Showing posts with label hunger statistics. Show all posts
Showing posts with label hunger statistics. Show all posts

Tuesday, 7 June 2011

MALNUTRITION: Reimagining Food Systems in the Midst of a Hunger Crisis

Kanya D'Almeida : Jun 3, 2011 (IPS) -

Today one billion people are living in hunger, not because of scarcity of production or a shortage of food on shelves in the global marketplace, but because they "lack the most basic purchasing power needed to acquire it", Olivier De Schutter, the United Nations Special Rapporteur on the Right to Food, said Thursday.
Currently, 35-40 percent of harvests are lost due to inadequate transportation and storage facilities, while a further 35-40 percent goes to wealthy Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development (OECD) countries.
According to experts like De Schutter, the inability of 10 percent of the world's population to feed itself is also a reflection of unsustainable patterns of consumption and deeply flawed models of industrialised agricultural production which, if allowed to continue, will divert 50 percent of global cereal harvests towards feeding cattle by the year 2050.
"From the food crisis in 1974, to the crisis in 2007-2008, and even now during the food crisis of 2010-2011, governments have had the same Pavlovian reaction - to increase production in order to lower prices and alleviate the burden of food price inflation on the population," De Schutter said at a panel discussion in Washington.
He added that while the reaction was understandable, it has been undeniably proven to be incomplete, short-sighted and based on an inadequate diagnosis of the complexity of the problem.
"A food system that is increasingly industrialised and commodified is not the only one available to us," he stressed. "We can and must re- imagine other food systems that take numerous social dimensions into account."

Inter-connected crises
In his recent report "Agroecology and the Right to Food", which was presented to the Human Rights Council in March this year, De Schutter outlines the global hunger catastrophe as an amalgamation of three distinct but inherently inter-related problems.
These are poverty, caused by trade policies that dump heavily- subsidised produce from developed countries on third world markets, thus rendering local farmers jobless; environmental degradation brought on by industrialised farming, which now accounts for nearly one-third of global green house gas emissions; and an epidemic of malnutrition caused by the colonising effects of mono-crops and a flood of processed food from the global north to the global south.
Only by examining these three challenges together can a strategy for ending hunger be successfully designed and implemented, he argues.
A study released Friday by the Consultative Group on International Agricultural Research (CGIAR)'s programme on Climate Change, Agriculture and Food Security (CCAFS) bolstered this argument by identifying future climate change "hotspots" in countries already crippled by severe food shortages and chronic hunger.
By consolidating detailed maps of scores of different agricultural regions across the world, the seven scientists behind the study tracked the impacts of climate change on food security and identified highly-vulnerable populations - principally in Africa and South Asia, with dark clouds hanging over China and parts of Latin America as well - that would suffer the double blows of hunger and environmental crisis.
"When you put these maps together they reveal places around the world where the arrival of stressful growing conditions could be especially disastrous," Polly Ericksen, lead author of the study and a senior scientist at the CGIAR's International Livestock Research Institute (ILRI) in Nairobi, Kenya, told the press in Copenhagen Friday.
"These are areas highly exposed to climate shifts, where survival is strongly linked to the fate of regional crop and livestock yields, and where chronic food problems indicate that farmers are already struggling and they lack the capacity to adapt to new weather patterns," she said.
Swathes of South Asia, including virtually all of India's territory and vast areas of sub-Saharan Africa are home to 369 million food- insecure people, all of whom live in climate-vulnerable, agriculture- intensive areas.
Over 56 million hungry and crop-dependent people in West Africa, India and China inhabit areas which, in less than 40 years, will likely experience daily growing season temperatures of 30 degrees Celsius - virtually impossible conditions for essential crops like corn and rice.

