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Eradicating world hunger taking stock ten years after
the World Food Summit
The State of
Food Insecurity in the World
2006
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Acknowledgements
The State of Food Insecurity in theWorld 2006 was prepared byJakob Skoet and Kostas Stamoulis,Agricultural and DevelopmentEconomics Division, under the generalsupervision of Prabhu Pingali, Directorof the same division. Ricardo Sibrian,Statistics Division, coordinated thestatistical inputs and analysis to thepublication. Consultant Jorge Merniesprovided advice in the planning stage.
Background papers and draft sections
were prepared by Shahla Shapouri,Economic Research Service of the UnitedStates Department of Agriculture;Tugrul Temel, Agricultural Economicsand Rural Policy Group, WageningenUniversity; and Sumiter Broca,FAO Global Perspectives Studies Unit.
The following FAO staff and consultantsprovided technical contributions:Margarita Flores, Aasa Giertz andKristian Jakobsen, Agricultural andDevelopment Economics Division; DeepFord, Commodities and Trade Division;Jelle Bruinsma, Gerold Boedeker andJoseph Schmidhuber, GlobalPerspective Studies Unit; Cinzia Cerri,Amanda Gordon, SeevalingumRamasawmy, Mohamed Barre andNathalie Troubat, Statistics Division;David Sedik, Regional Office for Europe;
and Nasredin Elamin, Regional Officefor the Near East.
The key estimates on food consumptionand undernourishment used in TheState of Food Insecurity in the World2006 were produced by the Basic Food
and Agriculture Statistics Service andthe Socio-Economic Statistics andAnalysis Service of the FAO StatisticsDivision.
Projections of food consumption andundernourishment in 2015 wereprepared by the FAO Global PerspectiveStudies Unit.
The Electronic Publishing Policy andSupport Branch of the General Affairsand Information Department (GI)
provided editorial, language editing,graphic and production services.Translations were provided by theMeeting Programming andDocumentation Service of GI.
Published in 2006 by theFood and Agriculture Organization of the United NationsViale delle Terme di Caracalla, 00153 Rome, Italy
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The designations employed and the presentation of material in the maps do not imply the expressionof any opinion whatsoever on the part of FAO concerning the legal or constitutional status of anycountry, territory or sea area, or concerning the delimitation of frontiers.
All rights reserved. Reproduction and dissemination of material in this information product foreducational or other non-commercial purposes are authorized without any prior written permissionfrom the copyright holders provided the source is fully acknowledged. Reproduction of material in thisinformation product for resale or other commercial purposes is prohibited without written permissionof the copyright holders. Applications for such permission should be addressed to the Chief,Electronic Publishing Policy and Support Branch, Information Division, FAO, Viale delle Termedi Caracalla, 00153 Rome, Italy or by e-mail to [email protected]
FAO 2006
ISBN 92-5-105580-7
Printed in Italy
PhotographsFrom left to right on cover: FAO/14800/A. Conti; FAO/17283/J. Holmes; FAO/23076/R. Grossman.
Copies of FAO publicationscan be requested from:
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Eradicating world hungertaking stock ten years after
the World Food Summit
The State ofFood Insecurity in the World
2006
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Ten years ago, world leadersmet in Rome for the WorldFood Summit (WFS) to
discuss ways to end hunger.They pledged their commitment toan ongoing effort to eradicatehunger in all countries and set
themselves the immediate target ofhalving the number ofundernourished people by 2015.To this purpose, they approvedthe World Food Summit Plan ofAction. In October 2006, FAOsCommittee on World Food Securityis undertaking an assessmentof the implementation of thePlan of Action and a mid-termreview of progress towardsachieving the target.
The State of Food Insecurity in
the World 2006 reviews progressand setbacks in hunger reduction
since 199092, the establishedbaseline period.
The first section of the report,Undernourishment aroundthe world, reviews trends in hungerat the global, regional andsubregional levels. It also presents
FAOs most recent projections ofundernourishment in 2015.
The second section,Undernourishment in the regions,reviews the food security situation ineach of the major developingregions and the transition countries.
The third section, Towardsthe Summit commitments,summarizes lessons from pastexperience in hunger reductionand presents FAOs currentthinking on how to accelerate
progress towards meeting the WFStarget.
Two tables (pp. 3238) providedetailed information on levels ofundernourishment in developing andtransition countries and otherindicators relevant to food security.The report also includes maps(page 31) illustrating the global food
security situation and progress inhunger reduction.
The State of Food Insecurity in the World 20062
About this report
Commitments
1 We will ensure an enabling political, social, and economicenvironment designed to create the best conditions forthe eradication of poverty and for durable peace, based on
full and equal participation of women and men, which is
most conducive to achieving sustainable food security
for all.
2 We will implement policies aimed at eradicating povertyand inequality and improving physical and economic accessby all, at all times, to sufficient, nutritionally adequate and
safe food and its effective utilization.
3 We will pursue participatory and sustainable food,agriculture, fisheries, forestry and rural developmentpolicies and practices in high and low potential areas,
which are essential to adequate and reliable food supplies
at the household, national, regional and global levels, and
combat pests, drought and desertification, considering the
multifunctional character of agriculture.
4 We will strive to ensure that food, agricultural trade andoverall trade policies are conducive to fostering foodsecurity for all through a fair and market-oriented world
trade system.
5 We will endeavour to prevent and be prepared for naturaldisasters and man-made emergencies and to meettransitory and emergency food requirements in ways that
encourage recovery, rehabilitation, development and a
capacity to satisfy future needs.
6 We will promote optimal allocation and use of public andprivate investments to foster human resources, sustainablefood, agriculture, fisheries and forestry systems, and rural
development, in high and low potential areas.
7
We will implement, monitor, and follow-up this Plan of
Action at all levels in cooperation with the international
community.
The World Food Summit Plan of Action
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Foreword
4 Despite setbacks, the race against hunger can be won
Undernourishment around the world
8 Counting the hungry: trends in the developing world and
countries in transition
Undernourishment in the regions
14 Asia and the Pacific
17 Latin America and the Caribbean
20 Near East and North Africa
23 Sub-Saharan Africa
26 Countries in transition
Towards the Summit commitments
28 The way ahead: strengthening efforts for eradicating hunger
31 Maps
32 Tables
39 Notes
The State of Food Insecurity in the World 2006 3
Contents
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In November 1996, the worldturned its attention to Rome,where heads of State and
Government of more than 180 nationsattending the World Food Summit(WFS) pledged to eradicate one of theworst scourges weighing on societys
collective conscience: hunger. As animportant step towards this noble andlong overdue objective, world leaderscommitted themselves to what wasconsidered an ambitious butattainable intermediate target: tohalve by 2015 the number ofundernourished people in the worldfrom the 1990 level. Ten years later,we are confronted with the sad realitythat virtually no progress has beenmade towards that objective.Compared with 199092, the number
of undernourished people in thedeveloping countries has declined bya meagre 3 million a number withinthe bounds of statistical error. This isthe situation facing representatives ofthe Committee on World FoodSecurity, meeting in Rome this year totake stock of progress and setbacksexperienced since the Summit and topropose further action.
Not all news is dismal, however.Despite disappointing performancesin reducing the number of hungrypeople, a smaller percentage of thepopulations of developing countriesis undernourished today comparedwith 199092: 17 percent against20 percent. Furthermore, FAOsprojections suggest that theproportion of hungry people indeveloping countries in 2015 couldbe about half of what it was in199092: a drop from 20 to10 percent. This means that theworld is on a path towards meetingthe Millennium Development Goalon hunger reduction. The sameprojections, however, also indicatethat the WFS target could be missed:some 582 million people could still
be undernourished in 2015 versus412 million if the WFS goal were tobe met.
The news cannot come as asurprise. Time and again, throughThe State of Food Insecurity in theWorldas well as other channels,
FAO has pointed out that insufficientprogress is being made in alleviatinghunger. This publication hashighlighted the discrepancy betweenwhat could (and should) be done,and what is actually being done forthe millions of people suffering fromhunger. We have emphasized firstand foremost that reducing hungeris no longer a question of means inthe hands of the global community.The world is richer today than it wasten years ago. There is more food
available and still more could beproduced without excessive upwardpressure on prices. The knowledgeand resources to reduce hunger arethere. What is lacking is sufficientpolitical will to mobilize thoseresources to the benefit of thehungry. Past issues of this reporthave stressed the urgency ofaccelerating the pace in what hasliterally been termed as the raceagainst hunger. They havereiterated the need to move fromrhetoric to concrete action.
Hunger reduction:challenges and priorities
When observing global trends in thenumber of undernourished people, itis almost a natural reaction to dismissthe period since the WFS as a lostdecade. To do so, however, would bea serious mistake. It would compoundexisting scepticism and would riskdetracting from positive action beingtaken. It would also obscure the factthat much has been accomplished insecuring a top place for hunger on thedevelopment agenda.
