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UN: Globally 783 million children faced hunger last year

International Desk

  13 Jul 2023, 10:34

Over 2.3 billion people didn’t have constant access to food last year, as many as 783 million faced hunger and 148 million children suffered from stunted growth.

Five U.N. agencies said on the report of State of Food Security and Nutrition 2023, the U.N. delivered grim news on Wednesday.

While the global hunger numbers stalled between 2021 and 2022 many places are facing deepening food crises. They pointed to Western Asia, the Caribbean and Africa, where 20% of the continent’s population is experiencing hunger, more than twice the global average.

Qu Dongyu, director-general of the Food and Agriculture Organization said, “Recovery from the global pandemic has been uneven, and the war in Ukraine has affected the nutritious food and healthy diets,”
FAO chief economist Maximo Torero said the FAO food price index has been declining for about 15 months, but “food inflation has continued.” But he said not knowing if the deal that has enabled Ukraine to ship 32 metric tons of grain to world markets and is trying to overcome obstacles to Russian grain and fertilizer shipments will be renewed when it expires on July 17 “is not good for the markets.”

If it isn’t renewed immediately “you will have a new spike for sure” in food prices, but how much and for how long will depend on how markets respond, he said.

According to the report, people’s access to healthy diets has deteriorated across the world.

More than 3.1 billion people – 42% of the global population – were unable to afford a healthy diet in 2021, an increase of 134 million people compared to 2019, it said.

Torero told a news conference launching the report that reducing the number of people eating unhealthy diets “is a big challenge, because it’s basically telling us that we have substantially to change the way we use our resources in the agricultural sector, in the agri-food system.”

According to the latest research, he said, between 691 million and 783 million people were chronically undernourished in 2022, an average of 735 million which is 122 million more people than in 2019 before the COVID-19 pandemic began.

Source: UNB

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