UN: Number of Hungry Increases by 40 Million


Dec 10th, 2008 9:55 AM EST
By Chris Scott

The UN’s Food and Agriculture Organisation (FAO) now estimates the number of people who go hungry every day at 963 million—up 40 million from last year. This is mainly due to the rise in food prices worldwide. The number of people who are unable to afford to eat enough calories to lead a normal life now account for 14% of the world’s population.

Excerpts below, full piece here

The FAO’s hunger report, the State of Food Insecurity in the World 2008, found that the majority of the hungry live in the developing world, 65% of them in just seven countries: India, China, the Democratic Republic of Congo, Bangladesh, Indonesia, Pakistan and Ethiopia. The worst affected are landless families, particularly households headed by women.

“For millions of people in developing countries, eating the minimum amount of food every day to live an active and healthy life is a distant dream,” said the FAO’s assistant director general, Hafez Ghanem. “The structural problems of hunger, like the lack of access to land, credit and employment, combined with high food prices remain a dire reality.”

“This sad reality should not be acceptable at the dawn of the 21st century,” the FAO’s director general, Jacques Diouf, said in a speech to launch the report. “Not enough has been done to reduce hunger and not enough is being done to prevent more people becoming hungry.”

-Chris Scott

TAGS: Food Aid, Policy News, United Nations, World Food Crisis

 

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