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Nutrition Security for the Poor Ahmad Kaikaus, PhD Additional Secretary Power Division 01 November, 2014
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Bangladeshi Poor in 1971
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Bangladesh Now:
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Poverty Reduction in the Past Decade Bangladesh made a remarkable record in reducing poverty in the past decade Poverty incidence dropped from 49 percent in 2000 to 32 percent in 2010 About 1.6 million people have escaped poverty every year since 2000 Poverty rate declined modestly between 1995 and 2000, from 51 percent to 49 percent
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Households with Functioning Mobile Phone 7
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Source: Haddad et al. 2002; in: Repositioning Nutrition, WB, 2006 10% increase in GNP/PC: 3-5% ↓ underweight
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If we were to Wait for Income Growth Alone to Achieve the Nutrition MDG: India would likely achieve the MDG in 2067 (3% GDP/PC growth; income/underwt elasticity - 0.3) Bangladesh would achieve the MDG in 2044 (6% GDP/PC growth; income/underwt elasticity - 0.3) Tanzania would achieve it in 2105 (2.1% GDP/PC growth; income/underwt elasticity - 0.3) Source: Repositioning Nutrition, WB, 2006
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Malnutrition in Bangladesh is much Higher than Expected, given its National Income IFPRI, Global Hunger Index, 2010
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Family Welfare Indicator: Percent of people living on less than PPP $1.25/day
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Food Energy (calorie) Deficient Households
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Food Energy (calorie) Share of Rice 14
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Trends in maternal and child undernutrition, 1996-2007 Source: BDHS data 1996-2007; Chart from HKI, Bangladesh
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Anemia & stunting among children 6-23 months old, by per capita expenditure quintile AnemiaStunting Page 16 % *** * Source: Alive & Thrive Baseline Survey 2010 ; * p < 0.05, ** p < 0.01, *** p < 0.001 Expenditure quintiles
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Underlying factors matter for stunting: household food security and maternal education Food security Maternal education Page 17 % stunted A&T Bangladesh Baseline Survey, 2010
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As Bangladesh moves towards a National Nutrition Services approach for nutrition, specific attention is needed to: Address the high levels of anemia among infants and young children through targeted interventions such as micronutrient powders, iron supplements and/or fortification Address stunting among children through a multi-pronged approach that addresses maternal and household factors in addition to direct nutrition-specific interventions Policy considerations 18
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Health Nutrition Agriculture Income Employment Food security AGRICULTURE BENEFITS NUTRITION + HEALTH THROUGH: AGRICULTURE POSES RISKS: Productivity Physical strength Endurance Cognition Risk taking Water-related diseases Food-borne diseases Zoonotic diseases Dietary diversity Livelihoods AGRICULTURE – NUTRITION - HEALTH HEALTH & NUTRITION BENEFITS AGRICULTURE THROUGH: Gender equity Education
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Social Behavior Change and Communications All components Enhancing Nutrition along the Value Chain Component 1 Prevention, Control of Ag- Associated Diseases Component 3 Biofortification Component 2 Integrated Programs and Policies Component 4 H ealth N utrition A griculture RESULT: A better nourished, healthier population, esp. mothers and children < 2 Risk of AAD Income and gender equity Labor productivity Conceptual Framework Availability, access, intake of nutritious, safe foods Knowledge of nutrition, food safety
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Policy Implications Agriculture alone will not improve nutrition fast enough We have opportunities and examples of success on how to bridge the agriculture-nutrition divide We have challenges Our biggest challenge AND opportunity is to work together - cross-sectorally (how?) We need to do much better at documenting successes – and failures; we need the evidence for advocacy, to stimulate investments In Bangladesh we have a momentum, new initiatives, committed government and donors, experienced NGOs, strong research community and partners
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