Reimagining food systems
In 2006, a team of researchers from the University of Essex carried out a study on "agro-ecological" approaches to farming and development.
Spanning 57 developing countries and 286 different models of sustainable farming techniques in an area covering 37 million hectares - three percent of cultivated land - the study unearthed how low external-input farming that utilized surrounding ecosystems and cyclical practices resulted in a 79 percent yield increase, more than double the average yield under the normalised agricultural system.
Agro-ecology, which includes systems that produce their own fertiliser using materials and waste from the surrounding environment, is being increasingly viewed as the only viable solution to the hunger crisis. Since prices of fertiliser doubled during the 2008 food crisis, continents like Africa that import 95 percent of their chemical fertilisers could see radically different outcomes in production by adopting agro-ecological techniques.
Analysing the data from the 2006 study by region, the International Fund for Agricultural Development (IFAD) found that in some parts of Africa the yield increase was a stunning 213 percent.
However, De Schutter warned, this agricultural "revolution" will not come about by chance but will require swift and determined government action.
In addition to investing in education, gender-sensitive solutions and public goods and services such as the infrastructure required to nurture farmers' unions and peasant cooperatives, De Schutter's recommendations to governments include an urgent appeal to revolutionize markets to reward best-practices rather than short-term profit.
"The market as it exists today is too focused on global supply chains and does not give enough importance to local farmers, and producers of diversified crops," De Schutter told IPS.
"Governments must move away from export-led supply models and reinvest heavily in regional, sustainable food systems."
He added that governments should set solid agendas, which development agencies and private sector actors would align with, that incorporate a cultural shift away from a broken structure and towards a visionary, resilient food future.

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Reimagining Food Systems in the Midst of a Hunger Crisis
 Enter the Transnationals

At a panel entitled "Feeding the World While Caring for the Planet", representatives from the U.S. Agency for International Development joined with De Schutter to discuss the U.S. government's latest Feed the Future Initiative.
While seemingly aligned with the policies and recommendations of leading ecological and environmental experts, the initiative has generated tremendous controversy since Rajiv Shah, USAID's chief administrator, announced in January that "large-scale private sector partnerships" would lead the way to a world free of hunger.
Identifying 17 global "champions", Shah named transnational giants Archer Daniels Midland, BASF, Bunge, Cargill, The Coca- Cola Company, DuPont, General Mills, Kraft Foods, Metro, Monsanto Company, Nestlé, PepsiCo, SABMiller, Syngenta, Unilever, Wal-Mart Stores and Yara International as leaders in the fight against food insecurity.
Heavily featured on watchdog websites such as GRAIN, CorpWatch and Food and Water Watch, these companies have notorious track records in human and environmental rights violations.
"Feed the Future... needs to think a lot harder about what it will mean for small- scale farmers when they partner with transnationals to push GMO seeds, even drought-resistant varieties," Karen Hansen-Kuhn, international programme director of the Institute for Agriculture and Trade Policy, told IPS. "It's... almost certain that they would lock farmers into even more dependence on imported inputs, rather than building local self- reliance through agroecologal methods."
She added, "This [initiative] is funded by the U.S. government, so they need to make sure those public funds support public interests. We hear a lot about 'value chains' and relying on markets, but hardly anything about market failures, and the fact that supply chains are often rigged against small- scale farmers."
"De Schutter is right that what's important is to re- localise food systems, so that supply chains are shorter and geared towards local communities. It's hard to see how these corporate alliances can play any role in that process," Hansen- Kuhn concluded.

Strong Government Action

De Schutter believes that even the problem of corporate interests can be overcome if governments seize the opportunity to assert their influence in prioritising sustainable systems.
"One problem that has existed since the 1980s is the weight that international trade has exercised on the development of policies," De Schutter told IPS.
"Though it concerns only 9-10 percent of the food that is produced globally, international trade has had a decisive influence on the way decisions are made, on the way infrastructure develops and on how farmers are being supported - but governments can change that."
He added that another part of the problem has been the political disenfranchisement and disempowerment of the majority of small-scale farmers.
"This is why it is key in my view that Feed the Future should include a specific focus on the organisation of farmers into cooperatives that can have a stronger bargaining position on the food chains, and that it should address the problem of concentration and abuse of buyer power in the food chains, in particular by a more assertive use of the powers that the authorities have under existing antitrust legislation," De Schutter told IPS.
"Today, too many policymakers still see hunger as a problem of supply and demand, when it is primarily a problem of a lack of access to productive resources such as land and water, of unscrupulous employers and traders, of an increasingly concentrated input providers sector, and of insufficient safety nets to support the poor."
He added, "Empowerment of farmers and the strengthening of their position in the food system is vital, and I do hope that the Feed the Future initiative will not ignore this issue simply because of those companies which contribute to funding it."
http://ipsnews.net/news.asp?idnews=55924

Wednesday, 22 December 2010

MALNUTRITION: Mumbai slum children facing acute malnutrition

Malnutrition, illness and abject poverty have taken a severe toll on children in Mumbai's Rafiq Nagar slum. File photo: Paul Noronha
File photo: Paul Noronha

