths, rather than people who were never born due to declining birth rates. Also she claimed that “Because the internal political developments in China after 1978 were in the direction of attacking Maoist egalitarianism and the commune system, no repudiation from Chinese sources of the US estimates are to be seen”. Patnaik concluded that the figures were ideologically derived in attempts to discredit communism, while similar excessive deaths in 1990s Russia, following the collapse of the USSR, were routinely ignored.