Reaching Sustainable Food Security for All by 2020 Getting the Priorities and Responsibilities Right I n t e r n a t i o n a l F o o d P o l i c y R e.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
National Development Strategies
Advertisements

General form of a rights-based claim:
International Marketing © Thomson/South-Western ChapterChapter The International Political Economy 4.1 National Demographics 4.2 Economic Environment 4.3.
1 Economic Freedom of the World: 2002 Annual Report n Presentation to n Fraser Institute Press Conference n Calgary n June 24, 2002 n Fred McMahon and.
1 Dr. Noeleen Heyzer Under-Secretary-General of the United Nations and Executive Secretary of ESCAP MDG Priorities in Asia and the Pacific.
Overcoming Indigenous Disadvantage in Australia Gary Banks Chairman, Productivity Commission OECD WORLD FORUM Statistics, Knowledge and Policy Measuring.
Comprehensive Review of National Development Strategies Lesotho.
How Can We Best Support Smallholder Farmers for Poverty Reduction? Discussion at Carnegie Endowment for International Peace April 8, 2009.
Reaching the marginalized Samer Al-Samarrai Child Friendly Budgets for 2010 and Beyond Policy Forum New York, February EFA Global Monitoring Report.
Global Issues Seminar Series Slide 1: Agenda for Today 1.Introduction of participating sites- 15 minutes 2.Presentation: Part minutes (slides 2-6)
IFC 2009 Creating Opportunity. 2 Our Vision That people should have the opportunity to escape poverty and improve their lives We foster sustainable economic.
Rural Poverty, Food Security, and Trade Liberalization: Exploring the Linkages WTO Symposium on Trade and Sustainable Development October, 2005.
1. 2 Why are Result & Impact Indicators Needed? To better understand the positive/negative results of EC aid. The main questions are: 1.What change is.
1. 2 Why are Result & Impact Indicators Needed? To better understand the positive/negative results of EC aid. The main questions are: 1.What change is.
Programme priorities for Near East and North Africa Mona Bishay Director of Near East and North Africa Division, PMD April th Replenishment.
Target setting for the SEE 2020 strategy Jahorina, Bosnia and Herzegovina September 11 th
Tennessee Higher Education Commission Higher Education Recommendations & Finance Overview November 15, 2012.
No Goals at Half-time: What Next for the Millennium Development Goals? MDG1: Poverty and hunger Andrew Dorward and Colin Poulton.
1 Presentation to the Overseas Development Institute Friday, 30 January 2004 London Development Cooperation Report 2003 Presentation by Richard Manning,
Water scarcity in the Arab world: how to get from crisis to sustainable? Rania el Masri, Ph.D. Environment and Energy Policy Specialist Cairo, May 8, 2012.
Russias Image Among Foreign Investors Key findings from survey and focus group research conducted April – May 2007 by HART RESEARCH P e t e r D ASSOTESCIA.
1 Meeting carbon budgets – 5th Progress Report to Parliament Committee on Climate Change, June If you want to tweet about this report.
The Environment and Development
Sharing experiences between Asia and the Pacific and Western and Central Africa Achieving the Millennium Development Goal of Halving Poverty by 2015 Sharing.
Millennium Development Goals MDGs Agenda for reducing poverty and improving lives Adopted by world leaders at the Millennium Summit in September 2000.
Week 10 Politics of international aid Development aid and development funding: International philanthropy or political gain?
1 The new government has to develop a systematic campaign to contact: 1) Regional and communal associations abroad and in Haiti. Communities can participate.
Main Messages December EQUAL? In the last 20 years, university enrollments for women grew 7-fold … and in 2009 women are 51% of college students…
Population and Poverty
1 European Community Development Policy. 2 GENERAL CONTEXT world-wide.. Trade and investment liberalisation Technological revolution - Information Society.
Copyright © 2006 Pearson Addison-Wesley. All rights reserved. Chapter 2 Comparative Development: Differences and Commonalities among Developing Countries.
Copyright © 2006 Pearson Addison-Wesley. All rights reserved. Chapter 10 The Environment and Development.
PSSA Preparation.
Copyright © 2012 Pearson Addison-Wesley. All rights reserved. Chapter 13 Balance of Payments, Debt, Financial Crises, and Stabilization Policies.
World Hunger Fred Boadu, PhD; J.D. (Law) Department of Agricultural Economics, Texas A&M University, College Station.
80:20 Our Unequal World.
ConclusionQuestion Mark Let the Markets Decide A Conclusion or a Question Mark ? Dr Mahesha Ranasoma.
Food Security Prepared By :Rana Hassan Supervised By :Dr. Raed Alkowni
Presentation on Structural Transformation
World Hunger and Politics Per Pinstrup-Andersen Prepared for: BioNB321 The State of the Planet Cornell University February 6, 2008.
Almost 14 years ago all countries endorsed a set of 8 Millennium Development Goals (or MDGs). 3 of those 8 Goals focus on health – that being child mortality,
Rural Poverty and Hunger (MDG1) Kevin Cleaver Director of Agriculture and Rural Development November 2004.
GHANA’S AGENDA FOR SHARED GROWTH AND DEVELOPMENT,
Managing Natural Resources in Africa Geography 12.
The Post-2015 Development Agenda
Canada making a difference in the world: Park View Education Centre April 6,2006.
Lessons and implications for agriculture and food Security in the region IFPRI-ADB POLICY FORUM 9-10 August 2007 Manila, Philippines Rapid Growth of Selected.
Update on Cambodian post and SDGs CCC Bi-Monthly Member Meeting Phnom Penh, 05 August 2014 By: Sotheary, HOP, CCC Vision: A strong and capable civil.
The Millennium Development Goals: the fight against global poverty and inequality.
Development Economics: An Overview based on Cypher and Dietz The Process of Economic Development Ch. 1.
Office of Overseas Programming & Training Support (OPATS) Introduction to Food Security.
Lessons & Perspectives Dr. George Norton Agricultural and Applied Economics Virginia Tech Copyright 2006.
Sustainable Development Goals 17 proposed goals as of March 2015.
UN Millennium Development Goals Target date: 2015 Text adapted from: United Nations Development Programme: (2002); Millennium Development.
MILLENIUM DEVELOPMENT GOALS Board review Notes Dr. Theresita R. Lariosa.
Food security.
Millennium Development Goals Presenter: Dr. K Sushma Moderator: Dr. S. S.Gupta.
Millennium Development Goals Bhutan & Bangladesh Alicia Madsen & Diana Garcia Determine which country is closer to achieving its developmental goal (*=success)
Influences on health and status and the millennium development goals.
The millennium Development Goals: the first against global poverty and inequality Sajneet Pooni.
The Millennium Development Goals The fight against global poverty and inequality.
End poverty in all its forms everywhere End hunger, achieve food security and improved nutrition and promote sustainable agriculture Ensure healthy lives.
2015 Sustainable Development Goals. Goal 1: No Poverty.
UN SUSTAINABLE DEVELOPMENT GOALS SDGS Prof. Dr. Halimu Shauri
Millennium Development Goals (MDGs)
Shyenne Hofmeister & Lydia Falk
SDG goals Goal Activity Goal No.1 No Poverty:
Food security in pakistan AEC-401 Presented by Taj nabi ( 17-arid-4776)
International Development Prof. Philip Yang National Taiwan University
Reaching Sustainable Food Security for All by 2020
Presentation transcript:

