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UN Report: 131 million people in Latin America and the Caribbean cannot access a healthy diet
The region has the highest cost for a healthy diet compared to the rest of the world.
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Official Panorama 2022 Video
18/01/2023
UN Report: 131 million people in Latin America and the Caribbean cannot access a healthy diet. The region has the highest cost for a healthy dietat USD 3.89 per person per day.
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Report launch live stream
18/01/2023
New UN report warns that Latin America and the Caribbean has the highest cost of access to a healthy diet compared to the rest of the world.
Cost and affordability of a healthy diet
A healthy diet guarantees to meet a person's needs for energy, macronutrients (proteins, fats, and carbohydrates with dietary fiber) and essential micronutrients (vitamins and minerals), considering gender, age, level of physical activity and physiological state. A healthy diet should contain all group foods in a balanced and diverse way, including fruits, vegetables, whole grains; foods of animal origin; legumes, nuts, and seeds; oils and unsaturated fats.
The composition of a healthy diet varies according to food availability in countries and territories. Still, there is a consensus that it should contain a minimum of 400 grams of fruits and vegetables per day (equivalent to five servings). The energy intake of total fats should be less than 30% of total energy intake (of which saturated fats should not contribute more than 10 percent of calories), preferring unsaturated fats and avoiding the intake of trans fats. In addition, the intake of added sugars should not exceed 10 percent of total energy intake, and salt intake should be less than 5 grams per day.
The cost of a healthy diet is defined as the cost of the most affordable locally available food to meet the energy needs of 2330 kcal/day and fulfill nutrient requirements. It is the sum of the cheapest foods available in each country from the six food groups identified in a healthy diet: fruits, vegetables, starchy staples such as cereals and tubers, animal-source foods, legumes, nuts and seeds, and oils and fats.
The cost of a healthy diet in our region reaches US$3.89 per person per day, while the world average is US$3.54. In the Caribbean it reaches USD 4.23, followed by South America and Mesoamerica, with USD 3.61 and USD 3.47, respectively.
Several factors explain the high cost of a healthy diet in the region. First, nutritious foods, such as fruits and vegetables, and certain animal-source foods tend to be more expensive than starchy staples, such as cereals and tubers.
In addition, food prices depend, among other things, on how production and the supply chain adapt to increasing resource constraints resulting from the economic slowdown, conflicts and climate change.
Latin America and the Caribbean has faced an economic slowdown and contraction, leading to an increase in poverty between 2019 and 2021, and an increase in food inflation. These factors, exacerbated by the COVID-19 pandemic, increased the cost of healthy diets in the region between 2019 and 2020. Currently, the conflict in Ukraine is putting further pressure on the already high cost of healthy diets in Latin America and the Caribbean, due to its impact on fuel, logistics chains, and the price of food and fertilizers.
Affordability measures the percentage and number of people who cannot afford to pay the cost of a healthy diet at the national, regional or global level. A healthy diet is considered unaffordable when its cost exceeds 52 percent of income per person, which is the maximum proportion of income that population should spend on food.
This version of the Regional Overview of Food Security and Nutrition shows that the higher the levels of poverty and inequality, the lower the affordability of a healthy diet.
A healthy diet consists of fruits, vegetables, starchy staples, animal foods, legumes, nuts and seeds, and oils and fats. As local prices increase for any of these food groups, the cost of the healthy diet increases.
With the disruption of the production and logistics supply chain in the context of the COVID-19 pandemic, international food prices increased, driven mainly by higher vegetable oil and grain prices, and continued to rise during 2021.
In March 2022, the international food price index reached the highest level ever recorded by the FAO food price index. Although international food prices have declined since April, they remain high.
The construction and design of policies aimed at contributing to the affordability of healthy diets should be oriented to the production, markets and trade, and consumption of nutritious foods.
Diversification and production of nutritious foods is a key element in any strategy designed to make healthy diets affordable for communities. Increased production of diverse and nutritious foods can be achieved through support for family farming and small-scale producers and the inclusion of these products in public procurement systems and food programs. This can increase producer incomes and reduce the cost of nutritious food for consumers, especially if shorter food supply chains are also encouraged.
On the supply side, transparency in information on prices, products and varieties produced and available for sale can enhance markets and trade as a facilitator of food security and nutrition.
The affordability of healthy diets for the most vulnerable population can also be improved with cash and in-kind food transfers, such as school feeding programs, food vouchers and/or cash transfers.
