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HSS4331 – International Health Theory. Jan 25, 2010– Hunger (Special Focus on South Asia). International Culture & Development Week. http://www.scdi-icdw.uottawa.ca/ Today: 2:30pm: Launch with Allan Rock, Tabaret Chapel 4pm: “Casino capitalism”, UCU205
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HSS4331 – International Health Theory Jan 25, 2010– Hunger (Special Focus on South Asia)
International Culture & Development Week • http://www.scdi-icdw.uottawa.ca/ • Today: • 2:30pm: Launch with Allan Rock, Tabaret Chapel • 4pm: “Casino capitalism”, UCU205 • ALL events that involve an academic speaker are eligible for your mandatory seminars
Millennium Development Goal #1 "To eradicate extreme poverty and hunger" Target 1: To halve the proportion of people who suffer from hunger by 2015
Food: The State of the World • 2008, Canadian news reported food riots in Haiti and parts of Africa • Food shortages are continuing in all parts of the developing world • In the past year, global dairy prices have increased 50% • The NY Times reports that wheat prices are the highest they’ve been in 28 years • The global price of food has risen sharply in that last 18 months • Cereal prices have doubled • Sugar has almost doubled
Let’s Look at Some Global Factors • Global food crisis: • Rice at highest price in 20 years • Global supply of wheat lowest in 50 years (only 5 weeks worth of global reserve is on hand) • Producers (e.g., Khazakstan) restricting exports to ensure supply for domestic populations • Speculators, sensing food shortage, are investing in commodities, causing food prices to soar • Climate change is reducing all staple crops • Credit crisis reducing budget of donor agencies
Global Factors • Historic trend of living on arable land • Increasing price of oil has made importing food more expensive
South Asia India, Pakistan, Bangladesh, Sri Lanka, Nepal, Bhutan, Maldives, and British Indian Ocean Territory
Percentage of World’s Poor Living in Asia (Uses World Bank definitions of poor = living on <$1.25/day) Source: “Renewed Policy Action for the Poorest and Hungry in South Asia”, Dec 2, 2008, IFPRI
www.ifpri.org Food Case Study: The State of India • The International food policy Research Institute projects that in the next 20 years, India alone will increase its demand for: • meat by 176% • milk and vegetables by 70% • grain by 27% • But India is the world’s 2nd biggest producer of wheat Meanwhile the total global supply of grains and cereals has actually decreased by 40% over the last 7 years
Some Key Indicators for Selected Nations (source: World Food Programme) Percentage of GDP dedicated to producing crops Human Development Index = health, knowledge, and standard of living. Collected by UNDP. Closer to 1.000 the better. Percentage of children under 5 years who are underweight Percentage of the total population considered to be undernourished Global Hunger Index = level of child malnutrition, rates of child mortality, and the proportion of people who are calorie deficient Infant mortality rate per 1000 live births
Some Key Indicators for Selected South Asian Nations (source: World Food Programme)
Some Key Indicators for Selected South Asian Nations (source: World Food Programme)
Some Key Indicators for Selected South Asian Nations (source: World Food Programme)
What is “Food Security” • “Food security refers to the availability of food and one's access to it. A household is considered food secure when its occupants do not live in hunger or fear of starvation.” • Wikipedia
What Is The Role of Gender Here? • Women manage household economics • Women do not manage incoming cash “Giving women the same access to physical and human resources as men could increase agricultural productivity, just as increases in women’s education and improvements in women’s status over the past quarter century have contributed to more than half of the reduction in the rate of child malnutrition.” -Uisumbing & Meinzen-Dick, “Empowering Women to Achieve Food Security” “the low status of women …and their lack of nutritional knowledge are important determinants of high prevalence of underweight children…“ -UNICEF, 2006
Household Economy • A typical family in Bangladesh: • Five people per household, each earning $1/day • -> $5/household/day
Household Economy • Household energy • Heating, cooking, etc • Food • Everything else • Clothes, books, education, medicine, rent, etc • 50 cents • $3 • $1.50
Household Economy Medical expenditures go down Global prices of oil, rent, food go up Poor health Food consumption goes down
So What Can Be Done? World Food Programme’s Official Plan for South Asia • Combat malnutrition and invest in human resources; • Help improve immediate food security for selected target groups; • Maximize the active participation of women in projects; • Advocate joint forest management; • Help strengthen distribution channels for locally-produced food grains; • Increase agricultural production and create employment.
So What Can Be Done? International Food Policy Research Institute’s Official Recommendations for South Asia • expand emergency responses and humanitarian assistance to food-insecure people • eliminate agricultural export bans and export restrictions • undertake fast-impact food production programs in key areas • change biofuel policies • calm markets with the use of market-oriented regulation of speculation, shared public grain stocks, strengthened food-import financing, and reliable food aid • invest in social protection • scale up investments for sustained agricultural growth
Other Recommendations? • Letter from PrashantGoyal,Secretary to Government Chief Secretariat, Pondicherry, to The Hindu (newspaper) • Promote crop insurance schemes, with government as insurer • Increase inter-state free trade • food security need can be productively linked to increased enrolment in schools • Food for work • Community grain storage banks (decentralized) • investment in new agriculture infrastructure, credit linkages and encouraging latest technologies (GM foods? • “The focus on accelerated foodgrains production on a sustainable basis and free trade in grains would help create massive employment and reduce the incidence of poverty in rural areas. This will lead to faster economic growth and give purchasing power to the people”
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