The project The report has benefited from the underlying analysis, leverages evidence-based research, innovative modelling development and expert network of the technologies and coordinated action to provide donor research project, Hesat2030: Ending Hunger Sustainably, agencies and policymakers with the resources and tools Nutritiously, and Equitably, and the seminal work of necessary to make info. [...] transformative change in global policies, programs and investments to end hunger while protecting the climate, The publication was carried out under the direction of improving nutrition, empowering women and advancing David Laborde, Director of the Agrifood Economics and the well-being of the poorest and most vulnerable Policy Division (ESA) of FAO and Carin Smaller, Executive communities. [...] hunger and malnutrition in the world and the greatest need to accelerate the transformation of the agrifood systems to end hunger and poverty. [...] 2.2 POVERTY, RISING INEQUALITIES AND PERSISTENT FOOD PRICE INFLATION Persistent global inequality exacerbates the Figure 2 shows the average percentage of the vulnerabilities of already disadvantaged populations population living below the poverty line of USD 2.15 and compounds the impacts of the other major a day and the average level of income inequality drivers of food insecurity and malnutriti. [...] The lack of workers with the necessary skills is partly due to the low participation in science, Skills shortages are also an obstacle to the growth technology, engineering and mathematics (STEM) and development of the agrifood processing sector education in developing countries and in technical in Africa (ILO, 2022).
- Pages
- 70
- Published in
- Austria
Table of Contents
- Figure 1 Prevalence of undernourishment and acute food insecurity, 2017–2023 15
- Figure 2 Prevalence of poverty in the global population compared to income inequality, measured by Gini index, 2003–2022 16
- Figure 3 Prevalence of undernourishment for countries with high inequality compared to countries not affected by a major driver of food insecurity and malnutrition, 2013–2023 17
- Figure 4 The average prevalence of undernourishment in countries affected by one of the major drivers of food insecurity and malnutrition in 2023 18
- Figure 5 Number of recorded natural disaster events, 1900–2023 20
- Figure 6 Acute food insecurity driven by weather extremes 20
- Figure 7 Total factor productivity evolution in agriculture, 1990–2021 21
- Figure 8 Volume of lending by the Council on Smallholder Agricultural Finance (CSAF) by value chain, 2014–2023 24
- Figure 9 Supply of financing provided by domestic and regional lenders to agrifood small and medium-sized enterprises in developing countries compared to need, 2022 25
- Figure 10 Breakdown of agriculture deals by sub-sector, 2021–2023 25
- Figure 11 Food loss from post-harvest to distribution in 2021 26
- Figure 12 Price at point of harvest in Zambia, compared with prices at point of sale in Kenya and the United Republic of Tanzania 28
- Figure 13 Scope of the Food Loss and Food Waste Index along the supply chain 36
- Figure 14 The Food Securities Fund model 43
- Figure 15 The Farmfit Fund structure 44
- Figure 16 Roots of Impact and Root Capital’s Social Impact Incentives lending model 45
- Figure 17 Innovative outcomes-based financing model 46
- Figure 18 Additional cost of ending hunger and malnutrition by 2030 according to various modelling exercises 54
- Figure 19 G7 official development assistance (ODA) for food security and nutrition as a percentage of all ODA, 2015–2022 56
- Figure 20 G7 official development assistance for food security and nutrition compared to emergency food assistance, 2015–2022 57
- Figure 21 Evolution of World Food Programme requests for aid, compared with acute and chronic food insecurity, 2017–2023 58
- Table 1 Effect of cold storage on the perishability of vegetables and fruits in Sudan 37
- Box 1 Resilience of agropastoral populations in Eastern Sudan 30
- Box 2 Ethiopia’s Integrated Agro-Industrial Parks development 34
- Box 3 The Food Loss App 36
- Box 4 The Cambodia Programme for Sustainable and Inclusive Growth in the Fisheries Sector: Capture component 40
- Box 5 Sustainable pineapple value chain development in Suriname 42
- Box 6 Food Securities Fund 43
- Box 7 IDH Farmfit Fund 44
- Box 8 Roots of Impact 45
- Box 9 Innovative approaches to reducing post-harvest losses 50
- Abbreviations 4
- Foreword 9
- Acknowledgements 10
- Executive summary 11
- 1 Introduction 13
- 2 Food insecurity and malnutrition in an era of risks and uncertainties 14
- 2.1 Hunger in numbers 14
- 2.2 Poverty, rising inequalities and persistent food price inflation 16
- 2.3 The major drivers of hunger and malnutrition: climate change, economic shocks, conflict and geopolitical instability 18
- 3 Structural challenges in agrifood systems: The problems 21
- 3.1 Slowdown in agricultural productivity and supply chain vulnerabilities – limited mechanization and labour shortages 21
- 3.2 Lack of agrifood processing, distribution and retail: value added industries and skilled labour 23
- 3.3 Lack of access to finance for the “missing middle”: small-scale producers and agrifood small and medium-sized enterprises 23
- 3.4 Poor quality and inadequate infrastructure for irrigation, roads, storage and electricity 26
- 3.5 Weak trade, regional integration and highly concentrated markets dominated by a few lead firms 27
- 4 An income-generating approach to end hunger and malnutrition: The solutions 30
- 4.1 Improvements in productivity through agricultural research and development, extension services and farm mechanisation 30
- 4.2 Value addition and income-generation through agrifood processing and improved skills 34
- 4.3 Financing the “missing middle”: small-scale producers and agrifood small and medium-sized enterprises 41
- 4.4 Investment to build and maintain infrastructure for irrigation, roads, storage and electricity 49
- 4.5 Trade and competition policy, and regional integration 51
- 4.6 Accelerating income generation through social protection programmes 52
- 5 Ending hunger and malnutrition: What would it cost? 54
- 5.1 Estimates of the cost of ending hunger 54
- 5.2 The cost of inaction 55
- 5.3 The hidden costs of the agrifood system 55
- 5.4 Financing the investment gap 56
- 5.5 The growing humanitarian finance and the need to balance better with long-term development finance 57
- 6 From recommendations to action 61
- References 63