Policies designed and focused on food environments, such as front-of-pack nutrition labeling and taxes on sugar-sweetened beverages, can discourage the consumption of energy-dense foods with minimal nutritional value, improving consumers' eating patterns and choices.
Food Security and nutrition in Latin America and the Caribbean
Hunger is a consequence of insufficient dietary energy consumption.
In this report, the term "hunger" is used as a synonym for undernourishment, defined as the condition of an individual whose usual food consumption is insufficient to provide the amount of dietary energy needed to maintain an everyday, active, and healthy life.
Undernourishment in the region has grown steadily even since before the COVID-19 pandemic. The prevalence of undernourishment increased by 57.4 percent between 2015 and 2021, or 20.6 million people, standing at 8.6 percent of the population in 2021, while the prevalence of undernourishment globally stands at 9.8 percent of the population in the same year. The prevalence of hunger in South America is 7.9 percent, 8.4 percent in Mesoamerica and 16.4 percent in the Caribbean.
Between 2019 and 2021, the increase in undernourishment in the region was 13.2 million people. When broken down by subregion, undernourishment increased most in South America (11 million people), followed closely by Mesoamerica (1.6 million people) and the Caribbean (0.6 million people).The latter subregion shows the highest prevalence of undernourishment (16.4 percent).
Although South America had the largest increase in this indicator, it continues to be the subregion with the lowest prevalence of hunger compared to the other subregions.
Food insecurity is defined as a lack of continued access to food, which reduces the quality of the diet, disrupts normal eating habits, and can negatively affect nutrition, health, and well-being. While severe food insecurity is the situation where people are likely to run out of food, suffer from hunger and, in the most extreme case, go for days without food, putting their health and well-being at serious risk.
The prevalence of moderate or severe food insecurity is higher in Latin America and the Caribbean than globally. That is, while 29.3 percent of the global population faced moderate or severe food insecurity in 2021, in the region, the prevalence was 40.6 percent.
Between 2014 and 2021, the regional increase has also been more significant than at the global level. In the world food insecurity increased by 8.1 percentage points, while in the region this increase was 16 percentage points. Subsequently, between 2019 and 2021, the increase in food insecurity in Latin America and the Caribbean was 8.9 percentage points and in the world, 3.9 percentage points.
A breakdown by subregion shows that in South America, moderate or severe food insecurity affected 40.9 percent of the population in 2021, while in Mesoamerica the prevalence was 34.1 percent. The figure is even higher in the Caribbean, where 64 percent of the population was moderately or severely food insecure, and of these, half (30.5 percent) experienced severe food insecurity.
As a result of reduced economic growth, the COVID-19 pandemic and its socioeconomic consequences, estimates show an increase in poverty, which is one of the main drivers of moderate and severe undernourishment and food insecurity in the region.
The slowdown in economic activity and the reduction in employment has led to increased poverty in the region. Between 2015 and 2019, poverty increased from 29.1 percent to 33 percent and, in the same period, extreme poverty increased from 8.8 percent to 13.1 percent. In addition, the increase in international food prices has had an impact on final consumer prices. Since 2020the increase in food inflation and employment reduction have increasingly reduced households' purchasing power, putting food security at risk.
Low-income households, which spend a significant part of their income on food, are forced to reduce - initially - the quality of their diet and then the quantity of food they consume, leading to an increase in food insecurity and undernourishment in the region. This situation affects vulnerable populations to a greater extent, such as women, who are disproportionately affected by poverty and food insecurity.
Malnutrition is an abnormal physiological condition caused by insufficient, unbalanced or excessive intake of macronutrients and/or micronutrients. Malnutrition includes undernutrition (stunting and wasting of children, and vitamin and mineral deficiencies), as well as overweight and obesity.
In 2020, the prevalence of stunting in children under five in Latin America and the Caribbean was 11.3 percent, approximately 10 percentage points below the global average. All subregions have made positive progress in reducing stunting. Between 2000 and 2020, South America reduced stunting by 41 percent, Mesoamerica by 35 percent and the Caribbean by 25 percent.
In contrast, 7.5 percent of children under five were overweight in 2020, almost two percentage points above the global average (5.7 percent). In South America and the Caribbean, overweight in children has increased over the last 20 years, while in Mesoamerica the problem has decreased since 2010.
Moreover, in the region, anemia affects 17.2 percent of women aged 15-49 years, a percentage significantly lower than the global average in 2019. In the Caribbean, however, almost 30 percent of women aged 15-49 years are affected by anemia.