Reaching Sustainable Food Security for All by 2020 Getting the Priorities and Responsibilities Right I n t e r n a t i o n a l F o o d P o l i c y R e s e a r c h I n s t i t u t e

2 The Human Tragedy Each day 800 million people go hungry Among them are 170 million children under 5 years of age

3 The World Food Summit Goal Halve the number of hungry people by million must achieve food security every year Since 1990, only 6 million a year have left “the prison of hunger”

4 IFPRI’s 2020 Vision: A World Free from Hunger Every person has access to sufficient food to sustain a healthy and productive life Malnutrition is absent Food originates from efficient, effective, and low-cost food systems Food production is compatible with sustainable natural-resource use

5 Progress in the Developing World Since 1970 Number of food-insecure people has fallen from 959 million to 780 million Percentage of food-insecure people has fallen from 37% to 17% Progress has been uneven  major reduction in East and Southeast Asia  slight increase in South Asia  number of hungry people in Sub-Saharan Africa has more than doubled

6 Even Less Progress without China Between 1991 and 1998 The number of food-insecure people declined in China by 76 million In all other developing countries the number of food-insecure people increased by 40 million

7 Uneven Income Distribution 20% of the world’s population lives on the equivalent of less than US$1 a day Fully half of the human race earns less than US$2 a day The income of the richest 1% of our planet equals that of the poorest 57%

8 The Gap Is Widening In 1960 average per capita income in industrialized nations was 9 times the average of Sub- Saharan Africa Today it is 18 times Difference in magnitude

9 A Focus on Children One-third of preschool children in developing countries are malnourished Malnutrition among preschool children  impairs their mental and physical development  compromises their future health, productivity, and food security  undermines economic growth and social justice

10 The Cost of Child Malnutrition Malnutrition Is a factor in more than 5 million deaths of children under five Accounts for 20-25% of the economic impact of childhood diseases in developing world Reduces gross domestic product by 0.7% annually in India and 0.5% in China

11 Indicators of Human Development In developing countries in the past 30 years Life expectancy rose from 56 to 64 years Mortality rates of preschool children fell from 167 per 1,000 live births to 89 Adult literacy rate rose from less than 65% to 73% Incomes per capita more than doubled

12 Food Availability Improved dramatically in developing countries as a whole during past 30 years Daily per capita calorie availability  rose from 2,100 to 2,700 in all developing countries, or more than enough to meet minimum needs  lags behind in Sub-Saharan Africa and South Asia  remains below minimum requirements in Sub-Saharan Africa