The State of Food Insecurity in the World 20064
Foreword
Despite setbacks, the race against hunger can be won
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and it will not be long before agreater part of developing countrypopulations is living in large cities.Therefore, urban food security andits related problems should also beplaced high on the agenda in theyears to come.
Twin track a tried and effectiveapproach
The concentration of hunger in ruralareas suggests that no sustainedreduction in hunger is possiblewithout special emphasis onagricultural and rural development.In countries and regions wherehunger remains widespread,agriculture often holds the key toachieving both economic progress
and sustained reductions inundernourishment. History hastaught us that, in general, thosecountries that have managed toreduce hunger have not onlyexperienced more rapid overalleconomic growth but have alsoachieved greater gains inagricultural productivity than thoseexperiencing setbacks or stagnation.
It follows that investments inagriculture, and more broadly in the
rural economy, are often aprerequisite for accelerated hungerreduction. The agriculture sectortends to be the engine of growth forentire rural economies, andproductivity-driven increases inagricultural output can expand food
supplies and reduce food prices inlocal markets, raise farm incomesand boost the overall local economyby generating demand for locallyproduced goods and services.
By now, it is well understoodthat hunger compromises thehealth and productivity ofindividuals and their efforts toescape poverty. It acts as a brake onthe potential economic and socialdevelopment of whole societies. It isno coincidence that more rapid
advances have been made in povertyreduction as opposed to hungeralleviation. Indeed, escaping povertyseems to be much more difficult forhungry people, who aredisadvantaged in their capacityto earn a livelihood. Acceleratinghunger reduction consequentlyrequires direct measures to helppeople who are both poor and ill-fedto escape the hunger-poverty trap.Empirical evidence from an
The State of Food Insecurity in the World 20066
Progress and setbacks in hunger reduction from 199092 to 2001032
-80 -60 -40 -20 0 20 40 60
Countries having achieved the WFS target
Countries having progressed towards the WFS target Setback countries Source: FAO
Transition countries
Sub-Saharan Africa
Near East and North Africa
Latin America and the Caribbean
Change in number of undernourished people (millions)
Asia andthe Pacific
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increasing number of countriesillustrates the powerful contributionthat direct and carefully targetedmeasures can make to both hungerand poverty reduction.
A twin-track approach,emphasizing direct action against
hunger along with a focus onagricultural and rural development,is effective in providing the mostvulnerable and food-insecure peoplewith new livelihood possibilities andhope for a better life. Efforts topromote the twin-track approach asthe principal strategic framework forhunger reduction should therefore beat the centre of poverty reductioninitiatives at all levels.
Reaching the WFS goal:
it can be done
Conditions are currently ripe forhastening effective hunger reductionstrategies and moving countriesdecisively towards the WFS targetand beyond towards the totaleradication of world hunger. It is fairto say that the internationalcommunity today pays moreattention to hunger as an intrinsicand pressing development issue.Hunger has been raised to a moreprominent position in national anti-poverty programmes and similarinitiatives, and there is morewidespread and vocalacknowledgement of the fact that thepersistence of chronic hunger in themidst of plenty is an unacceptablecontradiction. On the part ofgovernments, civil society and otherorganizations, there is a greaterawareness of the steps that need tobe taken and, more importantly, theresolve to instigate and catalyse thenecessary action appears to havebeen strengthened.
Today, ten years after the WFS wecan resume the race against
hunger with renewed vigour,seeking to honour the commitmentsmade ten years ago but, ideally,aiming well beyond the WFS target.We must dispel any complacencythat may be engendered by theabundance of world food supplies, by
the general increase in agriculturalproductivity, or by the expansion ofinternational trade possibilities.The coexistence of food abundanceor even overnutrition with fooddeprivation, even in the samecountries or communities, has beena reality for decades and, unlessconditions conducive to chronichunger are eliminated, the twoextremes will continue to coexist inthe future.
Is the 2015 WFS target still
attainable? The answer should be aresounding Yes, as long asconcrete and concerted action,following the WFS Plan of Action, istaken and stepped up immediately.Already ten years ago, signatories tothe Rome Declaration emphasizedthe urgency of the task for whichthe primary responsibility rests withindividual governments, but forwhich cooperation with internationalorganizations and civil society including both public and privatesectors is vital. Today, we areconfident that the race againsthunger can still be won, but only ifthe necessary resources, politicalwill and correct policies areforthcoming. We fully agree with theprincipal conclusion of the UNMillennium Projects Hunger TaskForce: It can be done.
Jacques DioufFAO Director-General
The State of Food Insecurity in the World 2006 7
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Ten years after the 1996 RomeWorld Food Summit (WFS), thenumber of undernourished
people in the world remainsstubbornly high. In 200103, FAOestimates there were still 854 millionundernourished people worldwide:
820 million in the developingcountries, 25 million in the transitioncountries and 9 million in theindustrialized countries.2
Virtually no progress has beenmade towards the WFS target ofhalving the number of under-nourished people by 2015. Since199092, the baseline period for theWFS target, the undernourishedpopulation in the developing countrieshas declined by only 3 million people:from 823 million to 820 million. This
contrasts starkly with the reduction of37 million achieved in the 1970s andof 100 million in the 1980s. Moreover,the most recent trends are a causefor concern a decline of26 million between 199092 and199597 was followed by an increaseof 23 million up to 200103.
Because of population growth, thevery small decrease in the number ofhungry people has nevertheless
resulted in a reduction in theproportion of undernourished peoplein the developing countries by3 percentage points from20 percent in 199092 to 17 percentin 200103. This means thatprogress has continued towards thefirst Millennium Development Goal(MDG 1) of halving the percentage ofundernourished people by 2015.However, progress over this period
was slower than over the previoustwo decades, when the prevalence ofundernourishment declined by9 percent (from 37 percent to28 percent) between 196971and 197981 and by a further8 percentage points (to 20 percent)between 197981 and 199092.3
Success in meeting the WFS targetwill require a reversal of recenttrends in the number of hungry
The State of Food Insecurity in the World 20068
Undernourishment around the world
Counting the hungry: trends in the developing worldand countries in transition1
The World Food Summit in 1996 established the target of halving the number of
undernourished people by no later than 2015. FAO uses the average of the period
199092 as the baseline for monitoring progress towards this target.
One of the two targets of the first Millennium Development Goal is to halve, between1990 and 2015, the proportion of people who suffer from hunger.
The WFS target is the more ambitious of the two. Indeed, continued population growth
means that the proportion of hungry people in the developing countries will need to be
cut by much more than half if the target is to be met. If the MDG target is achieved in
2015 by the developing countries as a group, current population projections suggest that
we will still be left with around 585 million undernourished, far more (173 million) than
the WFS target of 412 million. On the other hand, reaching the WFS target will require a
reduction in the proportion of undernourished in the developing countries to 7 percent,
which is 10 percentage points lower than the current level of 17 percent.
The World Food Summit and Millennium Development Goal targets
Source: FAO* Excluding China and India
Undernourished 200103(millions)
3
Number of undernourished and the World Food Summit target
4
World854
Developing world820
Latin America/Caribbean 52
Near East andNorth Africa 38
Sub-SaharanAfrica206
Transitioncountries 25
Developing Asia/ Latin America/ Near East and Sub-Saharan Transitionworld Pacific Caribbean North Africa Africa countries
Industrializedcountries 9
China150
India 212
Asia/Pacific*162
Millions
900
800
700
600
500
400
300
200
100
0
199092* 199597 200103 WFS target
Source: FAO* For the transition countries: 199395
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people and a sharp acceleration inthe rate of reduction of the proportionof undernourished. Indeed, even ifthe MDG target were to be reached by2015, the WFS target would still befar from being met (see box). In orderto attain the WFS target in the
developing countries, the number ofundernourished people must bereduced by 31 million per yearbetween 200103 and 2015.
Regional trends inundernourishment4
Global stagnation in hungerreduction masks significantdisparities among regions: Asia andthe Pacific and Latin America andthe Caribbean have seen an overall
reduction in both the number andprevalence of undernourishedpeople since the WFS baselineperiod. Nevertheless, in bothregions the average rate ofreduction has fallen short of whatwould be required to halve theundernourished population by 2015.Furthermore, in the case of Asia andthe Pacific the number ofundernourished has reverted to anincreasing trend over the latter partof the decade, although theprevalence has continued to decline.Underlying this reversal are largerabsolute numbers in China and Indiain 200103 relative to 199597.
On the other hand, both in the NearEast and North Africa and in sub-Saharan Africa the number ofundernourished people has risenduring the 11-year period following theWFS baseline. In sub-Saharan Africa,this represents the continuation of atrend that has been apparent over atleast the last three decades.