Malnutrition, illness and abject poverty have taken a severe toll on children in Mumbai's Rafiq Nagar slum. Situated in a vast dumping ground, swarming with flies, and packed with garbage heaps at every step, the destitute colony has seen a series of child deaths since April this year, even as authorities scramble to ascertain their causes.
The infant, Asif Sheikh, from Rafiq Nagar slum died on Tuesday. His death comes less than a week after one-and-a-half-year-old Sahil Sheikh lost his life in the same slum. Sahil was not able to digest his food properly, officials of the Integrated Child Development Services (ICDS) told The Hindu.
The ICDS ward office has asked for data from the organisation Apna Le, which has been keeping a record of child deaths and malnutrition in 650 houses in the area for the past five years.
The Apna Le volunteers have recorded 18 deaths since April of which 10 have been due to malnutrition, said Pushpa Adhikari. There are 429 children in the age group of zero to 5. Of those who have been weighed so far, 25 were found to be in the acute stage, 80 fell in the moderately underweight stage and 143 were normal.
Najmunisa's four children are in varying stages of malnutrition. Her two-year-old son Mohammad Ahmed falls in the acute stage, weighing only 6 kg instead of the required 8 kg. Her six-day-old daughter weighs 2.5 kg, about 1/2 kg less than the average weight.
The pale Najmunisa is herself has a low blood count of 9.5, due to which she cannot undergo family planning operation.
It's the same story in Asma Sheik's house and practically every other house in Rafiq Nagar. Many of the residents here are migrants, eking out a living as garbage-pickers for which they erratically earn around Rs.3,000 a month.
“During the monsoon there is no work, so we have to take loans to survive,” said Najmunisa. Of the meagre earnings, a large amount is spent on water, which costs about Rs.40 a drum. Large families subsist on one drum for two days. Asma's house of five children, for instance, uses the same water for drinking and cooking.
“There are times when for eight days there is no water tanker. So there is no water to cook food,” said an ICDS staff. The extreme squalor gives rise to a host of diseases against which the children of Rafiq Nagar completely lack immunity.
Mothers reported that municipal schools refused to admit their wards either without birth certificates or summarily. Due to this, many cannot avail of the mid-day meals they are entitled to.
The Apna Le, which provides food for 250 children daily, hit out at the lackadaisical approach of government agencies. “We cannot blame the anganwadi teachers; they simply don't have the tools – the weighing scales, the cards to track malnutrition. Workers don't come to weigh the children every month. Two years ago, in reply to an RTI application, the ICDS said, there was not a single malnourished child in this area. In anganwadis, no record of beneficiaries is kept. The ICDS is a good scheme, but its implementation is poor,” said Ms. Adhikari.
According to the ICDS data, in Shivajinagar area, in which Rafiq Nagar falls, 915 children between zero to five years had severe underweight problem in the month of October this year. A climb down from 1,113 children in the same category in September.
The number of children who are moderately underweight rose from 1,982 in September to 2,122 in October. The ICDS has recorded 12 deaths in Shivajinagar, of which two were due to malnutrition, six still births and the rest were due to illness, ICDS staff said.
“Migration and demolitions [severely affect the growth of the children]. Their immunity is very low. There is no gap between the children. Anganwadi gives only one meal, but that is not enough,” the ICDS workers said.
Rafiq Nagar is part of a 900-acre dumping ground, which stretches over many other slum colonies. “It's an encroached property. How can the civic body provide any services? Do they pay taxes? They come here because in Mumbai they can at least get two square meals,” said a civic official.
http://www.thehindu.com/news/article954719.ece