13 Agricultural Productivity Increases Benefits Improved per capita production Reduced unit costs and prices Increased incomes and purchasing power for farmers and consumers Restrained expansion into forests, grasslands, and wildlife habitats, helping to avert natural resource degradation Costs Increased soil salinity and lowered water tables in irrigated areas Exacerbated health and environmental problems through inappropriate use of fertilizer and pesticides

14 Where Are We Headed? With business as usual there is no possibility of achieving food security for all by 2020 Number of malnourished children will decline by only 20% by 2020 Number of food-insecure people will decline from 780 to only 675 million by 2015  The goal of cutting hunger in half will only be reached by 2050

15 Confronting the Causes We must address  food insecurity  malnutrition  unsustainable resource management within the context of nine driving forces

16 Nine Driving Forces (I) 1.Accelerating globalization, including further trade liberalization 2.Sweeping technological changes 3.Degradation of natural resources and increasing water scarcity 4.Emerging, reemerging, and continuing health and nutrition crises

17 Nine Driving Forces (II) 5.Rapid urbanization 6.Changing structure of farming 7.Continued conflict 8.Climate change 9.Changing roles and responsibilities of key actors

18 Getting the Priorities Right Rapid pro-poor economic growth Effective provision of public goods Empowerment of poor people

19 Seven High-Priority Policy Actions (I) 1.Invest in human resources 2.Improve access to productive resources and remunerative employment 3.Improve markets, infrastructure, and institutions

20 4.Expand appropriate research, knowledge, and technology 5.Improve natural resource management 6.Promote good governance 7.Support sound national and international trade and macroeconomic policies Seven High-Priority Policy Actions (II)

21 1. Investing in Human Resources Improve access to healthcare Assure clean water, safe sanitation, and low-cost quality child care Fight “hidden hunger” Ensure food safety Educate girls as well as boys

22 2. Improve Access to Productive Resources and Paid Employment Promote broad-based agricultural and rural development Foster secure urban livelihoods Promote civil society organizations Empower women

23 3. Improve Markets, Infrastructure, and Institutions Ensure that markets are not biased against small farmers, less-favored areas, or food- insecure consumers Develop private competitive markets with supporting institutions and infrastructure Build competent public administration Invest in public goods

24 4. Expand Appropriate Research, Knowledge, and Technology Invest in pro-poor agricultural research Make use of the agroecological approach Tap the potential of conventional agricultural research Explore the potential of modern agricultural biotechnology Bridge the “digital divide” Pursue affordable alternative energy technologies

25 5. Improve Natural Resource Management Overcome water-related constraints Manage soil fertility Promote sustainable development in less- favored areas Assure property rights and collective action Address global climate change

26 6. Promote Good Governance Institute rule of law Protect and promote human rights Prevent and resolve conflict End corruption

27 7. Support Sound National and International Trade and Macroeconomic Policies Make globalization work for poor people Expand development assistance Undertake debt relief Conserve plant genetic resources

28 Roles and Responsibilities (I) Governments of developing countries have primary responsibility for  creating conditions to end hunger  forging partnerships with other sectors  ensuring local governments have necessary resources and authority Governments of developed countries should  put resources behind their pledges  relieve unpayable debt of poor countries  restructure global trading system

29 Roles and Responsibilities (II) Parliaments and judiciaries  assure poor people have a political voice  promulgate pro-poor policies  prevent arbitrary government action  ensure that governments fulfill their obligations International organizations and multilateral institutions  provide development finance, technical assistance, and information  provide global public goods  facilitate/strengthen international agreements

30 Roles and Responsibilities (III) Global and civil society  design and implement development activities  promote open, vigorous, and peaceful debate Transnational business and industry  make useful proprietary technologies available  provide innovative financial support to sustainable development  practice social responsibility

31 Roles and Responsibilities (IV) Domestic private sector, including farmers  produce food  develop markets  support credit institutions  invest in small enterprises that employ people and develop skills Food-insecure people are important actors in achieving food security, not passive victims

32 Food Security for All Is Affordable Public and private investments will be needed to achieve IFPRI’s 2020 Vision Investments to reduce number of malnourished children by 34 million by 2020 amount to just 3.6% of total spending by developing-country governments A more optimistic future with 72 million fewer malnourished children by 2020 requires that investments increase to 4.9%

33 Costs and Benefits Global investment ` Number of malnourished children in 2020 compared to 1997 US$323 billion12 million more US$579 billion 34 million less US$802 billion 72 million less

34 The Need for Political Will Political will means Placing food security higher on the agenda New partnerships, new programs, new institutions, and new ways of thinking Economic and political empowerment of poor people  governments must be held accountable to their own citizens and to international public opinion  institutions are needed that represent the interests of food- insecure people  national governments, the private sector, and civil society must put the well-being of poor and hungry people at the top of their priority lists  global advocacy effort is needed to push for food security for all

35 How useful have you found this presentation? your comments to: or Link to Quick Vote Vote