U.N. Food and Agriculture Organization
(Rome, October 30, 2006) Ten
years after the 1996 World Food Summit (WFS) in
Rome, which promised to reduce the number of
undernourished people by half by 2015, there are
more hungry people in the developing countries today
– 820 million – than there were in 1996, according
to a U.N. Food and Agriculture Organization report
released today Noting that promises are no
substitute for food, FAO Director-General Jacques
Diouf today called on world leaders to honor a
10-year-old pledge to halve the number of hungry in
the world by 2015.
“Far from decreasing, the number of hungry people in
the world is currently increasing – at the
rate of four million a year,” he continued. Dr Diouf
was speaking in Rome at the launch of the annual FAO
report, The State of Food Insecurity in the World,
or SOFI.
The leaders of the 185 countries who took part in
the Summit termed world hunger “unacceptable and
intolerable,” Dr Diouf recalled. “Today, I am deeply
sorry to report that the situation remains
intolerable and unacceptable – all the more so
because ten years have passed.”
“Business as usual will not do,” Dr Diouf declared.
Failure to achieve the World Food Summit objective
would be “shameful,” he added.
Marginal reduction
According to the SOFI report, today’s estimated 820
million undernourished people in developing
countries represent a marginal reduction of three
million as against the 1990-1992 baseline of 823
million used by the Summit.
But the performance is even worse if measured
against the 1996 world total of some 800 million – a
23 million increase. Keeping the Summit pledge would
require reducing the number of undernourished by 31
million every year until 2015, whereas the number of
hungry is currently climbing at the rate of some
four million a year.
Nonetheless, over the past ten years, the proportion
of people suffering from hunger in developing
countries has gone down as the overall population
has gone up, the SOFI report noted.
One in five people in the developing countries were
undernourished in 1990-92, and this has now gone
down to 17 percent.
Millennium Goal on hunger
Moreover, FAO’s projections suggested there could be
a further drop from 17 percent to 10 percent in the
next nine years. “This means that the world is on a
path towards meeting the Millennium Development Goal
on hunger reduction,” the report said.
Nonetheless, the total number of undernourished in
developing countries in 2015 was projected at 582
million. This would fall 170 million short of the
World Food Summit target of 412 million.
More than half of these would be concentrated in
South Asia and East Asia, with 203 million and 123
million respectively. Sub-Saharan Africa would be
home to 179 million hungry – more than double the
WFS target.
Significant disparities
Overall hunger reduction trends masked significant
disparities among regions, according to the report.
For instance, Asia and the Pacific and Latin America
and the Caribbean had seen an overall reduction in
both the number and the prevalence of undernourished
people.
In sub-Saharan Africa, “the task facing the region
remains daunting,” the report said. There were
currently 206 million hungry in the region – nearly
40 million up from 1990-92, the baseline period used
by the Summit.
The WFS target was still attainable if concrete and
concerted action was taken, SOFI noted. This should
be based on a twin-track approach emphasizing direct
action against hunger together with a focus on
agricultural and rural development.
The report listed a series of steps which, it said,
was needed to eradicate hunger in the years ahead.
They included: focusing programs and investments on
“hotspots” of poverty and undernourishment;
enhancing the productivity of smallholder
agriculture; creating the right conditions for
private investment, including transparency and good
governance; making world trade work for the poor,
with safety nets put in place for vulnerable groups;
and a rapid increase in the level of Official
Development Assistance (ODA) to 0.7 percent of GDP,
as promised.
“We must step up dramatically our efforts to reach
the WFS hunger reduction target. If the political
will is there we can reach it,” the report
concluded.
