FAO: Rising prices, food insecurity add to ranks of hungry
Growing numbers of people in Asia lack enough to eat as food
insecurity rises with higher prices and worsening poverty, according to a
report released Tuesday by the Food and Agricultural Organization and other
United Nations agencies.
Nearly a half-billion people, more than eight in 10 of them
in South Asia, were undernourished in 2021 and more than 1 billion faced
moderate to severe food insecurity, the report said. For the world, the
prevalence of food insecurity rose to more than 29% in 2021 from 21% in 2014.
The COVID-19 pandemic was a huge setback, causing mass job
losses and disruptions, and the war in Ukraine has pushed up prices for food,
energy and fertilizer, putting an adequate diet out of the reach of many
millions, it said.
The report is the fifth annual stocktaking on food
insecurity and hunger by U.N. agencies including the FAO, UNICEF, World Health
Organization and World Food Program.
Over those years, progress toward alleviating hunger and
malnutrition has stalled and then backslid as growing numbers of people lost
the wherewithal to get enough to eat. The prevalence of undernourishment as
measured by the U.N. agencies was 9.1% in 2021, better than the 14.3% in 2000
but up slightly from 2020.
Such figures show that “the slowdown in the fight against
hunger continues,” said the report, which also highlights the growing food
insecurity faced by people who have moved into cities, where they have less
easy access to affordable food.
“Reforming our agrifood systems to produce nutritious food
and ensure equitable access to healthy diets is critical,” it said.
The FAO’s Food Price Index has risen in the past several
years, hitting a record in March 2022. It fell back as commodity prices
declined somewhat later in the year but is still 28% above the 2020 level.
The Asia-Pacific region imports nearly $2 trillion of food a
year. Rising prices for basics like rice, wheat and oil hit the poor the
hardest.
It’s part of what the U.N. agencies call the “5F” crisis of
not enough food, feed, fertilizer, fuel and financing. The conflict in Ukraine
has dealt a heavy blow in many countries that depended on the region for wheat,
edible oils and fertilizers.
Nearly 2 billion people — or almost 45% of people living in
Asia — cannot afford healthy diets, contributing to problems with anemia and
obesity as well as hunger.
Underscoring the impact of the pandemic, which hit
vulnerable workers in the tourism and manufacturing industries especially hard,
nearly one in 10 Thais were undernourished in 2019-2021, according to data in
the report — a higher proportion than several years earlier and also than in
many other Southeast Asian countries where average incomes are much lower.
Poverty already had risen by 2.6% between 2015-2018, according to World Bank
data.
“An increase in poverty and in undernourishment would go
together,” Sridhar Dharmapuri, the FAO’s author for the report released
Tuesday, said in explaining the situation.
Unhealthy diets and inadequate food are also compromising
future health and productivity, as they cause children to suffer from stunting
or wasting and make them more susceptible to illness. The report says nearly a
quarter of children in the Asia-Pacific are affected by stunting, or small
height for their ages.
Some other details from the report:
— In Afghanistan, 70% of people are facing moderate or
severe food insecurity as the economy has collapsed after the Taliban seized
power in August 2021, driving millions into poverty and hunger as foreign aid
stopped almost overnight.
— In Cambodia, half of the population faces moderate or
severe food insecurity.
— One-third of women in Asia aged 15-49 are affected by
anemia, which causes fatigue and, in its most severe forms, can cause lung and
heart damage.