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Daniela Godoy
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Sustainable Agrifood Systems Regional Initiative
Pamela Rosero
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Sustainable Agrifood Systems Regional Initiative
FAQs
What is food security in the Caribbean? ›
The Caribbean region continues to be impacted by external factors which threaten livelihoods and the ability of people to meet their basic needs. On average, food inflation in the English and Dutch-speaking Caribbean has risen by 10.2 percent across 20 countries as of March 2022.
What are the five 5 components of food security? ›The five main tenets of the concept of food security are: quality; quantity; safety; palatability and cultural acceptability . Until the mid-1990s, food security was only defined by the trio of quality, quantity and safety.
What is the current status of nutrition and food security around the world? ›A recent World Bank blog underscored that high fertilizer prices have become a significant obstacle to food production in low income countries, destabilizing the 2023 and 2024 crop cycle; 205 million people are in acute food insecurity in 45 countries worldwide.
What are the factors affecting food security in the Caribbean? ›The Caribbean region remains susceptible to an increasing frequency of natural disasters, rising international debt, out-migration, rapid urbanization, and high imports to meet basic needs.
What are the 4 elements of food security? ›From this definition, four key dimensions of food security can be identified: availability, access, utilization, and stability.
What are the 3 components of food security? ›The three components of food security—availability (having sufficient quantities of appropriate food available), access (having adequate income or other resources to access food), and utilization/consumption (having adequate dietary intake and the ability to absorb and use nutrients in the body)—provide the basis for ...
What are the 6 major threats to food security? ›The main threats to food security are (1) world population growth, (2) the increase demand for food, (3) food price, (4) the disappearance of the variety of agricultural plant species (4) the increase in the area of scarcity water and the limitation of the availability of land and (5) the food losses and food waste.
What is the role of nutrition in food security? ›Food security does not exist without nutrition security. Unfortunately, many organizations and policies focused on quantity rather than quality of food over the past half-century. It's the difference between eating bread every day or a diverse diet incorporating all the food groups every day.
What are the key points of food security? ›The Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations, or FAO, identified the four pillars of food security as availability, access, utilization, and stability.
What are the three 3 most important issues in the global food system? ›Overproduction, mass consumption and unsustainable food practices are the root of the massive amounts of discarded food within the food production chain.
What are the 3 major reasons for these countries food insecurity? ›
- Lack of Access to Farming Lands. Food is grown or produced from the land. ...
- Land Grabbing. It is closely related to the point above. ...
- Conflict, Violence and Wars. ...
- Unfair Trade Rules. ...
- Biofuels. ...
- Natural Disasters. ...
- Climate Change. ...
- Wastage of Food.
- Climate - global warming is increasing temperatures by around 0.2°C every 10 years. ...
- Technology - improvements in technology have increased the amount of food available. ...
- Loss of farmland - the growth of the biofuel market is taking up valuable farmland which is then not used for food.
- Rising population. ...
- Rising incomes, changing diets. ...
- Falling water tables. ...
- More foodless days. ...
- Slowing irrigation. ...
- Increasing soil erosion. ...
- Climate change. ...
- Melting water reserves.
More than half of the world's undernourished people live in Asia — 418 million. The number of hungry people in Africa represents more than one-third of the world's undernourished. That's over 282 million people who experience hunger, more than double the proportion by population of any other region in the world.
What is the difference between food security and nutrition security? ›Food security is defined as the availability and the access of food to all people; whereas nutrition security demands the intake of a wide range of foods which provides the essential needed nutrients.
What is the most important 4 pillars of food security? ›Food security is a multidimensional concept characterised by four pillars related to availability, access, utilisation, and stability [3].
What are the 5 A's of food secure experience? ›○ The five “A's” of food security are: Accessibility; Availability; Adequacy; Acceptability; Agency. ○ There are many different factors that impact people's level of food security.
What are the largest limiting factors in food security? ›One study suggests that three major factors disrupt the ability of people to have access to food: inequitable food distribution, poverty, and political unrest. Clearly, therefore, population growth is just one factor that can influence food security.
What are the five major causes of food insecurity? ›...
The top 10 causes of world hunger
- Poverty. ...
- Food shortages. ...
- War and conflict. ...
- Climate change. ...
- Poor nutrition. ...
- Poor public policy. ...
- Poor economy. ...
- Food waste.
- Poverty.
- Population.
- Change in Climatic Conditions.
- Inadequate distribution of food.
- Unmonitored nutrition programmes.
What are the 3 roles of nutrition? ›
Nutrients have one or more of three basic functions: they provide energy, contribute to body structure, and/or regulate chemical processes in the body.