In sub-Saharan Africa, recentprogress in reducing the prevalenceof undernourishment is noteworthy.For the first time in several decades,
the share of undernourished peoplein the regions population saw asignificant decline: from 35 percentin 199092 to 32 percent in 200103,after having reached 36 percent in199597. This is an encouragingdevelopment, but the task facing theregion remains daunting: thenumber of undernourished peopleincreased from 169 million to206 million while reaching the WFStarget will require a reduction to85 million by 2015.
The Near East and North Africais the only region in which boththe number and proportion ofundernourished has risen
since 199092, albeit from arelatively low base. Following thesignificant reduction in the numbersof undernourished achieved duringthe 1970s, the trend in subsequentdecades has been consistentlyupwards. The decade since the WFSbaseline period constituted noexception, although the rate ofincrease slowed in the later years.
For the transition countries, thenumber of undernourished peoplehas increased slightly, from 23million to 25 million.5 This rise isattributed mainly to higher numbersin the Commonwealth ofIndependent States (CIS), where the
The State of Food Insecurity in the World 2006 9
Proportion of undernourished people and the MillenniumDevelopment Goal target
5
Developing Asia/ Latin America/ Near East and Sub-Saharan Transitionworld Pacific Caribbean North Africa Africa countries
Percentage of population
40
35
30
2520
15
10
5
0
199092* 199597 200103 MDG target
Source: FAO* For the transition countries: 199395
Ratio of undernourishment (number and prevalence) in 200103 to199092
Develop ing Asia/ Latin America/ N ear East and Sub-Saharan Transitionworld Pacific Caribbean North Africa Africa countries*
Ratio2.0
1.5
1.0
0.5
0.0
Source: FAO*For the transition countries the baseline period is 199395 rather than 199092.
6
Ratio for number WFS target Ratio for prevalence MDG target
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majority of the regionsundernourished people are found.
The WFS and MDG targets:regional progress and setbacks
The degree of regional progresstowards the WFS and MDG targets isillustrated by Figure 6, which showsthe ratio of the number and theprevalence of undernourished,respectively, in 200103 to that of199092. A ratio of 0.5 or lowerimplies that the respective target(WFS target for the number andMDG target for the prevalence) hasbeen achieved. A ratio of less than1.0 indicates progress towards thetarget while a ratio of more than 1.0indicates a setback. Only Asia andthe Pacific and Latin America andthe Caribbean have made progresstowards the WFS target, but neitherregion is close to reaching it. Theremaining regions have all movedaway from the target by varyingdegrees.
Prospects for achieving the MDGtarget look more promising. Alldeveloping country regions exceptthe Near East and North Africa havemade inroads towards reducing the
prevalence of undernourishment, andin the cases of Asia and the Pacific
and Latin America and the Caribbeanprogress has been quite significant.
Subregional trends inundernourishment6
Regional trends in undernourishmentsince the WFS baseline periodconceal significant differences at thesubregional level, as illustrated byFigures 7 and 8. Within the sub-Saharan Africa region, thesubregions of Southern Africa, EastAfrica and West Africa all saw adecline in the prevalence ofundernourishment (although notnecessarily in the number ofundernourished); by contrast,Central Africa experienced adramatic increase in both thenumber of hungry people andprevalence of undernourishment.
In Asia (where China and India aretreated as separate subregions inview of the size of their populations)significant progress in reducing thenumber of undernourished peoplewas made in China and the populoussubregion of Southeast Asia.In India, on the other hand, the
prevalence of hunger declined, butthe outcome in terms of reducing
the number of undernourished wassmall, as a reduction in the first partof the decade (199092 to 199597)was subsequently reversed. At thesame time, the number ofundernourished increased in therest of East Asia (excluding China)and, particularly, in the rest of SouthAsia (excluding India).
A significant contribution toprogress towards the WFS target inthe Latin American and Caribbeanregion was made by South America,while the number of hungry peopleincreased in Central America andMexico. In the Near East and NorthAfrica, the absolute number ofundernourished is the smallest ofall the developing country regions,but it increased both in North Africaand in the Near East, with the latteralso seeing an increase in theprevalence of hunger.
Globally, most subregionsexperienced a reduction in theprevalence of undernourishment.However, any significant progresstowards reducing the global numberof undernourished was concentratedin very few, but populous,
The State of Food Insecurity in the World 200610
Undernourishment around the world
GDP in the 1990s and prevalence ofundernourishment in 2000
7
Changes in number of undernourishedin subregions from 199092 to 200103
Source: FAOMillions
MexicoNorth Africa
Southern AfricaCentral America
East Asia, excl. ChinaSouth Asia, excl. India
East AfricaNear East
Central Africa
ChinaSoutheast AsiaSouth AmericaIndiaThe CaribbeanWest Africa, excl. Nigeria
Nigeria
-50 -40 -30 -20 -10 0 10 20 30
GDP in the 1990s and prevalence ofundernourishment in 2000
8
Changes in proportion of undernourishedin subregions from 199092 to 200103
Source: FAO
North AfricaMexico
Near EastCentral America
East Asia, excl. ChinaCentral Africa
Southern AfricaWest Africa, excl. NigeriaEast AfricaThe CaribbeanSoutheast AsiaIndia
South AmericaNigeriaChinaSouth Asia, excl. India
-15 -10 -5 0 5 10 15 20 25
Percentage points
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subregions: China, Southeast Asiaand South America.
The World Food Summit target:subregional progress and setbacks
Progress and setbacks in hunger
reduction in the subregions areshown in Figure 9. For eachsubregion, the ratio indicating thedistance from the WFS target isplotted against the prevalence ofundernourishment. A ratio between1.0 and 0.5 implies progress towardsthe target whereas one of 0.5 or lessindicates the target has beenachieved or surpassed. A ratiogreater than 1.0 indicates setback.
The two extremes the BalticStates and Central Africa illustrate
the wide disparity in progress in thefight against hunger. The BalticStates, with the lowest prevalence ofundernourishment, have alreadyreduced the numbers by more thanhalf; Central Africa, with the highestprevalence (56 percent of thepopulation), has been moving rapidlyaway from the WFS target as aresult of a dramatically worsening
food security situation in theDemocratic Republic of the Congo.
Apart from the Baltic States, onlyChina, Southeast Asia, SouthAmerica and the Caribbean havemoved decisively towards the WFStarget. The first three, owing to their
large populations, are also thesubregions that have provided themost substantive contributiontowards a reduction in the numberof undernourished. It is also worthnoting that in all these subregions,except the Caribbean, prevalence ofundernourishment is lower than theaverage of the developing countries.
In addition to Central Africa,also East Africa and Southern Africacall for priority attention in viewof their high prevalence of under-
nourishment. In both subregions,the number of hungry people hascontinued to increase in spite of areduction in the prevalence ofhunger. Substantial acceleration ofprogress will be needed if the WFStarget is to be met. The same appliesto other regions with somewhatlower levels of undernourishmentbut with limited or no progress in
reducing the absolute numbers:South Asia (excluding India), WestAfrica and India.
Other subregions with lower levelsof undernourishment that show aworrying increase in both prevalenceand numbers of undernourished are
East Asia (excluding China) mainlydue to a worsening situation in theDemocratic Peoples Republic ofKorea the Near East and CentralAmerica.
Clearly, progress towards the WFStarget is concentrated in too fewsubregions and generally in thosewith a prevalence of under-nourishment below the average forthe developing countries. Globalprogress is largely determined by afew subregions with large
populations, while too many othershave seen virtually no progress orhave even experienced setbacks. Toaccelerate the pace of global hungerreduction, it is essential to halt andreverse the rising trend in numberswhere it occurs and to broadensuccess in hunger reduction to othersubregions. This will evidently becritical in those subregions where the
The State of Food Insecurity in the World 2006 11
Progress towards the WFS target: ratio of number of undernourished in 200103 to 199092* and
prevalence of undernourishment in 200103
Source: FAO* For the transition countries: 199395
Prevalence of undernourishment 200103 (percent)0 10 20 30 40 50 60
Ratio: current number to baseline (200103/199092*)
.
2.5
2.0
1.5
1.0
0.5
0.0
Setback
Progress
Departing from WFS target
Moving towards WFS target
Beyond WFS target
9
Near East
East Asia, excl. China
North Africa
Eastern Europe Nigeria
South America
Baltic States
China
Southeast Asia
India
Caribbean
East Africa
Southern Africa
Central Africa
Central America
West Africa, excl. Nigeria
South Asia, excl. India
Mexico
CIS OceaniaDevelopingcountries
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prevalence of undernourishment ismost severe.
Undernourishment in the lead-upto 2015
Despite painfully slow global
progress in hunger reduction overthe last decade, a positive signcomes from some of FAOs latestprojections, which indicate anacceleration in the future (see table).7
The prevalence of hunger in thedeveloping countries as a group is
projected to drop by exactly half fromthe base rate (in 199092) of 20.3percent to 10.1 percent in 2015.If this happens, the MDG hungerreduction target will be met. Thesame cannot be said for the WFScommitment, as the number of
undernourished people in 2015 isexpected to remain in excess of itstarget by 170 million hungry people.