Friday, 22 October 2010

MALNUTRITION: CONGO: Farming villages to boost food output


Photo: André Thiel/Flickr
The first “farming village” project was inaugurated on 8 October in Nkouo, about 80km north of Brazzaville, capital of the Republic of Congo
22 October 2010 (IRIN) - The Republic of Congo has launched a “farming village” project to boost food self-sufficiency, with the first one inaugurated in Nkouo, about 80km north of Brazzaville, the capital, on 8 October. It houses 40 families from different regions of the country.
"Forty hen-houses, a warehouse, a sorting centre and refrigerated storage space have been made available. Each family received 792 laying hens and 2ha for cultivation,” said project director Jean-Jacques Bouya.
According to the Minister of Agriculture, Rigobert Maboundou, produce will be sold by the state and a portion of the revenue returned to the farmers.
Set up by Société congolaise de modernisation (Socomod), a subsidiary of an Israeli company L.R. Groups, the project is funded entirely by the Congolese government to the tune of US$26 million.
"Nkouo will produce two million kilogrammes of cassava per year… which will, undoubtedly, contribute to food self-sufficiency in Brazzaville," said the director of Socomod, Etrog Yehushua.
“Our goal is to boost food self-sufficiency and hold down imports,” said Maboundou.
"Besides the new agricultural villages there are other initiatives: restocking of livestock, mechanization of agriculture and distribution of improved seeds, " he added.
"Conditions here are suitable for large-scale agriculture: we have water, electricity and a school for our children," Gaetan Charlly Lengou, 32, one of the new farmers, told IRIN.
According to a 2010 report by the International Food Policy Research Institute, 21 percent of people are undernourished and 11.8 percent of children are underweight in Congo. In addition, the UN Children's Fund says more than a quarter of deaths among children under five are attributable to malnutrition.
http://www.irinnews.org/report.aspx?ReportID=90848

Tuesday, 19 October 2010

MALNUTRITION: On the shores of Lake Chad, UNICEF intensifies its fight against malnutrition

September 30, 2010

New Survey Shows 22 per cent of Children Suffer from Malnutrition in the Region
Usually considered a breadbasket for Chad, the region on the northern shore of Lake Chad is now affected by an extremely high malnutrition rate of children under five, almost 22 per cent, well beyond the emergency threshold.
"For years, we thought that with the lake, the region had many resources, food crops, corn, which explains the limited presence of aid workers here" said Dr. Roger Sodjinou, UNICEF chief of Nutrition. "In reality, the nutrition surveys we’ve just conducted show a catastrophic situation, confirming that the causes of malnutrition are not limited to the issue of food insecurity"
The results of this study were presented on 21 September to local authorities in Bol, the capital of this region where nearly 18,000 children under five are malnourished, including more than 4,600 severe malnutrition.
Local authorities did not expect to be amongst the areas of Chad most affected by malnutrition.
"Access to food is not a guarantee against malnutrition, food also needs to cover the nutritional needs of children and children need to have access to health care and appropriate hygiene and sanitation practices,” Dr. Roger Sodjinou stressed.
Children aged 6 to 29 months are the most affected by malnutrition, which corresponds to the period during which infants move from breast milk to often inappropriate diets.
Supporting local staff and raising awareness on this issue is therefore critical. The local health environment is marked by serious deficiencies in equipment and personnel, i.e. only one nurse for Bol’s hospital, a town of 40,000 inhabitants.
"I myself am forced to leave my job to run to the emergency or operating room and provide medical care" says Regional Health Delegate, Raoul Djinguebey, who keeps his surgical gown constantly at hand on the back of his chair.
To alleviate the needs, UNICEF is extending the emergency strategy already in place elsewhere in the Sahel belt by developing a network of outpatient feeding centres (NAC) in the hardest to reach corners of the region. These centres will refer the most severe cases to a therapeutic feeding centre (TFC) that will be installed in Bol’s hospital in the upcoming weeks.
A nutrition expert will be deployed in the city, as well as in the other urban center of the region, Ngouri, to train all health personnel by mid-October to the screening and treatment of malnutrition.
Meanwhile, 20 cartons of Plumpy Nut, a dietary supplement used to treat severe acute malnutrition, and medicines were distributed to the regional delegation to cover the most urgent needs.
The screening of malnourished children is a crucial step in the fight against malnutrition, despite extremely poor infrastructure, no paved road and widely disseminated villages.
"Before, we did not track malnutrition, so we did not treat it" explains Madou Adoum Bakama, a nurse at Health Centre Bol Urbain. "Today, we refer them immediately, even during National Immunization Days, so children can be treated" He stresses that this strategy works in urban areas but that "obviously, in the bush, it’s always very complicated"
"Reaching every child is obviously a challenge, both humanly, logistically and financially, but UNICEF intends to be present throughout the Sahel belt, where children continue to die from malnutrition" insists Dr Francis Kampundu, Head of the Emergency unit emergency created specifically to respond to the most pressing crises in Chad.
http://www.webwire.com/ViewPressRel.asp?aId=124154

