Report Rates Hunger “Serious”, “Alarming” or “Extremely Alarming” in 52 countries
The Inequalities of Hunger: Global
Hunger Index Spotlights Uneven Progress in Reducing Hunger
· Report Rates Hunger
“Serious”, “Alarming” or “Extremely Alarming” in 52
countries
· 27 Percent Reduction in
Global Hunger Index Scores Since 2000
October 12, 2017—Global hunger levels
have fallen more than a quarter since 2000, but more recent rising
hunger scores of several countries in the 2017 Global Hunger Index
(GHI) underline how uneven this progress has been and how precarious
it is to maintain. Famine has cast a shadow over four countries in
the past year while conflict and climate change continue to hit the
poorest the hardest. The Global Hunger Index this year indicates that
beyond these acute crises, long term obstacles to reducing hunger in
several countries may also be threatening efforts to reach zero
hunger.
Nowhere is this more evident than in
Africa south of the Sahara, where revised data place the Central
African Republic in the “extremely alarming” category – the
first time a developing country has fallen into the report’s
highest category since the 2014 report. The country has the same
score today as it did in 2000, suggesting any progress made in recent
years has been subsequently reversed. Several other countries
including Sri Lanka, Mauritania, and Venezuela also have higher GHI
scores in 2017 than in 2008, after witnessing falling scores in the
previous two decades.
“The results of this year’s Global
Hunger Index show that we cannot waiver in our resolve to reach the
UN Sustainable Development Goal of zero hunger by 2030,” said
Shenggen Fan, director general of the International Food Policy
Research Institute. “We have made great progress toward that goal
but indications that this progress is threatened emphasizes the need
to establish resilience in food systems. We must provide immediate
aid to those areas facing the most severe crises, such as famines,
and construct policies at the international and national levels to
address the structural issues that create persistent food
insecurity.”
Amidst some very worrying data there is
also some good news. The level of hunger in developing countries
decreased by 27 percent since 2000. During the same period, GHI
scores of 14 countries, including Senegal, Azerbaijan, Peru, Panama,
Brazil and China improved by 50 percent or more. Angola, Ethiopia and
Rwanda—each experienced violent conflict in recent decades—were
among 72 countries which improved their GHI scores between 25 and
49.9 percent, making progress from “extremely alarming” levels to
“serious levels”.
Declines in average hunger at the
regional or national levels obscure some grim realities though. The
averages can mask lagging areas where millions are still hungry,
demonstrating the need to hold governments accountable not only for
investments in timely data but also for building resilience in
communities at risk for disruption to their food systems from weather
shocks or conflict.
“Conflict and climate related shocks
are at the heart of this problem. We must build the resilience of
communities on the ground, but we must also bolster public and
political solidarity internationally. The world needs to act as one
community with the shared goal of ensuring not a single child goes to
bed hungry each night and no one is left behind.” said Concern
Worldwide CEO Dominic MacSorley.
The Near East region, for example, has
an average score at a “moderate” hunger level, but there are deep
inequities within the region: Yemen, for example, has the sixth
highest GHI score at an “alarming” 36.1. Other places highlight
inequality within countries. In Nigeria, an overall hunger level at a
“serious” 25.5 does not fully reflect the wide inequality within
its borders: child stunting—an indicator of child
undernutrition—ranges from 7.6 percent to 63.4 percent by region.
Latin America’s “low” hunger scores do not tell the story of
Venezuela, where political turmoil and ensuing food riots caused
hunger to rise by 40 percent from 2008 levels, pushing the country
into “moderate” from “low” levels of hunger.
These uneven hunger levels bring into
sharp focus this year’s theme of ‘the inequalities of hunger’,
which emphasizes the inequalities of social, economic and political
power underlying nutritional inequalities. Groups with the least
social, economic, and political power like women and girls, ethnic
minorities, and the rural poor often also experience greater levels
of poverty and hunger.
"Women often do not have the same
access to food although they take over the main responsibility for
family meals. They need greater participation and their voices need
to be heard in local and national decisions on food policy. This also
applies to other vulnerable groups who cannot influence developments
and debates on nutrition in their countries" said Bärbel
Dieckmann, President of Welthungerhilfe.
Efforts to reduce malnutrition and end
hunger are marred by lack of complete data for calculating index
scores for 13 countries. Yet the countries with missing data may be
the ones suffering most: 9 of these countries have indicators like
stunting, wasting and child mortality that raise significant concern
for having high hunger levels. Two of these countries (South Sudan
and Somalia) were included in the UN’s declaration of famine and
warning of risk of famine. Ongoing conflicts in many of these
countries were a factor inhibiting the collection of data necessary
for calculating GHI scores.
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