A reduced number of under-nourished people is not envisagedfor all developing regions. Only EastAsia is expected to reach the WFS
target. Sub-Saharan Africa and theNear East and North Africa, on thecontrary, are expected to suffer anincrease, reaching higher numbersin 2015 than in 199092.8 LatinAmerica and the Caribbean andSouth Asia, while projected to reach
the MDG target, are not on track forthe WFS target. The recentincreasing trends in the number ofundernourished people in SouthAsia, sub-Saharan Africa and theNear East and North Africa are likelyto be reversed, but, of these three,only South Asia is foreseen to reachthe MDG target.
Food intake and population growth
Projected progress in hunger
reduction mirrors significantincreases in average per capita foodconsumption. Despite the overallgains in food consumption,in several countries the increaseswill not be sufficient to allow for asignificant reduction in the number ofundernourished people. In particular,sub-Saharan Africa will still have anaverage per capita daily calorieintake of 2 420 kilocalories (kcal)(2 285 kcal when Nigeria is excluded)in 2015 close to that of South Asiaat the turn of the century. Low initiallevels of calorie intake, coupled withhigh population growth, willcontribute to the slow reductions inthe number of undernourishedpeople.
Reducing hunger will beparticularly difficult for countriescharacterized by historically veryhigh levels of hunger prevalence,very low food consumption (under2 200 kcal/person/day in 19992001),low economic growth prospects, highpopulation growth rates and alimited agricultural resource base.Thirty-two countries fall into thiscategory with undernourishment
The State of Food Insecurity in the World 200612
Undernourishment around the world
Projected undernourishment in the developing world
Number of undernourished people Prevalence of undernourishment(millions) (percentage of population)
199092* 2015 WFS target 199092* 2015 MDG target
Developing countries 823 582 412 20.3 10.1 10.2
Sub-Saharan Africa 170 179 85 35.7 21.1 17.9
Near East and North Africa 24 36 12 7.6 7.0 3.8
Latin America and the Caribbean 60 41 30 13.4 6.6 6.7
South Asia 291 203 146 25.9 12.1 13.0
East Asia** 277 123 139 16.5 5.8 8.3
NotesThe base period for projections is 19992001 and not 200103. Some small countries have also been excluded
from the projections.
* Data for 199092 may differ slightly from numbers reported elsewhere in the report as the projections are
based on undernourishment estimates that do not include the latest revisions.
** Includes Southeast Asia.
Trends and projections in per capita food consumption
Developing Sub-Saharan Near East and Latin America/ South Asia East andcountries Africa North Africa Caribbean Southeast Asia
kcal/person/day
3 500
3 000
2 500
2 000
1 500
1 000
500
0
Source: FAO
Source: FAO
10
196971 197981 198991 19992001 2015
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rates ranging from 29 to 72 percentof the population and an averageprevalence of 42 percent. Theircurrent population of 580 million isprojected to rise to 1.39 billion by2050. Their current average foodconsumption of 2 000 kcal/person/dayhas actually fallen below that of30 years ago. Despite their poorhistorical record, however, severalof these countries could achievesignificant gains by prioritizing thedevelopment of local foodproduction, as other countries havedone in the past.
Undernourishmentand poverty
Growth in per capita incomes willcontribute to hunger alleviation byreducing poverty and increasing percapita food demand.9 Higher growthrates in per capita GDP relative tothe 1990s are projected for allregions and country groups, with theexception of East Asia, whichnevertheless remains the region withthe highest growth rate (over 5.0percent/year in per capita terms).
Figure 12 presents trends andprojections for poverty andundernourishment rates, which,significantly, indicate that thepoverty target of MDG 1 (halvingthe proportion of the poor by 2015)will be reached in the baselinescenario.
Different methodologies are usedto estimate poverty and under-nourishment and the figures arenot directly comparable. However,a closer look at trends for bothindicators in the developingcountries reveals that poverty has
tended to decline more rapidly thanundernourishment. The World Bankand FAO projections for theseindicators suggest that this trendwill continue. In fact, the differencesin calculations notwithstanding,there were 1.5 poor people for everyhungry person in 199092; by 2015,the corresponding figures areprojected to be 1.2 to one.
These past trends and projectionssuggest that poverty reduction doesnot benefit proportionately those
among the poor who are alsoundernourished. Although thereasons for the slower rate ofhunger reduction are not clear, animportant factor may be that hungeritself acts as a barrier to escapingpoverty (the hunger trap). Pasteditions of The State of FoodInsecurity in the Worldas well asthe World Food Summit: five yearslaterhave emphasized that hungeris not only a consequence but also acause of poverty, and that itcompromises the productivepotential of individuals, families andentire nations. In the 2004 edition ofthis report, an extensive analysis ofthe social and economic costs ofhunger was presented.
An important policy implication ofthis relationship would be that, inthe absence of purposeful action,hunger will compromise efforts toreduce poverty globally. Incomegrowth, while necessary, is notalways sufficient for eradicatinghunger. Specific measures targeteddirectly at ensuring access to foodare an indispensable component ofeffective hunger eradication efforts.
The State of Food Insecurity in the World 2006 13
Trends and projections for growth in per capita GDP
Developing Sub-Saharan Near East and Latin America/ South Asia East Asia/countries Africa North Africa Caribbean Pacific
Source: World Bank. 2006. Global Economic Prospects 2006, Table 1.2. Washington, DC.
11
1980s 1990s 200115Percentage
7
6
5
4
3
2
1
0
-1
-2
Poverty and undernourishment
1990 2002 2015
Percentage of population
35
30
25
20
15
10
5
0
Source: US$1 poverty rates adaptedfrom World Bank. 2006. Global Economic Prospects.2006. Washington, DC. For undernourishment,see FAO. 2006. World agriculture: towards 2030/2050.Interim report. Prospects for food, nutrition,agriculture and major commodity groups, p. 19. Rome.
12
US$1 poverty
Undernourishment*
* For undernourishment, historical datarefer to 199092 and 200002.
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Asia and the Pacific regionaccounts for 68 percent ofthe developing worlds
population and 64 percent of itsundernourished population. Theprevalence of undernourishment at 16 percent of the total
population is second only toAfricas among the developingcountry regions.
Between 199092 and 200103,the number of undernourishedpeople in the region declined from570 million to 524 million and theprevalence of undernourishmentdropped from 20 to 16 percent. Everycountry except the Democratic
Peoples Republic of Korea10 saw adecline in prevalence, but it was notsufficient in all cases to compensate
for population growth only 9 of theregions 17 countries reduced thenumber of undernourished people.To reach the WFS target by 2015,progress must be accelerated.
The decline in the number ofhungry people in Asia and the Pacific
was driven mainly by China, whichsaw a reduction from 194 million to150 million. India has the largestnumber of undernourished people inthe world, 212 million onlymarginally below the 215 millionestimated for 199092. Bangladeshand Pakistan, both with high levelsof prevalence, account for 15 percentof the hungry people in the region,with Pakistan showing an increasein both prevalence and in absolutenumber.
Individual country progresstowards the WFS target is shown inFigure 15. No country in the regionhas yet met the target. Twocountries, Myanmar and Viet Nam,have reduced the number ofundernourished people by morethan 25 percent. In addition to these,the most significant progress inrelative terms has been achieved byChina, Thailand and Indonesia. Themost serious deterioration in foodsecurity has been experienced bythe Democratic Peoples Republic ofKorea, where the number ofundernourished people more thandoubled: from 3.6 million to7.9 million.
Fighting hunger: determinants ofsuccess and setbacks
In most countries of the region, themajority of the population andmost of the poor and food-insecure live in rural areas. A vibrant ruraleconomy is therefore a prerequisitefor reducing undernourishment.Productivity-driven (yield-increasing) growth in agriculture can
The State of Food Insecurity in the World 200614
Undernourishment in the regions
Asia and the Pacific
Number of undernourished people: Asia and the Pacific
13
Millions
250
200
150
100
50
0
Source: FAO
199092 199597 200103
Proportion of undernourished people: Asia and the Pacific
14
Percentage of population
35
30
25
20
15
10
5
0
Source: FAO
199092 199597 200103
Southeast Asia China East Asia India South Asia(excl. China) (excl. India)
Southeast Asia China East Asia India South Asia(excl. China) (excl. India)
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have a strong positive impact on therural non-farm economy throughboosting demand for locallyproduced non-agricultural goodsand by keeping food prices low.Increasing the productivity of small-scale farmers is especially
important as they, and rurallabourers, are more likely to spendthe additional income on food andbasic non-farm products andservices deriving from rural areas.Agricultural growth thus generatesa virtuous cycle in which agricultural
and rural off-farm activities sustaineach other. Such growth can make apowerful contribution towardsreducing the numbers ofundernourished, especially wheninitial income inequality is not toomarked and population growth ismoderate.