Sunday, 17 October 2010

MALNUTRITION: Child malnutrition in India



VISHAL, the son of a farm labourer in the west Indian state of Maharashtra, is almost four. He should weigh around 16kg (35lb). But scooping him up from the floor costs his nursery teacher, a frail woman in a faded sari, little effort. She slips Vishal’s scrawny legs through two holes cut in the corners of a cloth sack, which she hooks to a weighing scale. The needle stops at just over 10kg—what a healthily plump one-year-old should weigh.
The teacher nods and puts Vishal back on the floor, where he sits listlessly before a jigsaw puzzle. That his teacher does not look perturbed is unsurprising. Nearly half of India’s small children are malnourished: one of the highest rates of underweight children in the world, higher than most countries in sub-Saharan Africa. More than one-third of the world’s 150m malnourished under-fives live in India.
That makes the sight of small, skinny children depressingly routine. Vishal’s rural village is not especially impoverished; 120km (75 miles) from Mumbai, India’s financial centre, it offers factory-work as well as the farm labour most country people do. But the battered register in Vishal’s nursery, a government-run centre known as an anganwadi (literally, courtyard), shows that close to half the children are malnourished, a handful chronically so. “It’s always been this way,” says Sunanda, the anganwadi teacher, who has weighed the children in her care every month for 25 years. “Nothing has changed.”
Almost as shocking as the prevalence of malnutrition in India is the country’s failure to reduce it much, despite rapid growth. Since 1991 GDP has more than doubled, while malnutrition has decreased by only a few percentage points. Meanwhile, the chasm between lucky and unlucky Indian children is growing: under fives in rural areas are more likely to be underweight than urban children, low-caste children than higher-caste children, girls rather than boys. And the disparities are growing. India seems certain to miss one of its key Millennium Development Goals: halving malnutrition by 2015.
Malnutrition places a heavy burden on India. It is linked to half of all child deaths and nearly a quarter of cases of disease. Malnourished children tend not to reach their potential, physically or mentally, and they do worse at school than they otherwise would. This has a direct impact on productivity: the World Bank reckons that in low-income Asian countries physical impairments caused by malnutrition knock 3% off GDP. Why, then, has India done so little to reduce it?
There are many reasons. Most fundamentally, poor parents find it hard to buy enough food; but that is by no means the only factor. Impoverished and rural families are also less likely to go to a doctor when their children fall sick, which they do a lot, thanks to dirty water and poor hygiene. Inadequate nutrition lowers the immune system, increasing the risk of infectious disease; illness, in turn, depletes a child’s nutritional stocks. Tara, a two-year-old in Chandan, a village in the northern state of Rajasthan, has yet to bounce back from a bout of gastroenteritis that put her in hospital a year ago. Since then, any weight gain has been offset by frequent bouts of diarrhoea, says her mother, Maya Devi, as she holds her limp child on her lap. Tara weighs a pitiful seven kilos.
Cow’s milk and water
Even the children of wealthier families suffer surprisingly high rates of malnutrition. Government data show that a third of children from the wealthiest fifth of India’s population are malnourished. This is because poor feeding practices—foremost among them a failure exclusively to breastfeed in the first six months—play as big a role in India’s malnutrition rates as food shortages. Here lies an opportunity: educating parents about how to feed their children should be more quickly achieved than ensuring that the 410m Indians who live below the UN’s estimated poverty line of $1.25 a day have enough to eat.
The government, however, has largely failed in both areas. Two big, expensive schemes designed to reduce malnutrition—a public distribution system (PDS) that provides subsidised food to the poor and a vast midday-meal scheme, to which 120m schoolchildren are signed up—are hampered by inefficiency and corruption. But the government’s main effort to tackle child malnutrition, the Integrated Childhood Development Service (ICDS), has failed for rather different reasons.
The ICDS, launched in 1975, is the world’s biggest early-childhood scheme. It provides, in theory, an anganwadi centre with one teacher and an assistant for every 1,000 people. Each centre is responsible for providing nutritional care to pregnant women and all children up to six, the age at which Indian children start school. Anganwadi centres also provide daily pre-school child care and education, as well as keeping a dozen-odd registers recording everything from children’s weights to financial accounts. Overburdened by this long list of responsibilities, anganwadi workers have tended to focus on the group they see every day: children over the age of two whose mothers take advantage of free child care and daily meals offered by the centres. While these meals—supposedly providing each child with an extra 500 calories a day—are certainly beneficial, they do not replace the nutritional guidance the parents of young children need. More seriously, this emphasis on older children means that the under-twos and pregnant women barely get a turn.
Unfortunately, this is precisely the group the government should be targeting. Most growth retardation occurs by the age of two and is irreversible. Often, it starts during pregnancy. More than half the women of childbearing age in India are anaemic—a condition that can be much improved by fortifying food—and 30% of Indian children are born underweight. In healthy infants, this could be corrected with six months of exclusive breastfeeding. But especially in rural India, where women often go back to the fields mere days after giving birth, babies’ diets are often supplemented with cow’s milk and water, which exposes them to infection.
That risk increases after six months, with the introduction of solid food. The quality and reach of ICDS centres varies from state to state: the most impoverished states, with the highest rates of malnutrition, also have the lowest numbers of centres. But countrywide the scheme suffers from the usual ailments of public services in India. Recently the production of daily meals served at anganwadi centres was taken out of the hands of pilfering contractors and given to groups of local women. A complicated system of payments, however, means that even in a state like Maharashtra, which has done more than most to improve ICDS services, centres must wait four months for cash to buy pay food bills. The two meals served at Vishal’s anganwadi—a plate of puffed rice dotted with a few nuts and a serving of sprouted moong dal—seem unlikely to give him 500 calories. Vandana Krishna, the state’s secretary of Women and Child Development, says the funding gap could be solved by giving village panchayats, or local governments, a special fund to make loans to anganwadis. But this would need a lot of money.
So too would any significant improvement in the government’s efforts to fight child malnutrition—with one exception. Fortifying the food handed out by the PDS would be an economical and effective way to lower rates of anaemia and increase nutrition. So far, India has resisted that idea. But most experts agree that the country will make a serious dent in child malnutrition only when it focuses on pregnant women and the very young, perhaps by providing an additional worker in each anganwadi centre to make home visits. “India has missed its big window of opportunity by not giving priority to mothers and the under-threes,” says Victor Aguayo, chief of Unicef’s nutrition programme in India. “It cannot afford to do so any longer.”
http://www.economist.com/node/17090948?story_id=17090948

