Food Security situation in 2013 around the world
- A
total of 842 million people in 2011–13, or around one in eight people
in the world, were estimated to be suffering from chronic hunger,
regularly not getting enough food to conduct an active life. This
figure is lower than the 868 million reported with reference to 2010–12.
The total number of undernourished has fallen by 17 percent since
1990–92.
- Developing regions as a whole have registered significant progress towards the MDG 1 hunger target.
If the average annual decline of the past 21 years continues to 2015,
the prevalence of undernourishment will reach a level close to the
target. Meeting it would require considerable and immediate additional
efforts.
- Growth can raise incomes and reduce hunger, but higher economic growth may not reach everyone.
It may not lead to more and better jobs for all, unless policies
specifically target the poor, especially those in rural areas. In poor
countries, hunger and poverty reduction will only be achieved with
growth that is not only sustained, but also broadly shared.
- Despite overall progress, marked differences across regions persist.
Sub-Saharan Africa remains the region with the highest prevalence of
undernourishment, with modest progress in recent years. Western Asia
shows no progress, while Southern Asia and Northern Africa show slow
progress. Significant reductions in both the estimated number and
prevalence of undernourishment have occurred in most countries of
Eastern and South Eastern Asia, as well as in Latin America.
- Food security is a complex condition.
Its dimensions – availability, access, utilization and stability – are
better understood when presented through a suite of indicators.
- Undernourishment and undernutrition can coexist.
However, in some countries, undernutrition rates, as indicated by the
proportion of stunted children, are considerably higher than the
prevalence of undernourishment, as indicated by inadequacy of dietary
energy supply. In these countries, nutrition-enhancing interventions are
crucial to improve the nutritional aspects of food security.
Improvements require a range of food security and nutrition-enhancing
interventions in agriculture, health, hygiene, water supply and
education, particularly targeting women.
- Policies
aimed at enhancing agricultural productivity and increasing food
availability, especially when smallholders are targeted, can achieve
hunger reduction even where poverty is widespread. When they are
combined with social protection and other measures that increase the
incomes of poor families to buy food, they can have an even more
positive effective and spur rural development, by creating vibrant
markets and employment opportunities, making possible equitable economic
growth.
- Remittances, which have globally become
three times larger than official development assistance, have had
significant impacts on poverty and food security. This report
suggests that remittances can help to reduce poverty, leading to reduced
hunger, better diets and, given appropriate policies, increased on-farm
investment.
- Long-term commitment to mainstreaming food security and nutrition in public policies and programmes is key to hunger reduction. Keeping
food security and agriculture high on the development agenda, through
comprehensive reforms, improvements in the investment climate, supported
by sustained social protection, is crucial for achieving major
reductions in poverty and undernourishment.
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