China and Viet Nam exemplify thisprocess. From 199092 to 200103,the number of hungry people inChina declined from 194 million to150 million and the prevalence ofundernourishment from 16 percentto 12 percent. This was achievedthrough strong economic andagricultural growth real per capitaGDP increased at an average annualrate of 8 percent between 1990 and2003, while per capita agriculturalGDP grew by 2.5 percent and percapita food production by 5.4 percentper year. At the same time, theannual population growth rate wasonly 1 percent.
The State of Food Insecurity in the World 2006 15
The Democratic Peoples Republic
of Korea has seen a sharp increase
in both the prevalence of under-
nourishment and the number
of hungry people over the period 199092
to 200103: the prevalence doubled and
the absolute number more than doubled
(to almost 8 million people).
The underlying cause appears to
have been negative trends in economic
growth. Statistics on GDP growth
are not available, making it difficult to
assess the extent of the problem.
However, available data on food
production indicate that this variable,
in per capita terms, declined at a rate of
2.2 percent per year over this period.
In 2003, the vast majority of the countrys
23 million people were dependent on
cereals received through the public
distribution system.
Food insecurity in the Democratic Peoples Republic of Korea
Number of undernourished: country progress and setbacks in Asia and the Pacific
Source: FAOPrevalence of undernourishment 200103 (percent)0 5 10 15 20 25 30 35 40
Ratio: current number to baseline (200103/199092)
2.5
2.0
1.5
1.0
0.5
0.0
Setback
Progress
Departing from WFS target
Moving towards WFS target
Beyond WFS target
15
Dem. Peoples
Rep. of Korea
BangladeshCambodia
Mongolia
Thailand
Sri Lanka
Lao Peoples Dem. Rep.
Pakistan
India
Philippines
Viet Nam
Nepal
China
Myanmar
Indonesia
Republic of Korea
Malaysia
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In fact, the rapid reduction ofhunger and poverty in China startedmuch earlier, originating withtwo major agricultural reformsin 1978, when families werepermitted to lease land from thecollectives and state procurementprices for foodgrains, oilcrops andhogs were raised.11 Agriculturaloutput and incomes rosedramatically in response, withrural per capita income increasingby 90 percent between 1980 and1985. From 1985 onwards, ruralnon-farm enterprises also began toexpand rapidly. By 2000 they hadabsorbed about a quarter of therural labour force and werecontributing about 30 percent tonational GDP, while farmhouseholds were deriving almost50 percent of their incomes fromnon-farm sources.12 The number of
poor people in rural China fell fromabout 490 million in 1979 to about90 million in 2002 in terms of theWorld Banks US$1-a-day povertyline.13 The number of under-nourished people was reduced from387 million in 196971 to the currentfigure of 150 million.
The rate of hunger reduction inChina slowed down during thesecond half of the 1990s.14 This, atleast in part, is attributable to theweak economic performance ofthe relatively isolated anddisadvantaged rural areas where themajority of the remainingundernourished people are located.The bulk of agricultural outputcomes from about 200 million verysmall (0.65 ha or less) farms.15
Recent steps by the Government ofChina to revitalize rural areas holdsout the promise that hunger
reduction can accelerate over thenext decade.
Between 199092 and 200103,Viet Nam reduced the prevalence ofundernourishment from 31 to17 percent and the number ofundernourished people from
21 million to 14 million. As in China,accelerated hunger and povertyreduction originated with market-oriented economic and agriculturalreforms, which were implementedin the 1980s. An economic reformprogramme gave farmers controlover land, allowed them to increasesales to the market and reducedagricultural taxation. Also as in thecase of China, the drivers werestrong per capita growth in GDP(5.7 percent/year between 1990
and 2003) and agricultural GDP(2.5 percent/year) as well asrapid expansion in food production.A poverty eradication programmetargeting investments in ruralinfrastructure also contributed toboosting agricultural production andhunger reduction. Viet Nam remainsa low-income country, and keepingup the momentum in reducinghunger presents a formidablechallenge.
Cambodia and India sawvirtually no change in the totalnumber of undernourished peopledespite strong growth in per capitaincome of 4 percent per yearfrom 1993 to 2003 in Cambodiaand 3.9 percent per year from 1990to 2003 in India. However, the goodoverall economic performancewas spread unevenly among sectorsand was not underpinned by strongagricultural growth; per capitaagricultural GDP increased at anannual rate of only 0.7 percentbetween 1993 and 2003 in Cambodiaand by 0.9 percent from 1990 to 2003in India.16
The State of Food Insecurity in the World 200616
Undernourishment in the regions
Undernourishment, GDP per capita and agricultural GDP per worker(percentage change 199092 to 200103)
16
Number of undernourished
GDP per capita Agricultural GDP per worker
Developing world
Asia and the Pacific
Source: FAO and World Bank
100
80
60
40
20
0
-20
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Latin America and theCaribbean is home to some6 percent of the developing
worlds undernourished people andto 11 percent of its total population.At 10 percent of the regionspopulation, the prevalence of under-
nourishment is the second lowestamong the developing regions.
With a reduction in the number ofundernourished people from59 million in 199092 to 52 million in200103, the region is makingprogress towards the WFS target,although the pace needs to beaccelerated. Progress is unevenand mostly concentrated in thesubregions of South America andthe Caribbean. Central America, onthe other hand, has witnessed an
upward trend in both numbers andprevalence. In Mexico,17 prevalenceremained unchanged at a relativelylow level while the number ofundernourished people increased.
Figure 19 reveals the widedivergence in country progresstowards the WFS target. A fewcountries Cuba, Guyana and Peru have already met the target whileChile and Uruguay are very close.Ecuador and Jamaica have reduced
the number of undernourishedpeople by around 25 percent. Braziland Suriname have shown similarprogress. Most countries in SouthAmerica have advanced towards thetarget, but a significant increase inhunger was recorded in the BolivarianRepublic of Venezuela. Setbacks have
also been recorded for most CentralAmerican countries, especiallyGuatemala and Panama. Haiti saw areduction in the number of under-nourished people but, at 47 percentof the population, the prevalence ofundernourishment remains by farthe highest in the region.
The State of Food Insecurity in the World 2006 17
Latin America and the Caribbean
Number of undernourished people:Latin America and the Caribbean
17
Millions
45
40
35
30
25
20
15
10
5
0
Source: FAO
199092 199597 200103
Proportion of undernourished people:Latin America and the Caribbean
18
Percentage of population
35
30
25
20
15
10
5
0
Source: FAO
199092 199597 200103
Mexico Central America The Caribbean South America Mexico Central America The Caribbean South America
Food insecurity deteriorated in Peru
during the 1970s and, especially, 1980s.
The prevalence of undernourishment
doubled from 21 percent in 196971 to42 percent in 199092. In the 1990s, the
trend was finally reversed. Between
199092 and 200103, the number of
undernourished fell from 9.3 million to
3.3 million people and the prevalence of
undernourishment from 42 to 12 percent
of the population.
The improved food security can be
attributed, inter alia, to the reduction
of inflation. Between 199092 and
200103, real per capita GDP grew
by 2.1 percent per year, despite the
setback caused by world financial
market upheaval in the late 1990s.
A key factor behind the success was
strong agricultural growth. Peru
introduced reforms in the agriculturesector, including legislation on land
transactions and entitlements, which led
to improvements in access to credit.
Agricultural value added per worker
increased by 4 percent annually between
199092 and 200103.
Nevertheless, significant levels of
undernourishment and poverty remain.
The challenge for the future is to
maintain the pace of improvements in
poverty and hunger reduction and
broaden the gains to poorer regions of
the country.
The World Food Summit target reached in Peru
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Fighting hunger: determinants ofprogress and setbacks
Overall, per capita dietary energysupplies are higher in the regionthan in both Asia and the Pacific andsub-Saharan Africa, and per capitaGDP is the highest amongdeveloping country regions. A keyfactor underlying food insecurity inthe region is high income inequality,which reflects unequal access toproductive assets.18 Inequalitycauses an uneven distribution of thefruits of economic growth and actsas a brake on poverty reduction.
The region is more urbanized thanother developing country regions,but in many countries the share ofthe rural population is still high.Furthermore, in most countries theincidence of extreme poverty andfood insecurity is higher in ruralareas than in urban ones. Rural andagricultural development has a
The State of Food Insecurity in the World 200618
Undernourishment in the regions
Number of undernourished: country progress and setbacks in Latin America and the Caribbean
Source: FAOPrevalence of undernourishment 200103 (percent)
0 5 10 15 20 25 30 35 40 45 50
Ratio: current number to baseline (200103/199092)
2.5
2.0
1.5
1.0
0.5
0.0
S
etback
Progress
Departing from WFS target
Moving towards WFS target
Beyond WFS target
19
Mexico
El Salvador
Argentina
Ecuador
Chile
Cuba
Uruguay
BrazilSuriname
Jamaica
Guyana Peru
Trinidad and TobagoColombiaCosta Rica
Bolivia
Dominican Rep.