Wednesday, 22 September 2010

MALNUTRITION: FAO report says fewer hungry than in 2009

September 15, 2010
UN's Food and Agriculture Organization released the latest figures on the number of hungry people in the world. Even though the number of people who are hungry is back under a billion, it is still higher than before the global recession. From IPS, writer Paul Virgo gives this analysis of the new FAO report. Experts say that even though the there is a small improvement in the number of hungry people, it is nothing to celebrate.
The recovery and lower food prices have alleviated the situation after the effects of the credit crunch and the 2008 spike in commodity prices pushed millions into the ranks of the hungry. But hunger levels remain above pre- crisis levels and the structural problems that mean almost one billion people -- around 16 percent -- do not have enough food to meet their energy needs remain."It's still an enormously high figure. The worst excesses of the crisis have gone away a little, but there's no celebration,'' Alex Rees, Save the Children UK's Head of Hunger Reduction, told IPS. "There must be a great sense of urgency as the number is so high. There are still a number of emergencies in many parts of the world."So MDG1 is still far out of reach despite ample aggregate food supplies, and poor people all over the developing world remain vulnerable to the shocks that economic fluctuations and failed crops can swiftly bring.A recent upsurge in commodity prices that prompted Russia to extend its ban on wheat exports till 2011 has sparked speculation that prices might be on the way back to the 2008 crisis levels. The FAO and authoritative institutes such as the International Food Policy Research Institution (IFPRI) say this is not the case pointing to, among other things, positive food stock levels, while admitting that the situation is volatile.''The food crisis has not gone away - -925 million hungry people is still a scandal,'' said Jeremy Hobbs, executive director of Oxfam International. ''The dip in the number of hungry people has more to do with luck than judgement."Another global food crisis could explode at any time unless governments tackle the underlying causes of hunger, including food price volatility, decades of underinvestment in agriculture, and climate change.''

http://povertynewsblog.blogspot.com/2010/09/analysis-fao-report-says-fewer-hungry.html?utm_source=feedburner&utm_medium=email&utm_campaign=Feed%3A+blogspot%2FEOch+%28Poverty+News+Blog%29