Food security is fundamentally about achieving reliable access to adequate, affordable and nutritious food supplies sufficient to avoid chronic hunger, crisis hunger and stunted development. Chronic hunger afflicts hundreds of millions of people. Latest figures from the Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO) estimate that nearly 1 billion people are undernourished worldwide, suffering food insecurity. Roughly 15 percent of humanity is considered hungry or malnourished, especially women. The majority of the hungry (65 percent) are in India, China, the Democratic Republic of Congo, Bangladesh, Indonesia, Pakistan and Ethiopia. The number has been increasing at a rate of almost four million per year since the second half of the 1990s, rendering the goal of the 1996 World Food Summit-to halve the number of undernourished people, 815 million at that time by 2015-far-fetched. Also the first Millennium Development Goal (MDG) falls short of food security aspirations in seeking only to reduce by half the proportion of the world's population experiencing hunger. Among the driving factors affecting food security, productivity is surely a crucial aspect; on the other hand, there are many other factors behind food insecurity to be analyzed comprised of social, environmental and economic issues. Moreover, unexpected events can contribute to global access to safe and stable food supplies. This happened in particular from 2003-2009, when a food price crisis followed by the financial crisis and global economic recession pushed the number of hungry and undernourished people in the world to unprecedented levels. In the first half of 2010, world agricultural commodity markets appeared to enter calmer times. Prices of food and agricultural commodities remained high, but had nevertheless declined from the peaks of 2008, and the world economy was emerging from recession. However, there are growing concerns about high market volatility partly exacerbated by many governments uncoordinated policy actions intended to ensure adequate supplies on domestic markets. This chapter will discuss food security concepts and main causes, and data about levels and trends in global hunger will be presented. Moreover, trends in food prices, production and trade will also be evaluated in the context of recent developments in the global economy and agricultural markets. © 2013 Scrivener Publishing LLC.

Food Security: A Global Problem / Donatella, Restuccia; Umile Gianfranco, Spizzirri; Francesco, Puoci; Giuseppe, Cirillo; Ortensia Ilaria, Parisi; Vinci, Giuliana; Nevio, Picci. - STAMPA. - 1(2013), pp. 19-102. [10.1002/9781118659083.ch2].

Food Security: A Global Problem

VINCI, Giuliana;
2013

Abstract

Food security is fundamentally about achieving reliable access to adequate, affordable and nutritious food supplies sufficient to avoid chronic hunger, crisis hunger and stunted development. Chronic hunger afflicts hundreds of millions of people. Latest figures from the Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO) estimate that nearly 1 billion people are undernourished worldwide, suffering food insecurity. Roughly 15 percent of humanity is considered hungry or malnourished, especially women. The majority of the hungry (65 percent) are in India, China, the Democratic Republic of Congo, Bangladesh, Indonesia, Pakistan and Ethiopia. The number has been increasing at a rate of almost four million per year since the second half of the 1990s, rendering the goal of the 1996 World Food Summit-to halve the number of undernourished people, 815 million at that time by 2015-far-fetched. Also the first Millennium Development Goal (MDG) falls short of food security aspirations in seeking only to reduce by half the proportion of the world's population experiencing hunger. Among the driving factors affecting food security, productivity is surely a crucial aspect; on the other hand, there are many other factors behind food insecurity to be analyzed comprised of social, environmental and economic issues. Moreover, unexpected events can contribute to global access to safe and stable food supplies. This happened in particular from 2003-2009, when a food price crisis followed by the financial crisis and global economic recession pushed the number of hungry and undernourished people in the world to unprecedented levels. In the first half of 2010, world agricultural commodity markets appeared to enter calmer times. Prices of food and agricultural commodities remained high, but had nevertheless declined from the peaks of 2008, and the world economy was emerging from recession. However, there are growing concerns about high market volatility partly exacerbated by many governments uncoordinated policy actions intended to ensure adequate supplies on domestic markets. This chapter will discuss food security concepts and main causes, and data about levels and trends in global hunger will be presented. Moreover, trends in food prices, production and trade will also be evaluated in the context of recent developments in the global economy and agricultural markets. © 2013 Scrivener Publishing LLC.
2013
Advances in Food Science and Technology
9781118121023
9781118659083
social issues; volatility; environment; economic crisis; food trade; food security; food production; food prices; economic aspects
02 Pubblicazione su volume::02a Capitolo o Articolo
Food Security: A Global Problem / Donatella, Restuccia; Umile Gianfranco, Spizzirri; Francesco, Puoci; Giuseppe, Cirillo; Ortensia Ilaria, Parisi; Vinci, Giuliana; Nevio, Picci. - STAMPA. - 1(2013), pp. 19-102. [10.1002/9781118659083.ch2].
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/11573/548127
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