Haiti
Honduras
Panama
GuatemalaVenezuela(Bolivarian Rep. of)
Paraguay
Nicaragua
Between 199092 and 200103, the
number of hungry people in Brazil
decreased from 18.5 million to
14.4 million and the prevalence from
12 to 8 percent of the population. With an
average energy intake of 3 060 kcal per
day (in 200103), Brazil has adequate
food supplies to feed its population, but
access to food is hampered by highly
skewed distribution of income and land.
In the early 1990s, Brazil experienced
recession and a debt crisis. Major policy
changes were introduced in an effort to
stabilize the macroeconomic situation;
these were accompanied by increased
government expenditures on social
programmes. Social indicators improved
as a consequence, but the country still
faces pervasive poverty and food insecurity
among the lowest income groups.
In 2003, the government launched the
Zero-Hunger Programme (Programa
Fome Zero) with the aim of rapidly
improving food security for 44 million
people. Its main components set out to
improve incomes, increase basic food
supplies, enhance access to food and
urgently alleviate hunger and
malnutrition through targeted
interventions.
A key social programme, launched in
October 2003, is the Bolsa Famlia
Programme, which provides conditional
income transfers to poor families.
Conditionalities include school
attendance and health visits. The
government plans, during 2006, to reach
all eligible families an estimated
11.2 million people.
Progress in Brazil
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major role to play in alleviatinghunger and extreme poverty,especially among small-scaleproducers and indigenouscommunities. Ensuring access bythe poor to productive resources land, capital, technology andeducation is of particularimportance.
The food economy is characterizedby deep structural changes thediffusion of new forms of food retail,including supermarkets andhypermarkets, and the consolidationof the food industry. Ensuring thatsmallholders and poorer farmersare not marginalized is a challengeto be faced.
In many countries, exportearnings are critical for ensuringstaple food imports. For countrieswith a high degree of exportcommodity concentration, export
earnings and the livelihoods ofindividuals who depend onagriculture and related activities arevulnerable to international pricefluctuations. For instance, thedramatic decline in coffee prices inrecent years had severe negativerepercussions on food security inCentral American countries.
In several countries in the region,susceptibility to natural shocksintensifies the vulnerability of thepoorest sections of the population.Examples over the last decadeinclude the El Nio phenomenon,which caused droughts and floodingin the Caribbean, Central Americaand the Andean countries in 1997and 1998, and hurricanes Georgesand Mitch, which destroyed lives,crops and infrastructure in manyCaribbean and Central Americancountries in 1998.
The State of Food Insecurity in the World 2006 19
Between 199092 and 200103, the
number of undernourished people in
Guatemala doubled to 2.8 million, and the
prevalence of hunger increased from 16to 23 percent of the population. Thirty-one
percent of the population live in extreme
poverty, almost 80 percent of whom live in
rural areas.1 Most of the rural poor are
indigenous and depend on subsistence
farming or agricultural work.
A longstanding constraint is unequal
access to productive resources. An
estimated 2 percent of the population
own 72 percent of agricultural land while
smallholdings of less than 7 ha in size
(87 percent of all farms) control only
15 percent.2
The productivity of smallfarmers is further constrained by poor
infrastructure and low levels of education
and social expenditure in rural areas.
Social expenditures are among the
lowest in the region, although they have
increased since 1990.3
Food insecurity has also been
aggravated by natural disasters. The
effects of El Nio were followed by
hurricane Mitch in 1998, drought in
2001 and hurricane Stan in October
2005. The latter caused losses
corresponding to 3.4 percent of GNP.4
Coffee production in 2000 accounted
for 18 percent of agricultural GDP,
4 percent of total GDP, 19 percent of
export revenues and 30 percent of rural
employment. The decline in
international coffee prices from the late
1990s seriously affected profitability for
both small producers, who predominate
numerically, and large and medium-size
farms, which account for 80 percent of
total production. The reduced demand
for farm labour led to employment
losses equivalent to 78 000 full-time
jobs and declines in rural wages.5
Notes: Please see page 40.
Worsening food insecurity inGuatemala
Undernourishment, GDP per capita and agricultural GDP per worker(percentage change 199092 to 200103)
20
Number of undernourished
GDP per capita Agricultural GDP per worker
Developing world
Latin America and theCaribbean
Source: FAO and World Bank
100
80
60
40
20
0
-20
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With 9 percent of thepopulation undernourished,the Near East and North
Africa is the region with the lowestprevalence of undernourishmentamong the developing regions.Relatively higher incomes and/or a
tradition of food support and subsidypolicies in some countries accountfor a large part of the difference. Theregion is home to around 5 percentof the undernourished and around8 percent of the population of thedeveloping world.
Although relatively low, foodinsecurity in the region is persistentand actually rising both in absolutenumbers and in prevalence.Between 199092 and 200103, theprevalence of hunger increased from
8 to 9 percent, which, combined withhigh population growth rates, led toan increase in the number of under-nourished people from 25 million to38 million. Excluding Afghanistan
and Iraq (for which available dataare very tenuous), the number of
undernourished still increased from15 million to 20 million andprevalence from 5 to 6 percent.
Among the countries in the region(excluding Afghanistan and Iraq), only
Yemen has very high levels of foodinsecurity; more than one-third of the
population are chronicallyundernourished. In the remainingcountries, except Jordan and Morocco,the prevalence of undernourishmentlies below 5 percent.
The State of Food Insecurity in the World 200620
Undernourishment in the regions
Near East and North Africa
Number of undernourished people: Near East and North Africa
21
Millions
35
30
2520
15
10
5
0
Source: FAO
199092 199597 200103
In Yemen, the number of hungry people increased from
4.2 million in 199092 to 7.1 million in 200103, and the
proportion of undernourished people in the population from 34 to
37 percent. The country falls among the low-income grouping and
is highly dependent on food imports. The average daily energy
supply of 2 020 kcal per person (200103) has decreased slightly,
from 2 040 kcal, in the decade since 199092. Yemens population
growth is among the highest in the world, exerting considerable
pressure on poverty and food insecurity levels in the country and
on its natural resource base. Generally, social indicators have
improved since 1990 but still remain poor; Yemen ranked 151 out
of 177 countries in the 2005 UNDP Human Development Index.
About three-quarters of the population and more than
80 percent of the poor live in rural areas, and agriculture
employs close to 50 percent of the labour force. Agricultural
production has been unable to keep pace with the rapidly growing
population, and dependence on agricultural imports has
increased significantly.
Rural development is critical for improving food security. The
agriculture sector is faced with low productivity due to the lack of
investment, inadequate water supply and scarce arable land.
Rapid depletion of groundwater resources may be the most
serious problem facing the country as a whole and the
agriculture sector in particular. About 42 percent of the cropped
land is irrigated and over 75 percent of irrigated land uses
groundwater. Ensuring sustainable use of scarce water resources
is crucial for the development of rural areas.
A further contributing factor often referred to regarding
Yemen is the production and use of the stimulant leaf qat, which
competes with food production for resources, including water,
and household food expenditures. The government has begun a
campaign against chewing the leaf, and farmers are being
encouraged to switch to high-value export crops in an effort to
improve water-use efficiency.
Worsening food insecurity in Yemen
Near East North Africa
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Progress of individual countriestowards the WFS target is shown in
Figure 23. Only Kuwait has reachedthe target, but the apparentlyimpressive record in hungerreduction must be seen in thecontext of the exceptionally high
level of undernourishment at theWFS baseline period (199092)
following the Iraqi occupation andthe first Gulf war. The United ArabEmirates has significantly reducedthe number of undernourished whilebringing the prevalence to a very low
level. Egypt and the Syrian ArabRepublic achieved small reductionsin the number of hungry people anda somewhat more significantreduction in the prevalence, which inboth countries is below 5 percent.The remaining countries (especially
Jordan and Yemen) experiencedincreases in numbers.
Fighting hunger:determinants of progress andsetbacks
The region relies heavily on foodimports, and foreign exchangeearnings constitute a majordeterminant of food security.Fluctuations in oil prices the keysource of export earnings
influence directly the economies ofthe exporting countries andindirectly the non-oil-exportingcountries, especially through flowsof remittances from intraregional
The State of Food Insecurity in the World 2006 21
GDP in the 1990s and prevalence of undernourishment in 2000Number of undernourished: country progress and setbacks in Near East and North Africa
Source: FAOPrevalence of undernourishment 200103 (percent)
0 5 10 15 20 25 30 35 40
Ratio: current number to baseline (200103/199092)
3.5
3.0
2.5
2.0
1.5
1.0
0.5
0.0
Setback
Progress
Departing from WFS target
Moving towards WFS target
Beyond WFS target
23
Yemen
Jordan
Turkey
Lebanon
Libyan Arab Jamahiriya
Iran (Islamic Rep. of)Morocco
AlgeriaSaudi Arabia
Egypt
Tunisia
Kuwait
United Arab Emirates
Syrian Arab Rep.