What are the 6 main purpose of nutrition? ›The six essential nutrients are vitamins, minerals, protein, fats, water, and carbohydrates. People need to consume these nutrients from dietary sources for proper body function. Essential nutrients are crucial in supporting a person's reproduction, good health, and growth.
How can we improve nutrition security? ›Food and agriculture policies can have a better impact on nutrition if they: Increase incentives (and decrease disincentives) for availability, access, and consumption of diverse, nutritious and safe foods through environmentally sustainable production, trade, and distribution.
What are the 3 main areas where there are food safety challenges? ›New challenges to food safety will continue to emerge, largely because of: Changes in our food production and supply, including more imported foods. Changes in the environment leading to food contamination. New and emerging bacteria, toxins, and antimicrobial resistance.
What is the biggest threat to global food security and why? ›The main threats to food security are (1) world population growth, (2) the increase demand for food, (3) food price, (4) the disappearance of the variety of agricultural plant species (4) the increase in the area of scarcity water and the limitation of the availability of land and (5) the food losses and food waste.
What are the current issues in food industry? ›- An Optimized Supply Chain. ...
- Use of Modern Technologies. ...
- Transparency and Sustainability. ...
- Waste Reduction. ...
- Increase in Demand for Plant-Based Foods.
Changing climate, population growth, rising food prices and natural disasters all have an impact on food security.
What is the #1 reason for food insecurity? ›Some of the causes of food insecurity include: Poverty, unemployment, or low income. Lack of affordable housing. Chronic health conditions or lack of access to healthcare.
What are the two main types of food insecurity? ›8.2 Chronic and acute food insecurity
There are two forms of food insecurity; chronic and acute. Chronic food insecurity is commonly described as the result of overwhelming poverty indicated by a lack of assets (means of living).
Giving more people benefits through nutrition assistance programs, increasing benefit amounts, and addressing unemployment may help reduce food insecurity and hunger.
What are two factors that could cause a negative impact on food security? ›
Adverse weather conditions, political instability, or economic factors (unemployment, rising food prices) may have an impact on your food security status.
What country has the lowest food security? ›South Sudan
An estimated 87,000 people were struggling to survive in famine conditions between April and June 2022.
The latest UN Hunger Hotspots report highlights Afghanistan, Ethiopia, Nigeria, Somalia, South Sudan and Yemen as the countries with the highest levels of hunger.
Which region wastes the most food? ›China and India produce more household food waste than any other country worldwide at an estimated 92 million and 69 million metric tons every year, respectively. This is unsurprising, considering both countries have by far the largest populations globally.
What is food security explain briefly? ›Food security, as defined by the United Nations' Committee on World Food Security, means that all people, at all times, have physical, social, and economic access to sufficient, safe, and nutritious food that meets their food preferences and dietary needs for an active and healthy life.
What is food security in Jamaica? ›Forty-one per cent of the population of the region is moderately or severely food insecure, which translates to 267 million people whose human right to food is not being met. In Jamaica, gains have also been made to meet targets on undernourishment.
What is food security explanation? ›Based on the 1996 World Food Summit, food security is defined when all people, at all times, have physical and economic access to sufficient safe and nutritious food that meets their dietary needs and food preferences for an active and healthy life.
What is food security in Trinidad and Tobago? ›Food security is a key national priority for Trinidad and Tobago. The goal is to “create a food secure nation” by providing access to adequate, nutritious, safe and affordable food to all people at all times.
How does food security affect agriculture? ›It helps to enhance the productivity and consecutively the production of food. It can assist in providing opportunities for income generation. And, it generally provides improvement of nutritional advice through home economics programmes and enhances the quality of rural life by way of community development.
What are the two types of food security? ›Once the answers are collected, the USDA groups households into the 4 classifications of food security: high food security, marginal food security, low food security, and very low food security. Households are considered to have low food security if they reported experiencing 3 or more indicators of food insecurity.
What are the 6 dimensions of food security? ›
... on the current definition of food security, HLPE (2020) points out that food security consists of six dimensions: food availability, economic and physical access to food, food utilization, food stability, agency, and food sustainability.
What is food security and why is it a problem? ›According to the United States Agency for International Development (USAID), food security means having, at all times, both physical and economic access to sufficient food to meet dietary needs for a productive and healthy life (2). Put more simply, families are able to afford and obtain enough nutritious food.
Who has the highest level of food security? ›Importance of Global Food Security
Access to quality, nutritious food is fundamental to human existence. Secure access to food can produce wide ranging positive impacts, including: Economic growth and job creation. Poverty reduction.