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Secretary-General |
This article first appeared in the Washington Post
12 March 2008
The New Face of Global Hunger
By Ban Ki-moon
The price of food is soaring. The threat of hunger and malnutrition is growing. Millions of the world’s most vulnerable people are at risk. An effective and urgent response is needed.
The first of the Millennium Development Goals, set by world
leaders at the UN summit in 2000, aims to reduce the proportion of hungry people
by half by 2015. This was already a major challenge, not least in
The price of basic staples—wheat, corn, rice—are at
record highs, up 50 percent or more in the last six months. Global food stocks
are at historic lows. The causes range from rising demand in major economies
like
The effects are widely seen. Food riots have erupted in
countries from West Africa to
In January, to cite but one example,
This is the new face of hunger, increasingly affecting communities that had previously been protected. And, inevitably, it is the so-called “bottom billion” who are hit hardest: people living on one dollar or less a day.
When people are that poor, and inflation erodes their meager earnings, they generally do one of two things: they buy less food, or they buy cheaper, less nutritious food. The end result is the same—more hunger and less chance of a healthy future. The UN’s World Food Program is seeing families who previously could afford a diverse, nutritious diet dropping to one staple and cutting their meals from three to two or one a day.
Experts believe that high food prices are here to stay. Even so, we have the tools and technology to beat hunger and meet the goals of the MDGs. We know what to do. What is required is political will and resources, directed effectively and efficiently.
First, we must meet urgent humanitarian needs. This year,
WFP plans to feed 73 million people globally, including as many as 3 million
people each day in
Second, we must strengthen UN programs to help developing countries deal with hunger. This must include support for safety-net programs to provide social protection, in the face of urgent need, while working on longer term solutions. We also need to develop early warning systems to reduce the impact of disasters. School feeding—at a cost of less than 25 cents a day—can be a particularly powerful tool.
Third, we must deal with the increasing consequences of weather-related shocks to local agriculture, as well as the long-term consequences of climate change—for example by building drought and flood defense systems that can help food-insecure communities to cope and adapt.
Lastly, we must boost agricultural production and market
efficiency. Roughly a third of food shortages could, to a significant degree, be
alleviated by improving local agricultural distribution networks and helping to
better connect small farmers to markets. UN agencies such as the Food and
Agriculture Organization and the International Fund for Agricultural
Development, meanwhile, are working with the African Union and others to promote
a “green revolution” in
But that is for the future. In the here and now, we must help the world’s hungry hit by rising food prices. That means, for starters, recognizing the urgency of the crisis—and acting.
The writer is UN Secretary-General