Proportion of undernourished people: Near East and North Africa
22
Percentage of population
14
12
108
6
4
2
0
Source: FAO
199092 199597 200103
Near East North Africa
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labour migration. Hence, the declinein oil prices during the 1990s had anegative impact on food security inthe region, while their presentrebound since 2002 is a powerfuldriving economic force.
The majority of the poor in the
region about 70 percent live inrural areas, while the rural share ofthe population is 43 percent.19 Forthe rural communities, agricultureremains the main source ofemployment and income andrepresents the engine of the ruraleconomy. The performance of thesector is subject to volatile climaticconditions, especially rainfall. Withthe exception of Egypt, where mostagricultural land is irrigated,drought often results in severe
production shortfalls, exerting heavypressure on farm incomes and foodimport bills. Increasing scarcity ofwater in the region limits the scopefor agricultural expansion andplaces the livelihoods of agriculturaland rural people under heavy stress.Improvements in water-useefficiency and managementpractices are critical elements forimproving the performance ofagriculture and the rural economies.
A significant challenge for theregion is that of meeting the growingfood requirements arising fromhigh population growth. Foodimports are crucial for food securityin this context, and represent ameans of saving scarce water.However, the region has not yetbeen successful in developingexport-oriented industries thatcould reduce its dependency on oilexports. A further challenge forseveral countries is that of ensuringlevels of economic growth sufficientto absorb the rapid expansion in thelabour force.
The State of Food Insecurity in the World 200622
Undernourishment in the regions
Between 199092 and 200103, the
number of hungry people increased from
100 000 to 400 000 and the prevalence of
undernourishment from 4 percent to7 percent of the population. Limited
resources, especially water, make Jordan
highly dependant on food imports.
Agriculture accounts for only 3 percent of
GDP and employs only 10 percent of the
labour force.
The Jordanian economy is highly
influenced by external factors, and its
performance has closely followed the
fluctuations in oil prices over the past
two decades as well as the conflicts in
the region. After a long period of
economic decline starting in the mid-1980s, Jordan is again experiencing
steady economic growth. Despite a large
external debt, the government has
succeeded in mobilizing public
expenditures towards social activitiessuch as health and education. However,
unemployment is still high and poverty
remains despite progress in reducing it.
While fewer than 2 percent of the
population are below the US$1-a-day
World Bank international poverty line,
7 percent live on less than US$2 a day.
With the labour force growing at
4 percent per year, the lack of job
opportunities is currently considered
the major threat to food security. In the
longer run, serious water scarcity could
constrain the countrys growth anddevelopment prospects.
Rising undernourishment in Jordan
Undernourishment, GDP per capita and agricultural GDP per worker(percentage change 1990-92 to 2001-03)
24
Number of undernourished
GDP per capita Agricultural GDP per worker
Developing world
Near East andNorth Africa
Source: FAO and World Bank
100
80
60
40
20
0
-20
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Sub-Saharan Africa accountsfor 13 percent of thepopulation and 25 percent of
the undernourished people in thedeveloping world. It is thedeveloping region with the highestproportion one-third of people
suffering from chronic hunger. In14 countries in the region, 35 percentor more of the population werechronically undernourished in200103.
Hunger in sub-Saharan Africa isas persistent as it is widespread.Between 199092 and 200103, thenumber of undernourished peopleincreased from 169 million to206 million, and only 15 of the39 countries for which data arereported reduced the number of
undernourished. At an annual rateof about 2.5 percent, the regionspopulation has been rising morequickly than the number of hungrypeople, resulting in a reduction inthe prevalence of undernourishmentfrom 35 to 32 percent: it declined in29 countries and increased in ten.
Efforts to reduce hunger in theregion have been hampered bynatural and human-induceddisasters, including conflictsoccurring during the 1990s and thespread of HIV/AIDS. Indeed, theincrease in the number ofundernourished people since theWFS baseline period was drivenmainly by five war-torn countries:Burundi, the Democratic Republic ofthe Congo, Eritrea, Liberia andSierra Leone. These countriescombined account for 29 million ofthe regions total increase of37 million. Particularly dramatic isthe worsening of food insecurity inthe Democratic Republic of theCongo, where the number of under-nourished people tripled, from12 million to 36 million, and theprevalence rose from 31 to 72 percent
of the population. The evidentconclusion is that conflict is a majorreason for lack of progress towardsthe WFS target in sub-SaharanAfrica.
The persistence of hunger in theregion is underlined by Figure 27,which shows individual country
progress towards the WFS target. Inaddition to Ghana, which has alreadyreached the target, only Gabonreduced the number of under-nourished by 25 percent or more(and is thus halfway towards thetarget). Other countries that reducedthe number of undernourished are:
The State of Food Insecurity in the World 2006 23
Sub-Saharan Africa
Number of undernourished people: Sub-Saharan Africa
25
Millions
100
90
80
70
60
50
40
30
20
10
0
Source: FAO
199092 199597 200103
Proportion of undernourished people: Sub-Saharan Africa
26
Percentage of population
60
50
40
30
20
10
0
199092 199597 200103
Source: FAO
Central Africa East Africa Southern Africa Nigeria West Africa(excl. Nigeria)
Central Africa East Africa Southern Africa Nigeria West Africa(excl. Nigeria)
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Angola, Benin, Chad, Congo,Ethiopia, Guinea, Lesotho, Malawi,Mauritania, Mozambique andNamibia. Nigeria and Cte dIvoiresaw only a marginal reduction in thenumbers, while the prevalencedeclined.
Fighting hunger:
determinants of progress and
setbacks
Among the countries that stand outas having achieved a significantreduction in the number of under-nourished are Ethiopia, Ghana andMozambique. In Ethiopia, thenumber of undernourished peopledeclined by 6 million (17 percent),
from 38 million to 32 million,between 199395 and 200103,20
with the prevalence falling from
61 to 46 percent. In relative terms,Ghanas performance was evenmore impressive. The number ofundernourished people was reducedfrom 5.8 million to 2.4 million(59 percent) and the prevalence ofundernourishment from 37 to
12 percent. In Mozambique, thenumber of undernourished people
declined by 900 000 (or by10 percent) and the prevalence ofundernourishment from 66 to45 percent. Although thecorrelatives of success variedamong highly successful countries,they seem to have combined good
economic growth performances witha significant expansion of per capita
The State of Food Insecurity in the World 20064
Undernourishment in the regions
Economic and agricultural performance in Ethiopia, Ghana and
Mozambique
Average annual per capita growth rate, 19902003
GDP Agricultural GDP Food production
(percentage)
Ethiopia* 2.0 1.0 2.3
Ghana 1.8 1.1 3.3
Mozambique 4.5 2.8 1.6* For Ethiopia, growth rates shown are for the period 19932003. Source: FAO and World Bank
Number of undernourished: country progress and setbacks in sub-Saharan Africa
Source: FAOPrevalence of undernourishment 200103 (percent)
0 10 20 30 40 50 60 70 80
Ratio: current number to baseline (200103/199092)
3.5
3.0
2.5
2.0
1.5
1.0
0.5
0.0
Setback
Progress
Departing from WFS target
Moving towards WFS target
Beyond WFS target
27
Ghana
Gabon
Mauritius
Benin
Togo
Senegal
Botswana
Central African Rep.
Zimbabwe
Mozambique
United Rep.of Tanzania
Liberia
Dem. Rep. of the Congo
Somalia
Burundi
Sudan
Madagascar
Kenya
Namibia
Gambia
Zambia
Mauritania
LesothoGuinea
Burkina Faso
Uganda RwandaNiger
Mali
Chad
Malawi
Congo
Angola
Sierra Leone
Nigeria
Cte dIvoire
Swaziland
Cameroon
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Undernourishment in the regions
Countries in transition
The transition economies are anextremely diverse group, a factthat should be kept in mind
when analysing hunger trends in theregion.21 The region is home to anestimated 25 million under-nourished people, 21 million of
whom live in the Commonwealth ofIndependent States (CIS).
In countries that have recentlyacceded to the European Union(EU),22 and in Romania, the level ofundernourishment is generally low 6 percent at the most. Somewhathigher levels are found in theBalkans (Bosnia and Herzegovina,Bulgaria, Croatia, Serbia andMontenegro, and The formerYugoslav Republic of Macedonia).Within the CIS countries, the range
of prevalence of undernourishmentvaries widely: from about 3 percentin Belarus, the Russian Federationand Ukraine to 61 percent inTajikistan, which, along withArmenia and Uzbekistan, is one ofthe countries facing the mostserious food insecurity problems.
Progress towards the WFS targetfor the countries in transition ismeasured using 199395 as thebaseline period.23 For the region as
a whole, there has been a slightincrease in both the number ofhungry people and the prevalence ofhunger. While some countriesshowed progress to varying degrees,others have experienced a sharpdeterioration in their food security
situation.Individual country progress
towards the WFS target is shown inFigure 31. Of the countries that haveachieved the target, the mostsuccessful are Azerbaijan, Georgiaand Kyrgyzstan, all of which, startingfrom a high prevalence of hunger,have cut the number ofundernourished by at least two-thirds. Armenia, which in 199395had the highest prevalence ofundernourishment (52 percent) in
the region, has already halved itsnumber of hungry people, but at29 percent of the population theprevalence remains disturbinglyhigh. Other countries that have metthe WFS target are Croatia, Estonia,Lithuania and The former YugoslavRepublic of Macedonia. Latvia, theRussian Federation, Slovenia andTurkmenistan have made strongprogress, though they have yet tomeet the target.
A few countries suffered setbacks,in some cases very severe. Thelargest relative increase was inKazakhstan, but by far the mostserious situation is in Tajikistan andUzbekistan, which have both seen a
Number of undernourished people:transition countries
29
Millions
25
20
15
10
5
0
Source: FAO
199395 200103
Proportion of undernourished people:transition countries
30
Percentage of population
8
7
6
5
4
3
2
1
0
Source: FAO
199395 200103
Commonwealth of Balt ic States Eastern EuropeIndependent States
Commonwealth of Balt ic States Eastern EuropeIndependent States
Azerbaijan and Georgia the two
countries that have been most
successful in reducing hunger from very
high levels emerged from armedconflict in the early 1990s. Their
economies started expanding in the
second half of that decade following a
severe contraction in the early years.
Economic growth, in turn, was a major
factor behind the significant reduction
in the numbers of hungry people in
both countries from about 2.5 million in
199395 to 0.70.8 million in 200103.
Both have made strong progress since
1993 in implementing economy-wide
reforms and those specific to the
agriculture sector, includingprivatization of agricultural land and
titling.
Progress in Azerbaijan andGeorgia
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serious worsening of food securityand currently experience very highlevels of undernourishment.
Fighting hunger: determinantsof progress and setbacks
Factors influencing progress orsetbacks in hunger reduction arediverse in the region. In manyinstances, food insecurity has been adirect consequence of human-induced disasters war, conflict andpolitical and economic instability withensuing problems of refugees anddisplaced persons. Armenia,Azerbaijan, Georgia, the Republic ofMoldova, the Russian Federation andmany Balkan countries are amongthis group. Natural disasters(prolonged drought in parts ofArmenia, Azerbaijan, Georgia and theRepublic of Moldova) have also playeda role.
More generally, food insecurity inthe region can be traced to factorssuch as weak economic developmentresulting from lack of support policiesand infrastructure and the breakdownof social safety nets following thedissolution of the pre-1990seconomic and political systems inEastern Europe and the CIS.
Between 1990 and 2001, extremepoverty, measured as the share ofthe population living on less thanUS$1 a day, increased from 0.4 to5.3 percent in the CIS countries andfrom 0.2 to 2.0 percent in thetransition countries of southeasternEurope.24 However, the CIS averagemasks the existence of countrieswith exceptionally high rates ofextreme poverty such as theRepublic of Moldova (22 percent),Uzbekistan (14 percent), Armenia (13percent), Turkmenistan (10 percent)and Tajikistan (7 percent).25
Reversing the food securitysetbacks requires focused efforts onpro-poor development strategies,targeting rural areas especially,which are home to more than50 percent of the population incountries such as the Republic ofMoldova, Tajikistan and Uzbekistanand to large shares also in othercountries where hunger ispervasive. While agriculture is notthe predominant sector in the regionas a whole, it remains important inthe poorer countries, andagricultural performance willdetermine future progress inreducing poverty and food insecurity.In the three countries with thehighest levels of undernourishment Tajikistan, Armenia andUzbekistan agriculture accountsfor 24, 23 and 31 percent of GDP,respectively.26
Number of undernourished: country progress and setbacks in the countries in transition
Source: FAONote: Not shown on graphic: Kazakhstan (ratio 7,2, prevalence 8 percent).
Prevalence of undernourishment 200103 (percent)0 5 10 15 20 25 30 55 60 65
Ratio: current number to baseline (200103/199395)
4.5
4.0
3.5
3.0
2.5
2.0
1.5
1.0
0.5
0.0
S
etback
Progress
Departing from WFS target
Moving towards WFS target
Beyond WFS target
31
Romania
Hungary
Poland
Czech Republic
Lithuania
Estonia
Serbia and Montenegro
Bulgaria
Azerbaijan
Russian Federation
Ukraine
SloveniaLatvia Turkmenistan
Kyrgyzstan
CroatiaMacedonia FYRArmenia
Uzbekistan
Georgia
Tajikistan
Republic of Moldova
Belarus
Bosnia and HerzegovinaSlovakia
Albania
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This report has shown that,although we are closer to theMDG target of halving the
proportion of undernourishedpeople by 2015, we are still very farfrom the WFS target of halving theirnumber. Towards the latter goal no
progress has been made, and thenumber of hungry people hasremained virtually unchanged since199092.
Despite the disappointing resultsso far, prospects for hungerreduction appear more promisingtoday. Improved economicperformance in developingcountries, bolstered by increasedinternational attention to the dualproblem of extreme poverty andhunger, promises more rapid
advances in the coming years. Still,the task in front of us is daunting:each year until 2015, the world mustbe able to count 31 million fewerhungry people27 ten times the totalreduction achieved since 199092 if we are to meet the pledge madeduring the WFS and reiteratedduring the WFS: five years later.
Furthermore, not all countriesface equal challenges, and manyrisk being left behind in the fightagainst hunger. Those that face themost serious difficulties and need tomake the largest efforts are oftenthose that have the least means to
do so. Without purposeful action bydomestic stakeholders and withoutassistance from the worldcommunity, these countries riskfurther marginalization, making thehunger reduction effort even moredifficult in the future.
Lessons learnt in hungerreduction28
In stepping up our efforts to reachthe WFS target and broadening the
areas of progress, past experiencescan provide indispensable guidanceon general policy directions. Thefollowing are some of the policylessons emerging from pastsuccesses and failures in hungerreduction. Hunger reduction is necessary
for accelerating development and
poverty reduction. Hunger is, atthe same time, a consequenceand a cause of poverty. Hungernegatively affects health, labourproductivity and investmentchoices, perpetuating poverty.Therefore targeted interventions
to ensure access to food areneeded.
Agricultural growth is critical forhunger reduction. Some 70percent of the poor in developingcountries live in rural areas anddepend on agriculture for theirlivelihoods, either directly orindirectly. In the poorest ofcountries, agricultural growth isthe driving force of the ruraleconomy. Particularly in the mostfood-insecure countries,
agriculture is crucial for incomeand employment generation(Figures 32 and 33). Combatinghunger requires an expandedcommitment to agriculture andrural development.
Technology can contribute, butunder the right conditions.Improved technology, adapted to
The State of Food Insecurity in the World 200628
Towards the Summit commitments
The way ahead:strengthening efforts for eradicating hunger
Agricultural GDP and undernourishment in200103
32
Percentage of population undernourished
0 5 10 15 20 25 30
< 5
519
2034
35
Source: FAO
Agricultural employment and undernourishmentin 200103
33
Percentage of population undernourished
Source: FAO
Agricultural GDP as a share of total GDP (percent)0 10 20 30 40 50 60 70 80Agricultural employment as a share of total employment (percent)
< 5
519
2034
35
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local conditions that favour small-scale farmers, hastens povertyreduction through increased farmincomes and lower food prices.
Trade can contribute to hungerreduction and poverty alleviation.But gains from trade
liberalization are neitherautomatic nor universal. Ensuringbenefits for the poor requiresattention to a range of otherfactors, including marketinfrastructure, institutions anddomestic policy reforms andsafety nets.
Public investment is essential foragricultural growth. Publicinvestment in infrastructure,agricultural research, educationand extension is indispensable for
promoting agricultural growth.Actual public expenditures onagriculture in many poorcountries do not reflect theimportance of the sector,particularly in those with highprevalence of undernourishment.
Development assistance does nottarget the neediest countries.External assistance to agricultureand rural development hasdeclined compared with the levelsof the 1980s. It also tends not totarget sufficiently the countrieswith low levels of under-nourishment.
Peace and stability are a sine quanonfor hunger and povertyreduction. Protracted conflictsdisrupt productive activities anddestroy infrastructure andlivelihoods, seriouslyundermining food security.
Towards a policy agenda forhunger reduction
Policy interventions for effectivehunger reduction must also bedesigned in the context of emerging
global, regional and national trendsand challenges. Globalization willnot only open opportunities byexpanding markets for agriculturalcommodities, but will also opendomestic markets to foreigncompetitors. Rapid urbanization willincrease urban demand for food aswell as f